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tv   News  Al Jazeera  February 16, 2023 1:00pm-2:00pm AST

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strengthened global alliances and deacons divisions with far reaching effects on the lives of millions of people worldwide. in a week could 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 year on, on, out there. ah. the head of the clock, this is the news on line from the hall coming up in the next 60 minutes, displaced by war phenomena, homeless earthquakes. thousands of syrian refugees rushed to the board with turkey
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to return. the warnings of disease in turkey, tens of thousands of quake survivors live in, make shift camps without placing facilities. i'm a big money, but the focus is on providing gates to the thousands who have been to say, well, the major talk to rebuild thousands of homes reduced to rubble. we report from a remote village that's being completely flat and we look at the ground in this chemistry. you can see where the earthquake has disturbed all the bricks. and then over here, it has literally pushed a grave out of the ground. also had anger encounter in nigeria over shortage of its new currency. the government, extending a deadline to turn and openings and its full months to city title live. those are still to go top for the english premium. ah,
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in. so we begin with the aftermath of the earthquakes in turkey and syria rescue efforts, winding down relief operations being scaled up some remote areas in turkey, i have started to receive a but in syria health has been slow to arrive, but that's not stop syrian refugees in turkey from trying to go back home across the region, shelter, food, drinking water and health care are all in short supply. more than 41000 people have been killed since you have quite struck last week. we have a team of correspondence covering disaster because the news in the turkish capital of anchor, as had begun to done or in ma'am, and natasha. the name is in, is ken doran. the 1st is report from laura con on the situation. and sir, this little boy is too young to understand how last week's earthquake will shape
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his life. he simply wants his mother. oh ha ah, it's bitterly cold engine daddy's a town in the rebel house district of afrin. in one of the areas was hit by the earthquake in north western syria. these people were forced onto the streets of their homes were destroyed. conditions are harsh and resources short. i am posada zed, i was asleep when the earthquake happened. the war collapsed on me and i broke my arm and leg, and now i'm here in the cold. i am at a loss for words. my fiance can premier, there are too few tins for the number of people here. there are about 3 families pretends about 200 people are out in the open and you can see it with your own eyes, but the cold is killing as you would do the hunger and the sickness i am. i am a woman with diabetes. for some, it's a struggle to speak this is what the town looks like now.
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lives shattered everything they know destroyed. the united nations of calling it a crisis of colossal proportions. that affected more than 9000000 people in syria. and they desperately need help before the quake aid for more than 4000000 people was delivered to just one crossing theory as president has agreed to open to more from turkey. but people here feel forgotten and say they should be a priority. now and i'm in la la la, i've been sleeping on the ground. it's now 7 days of sleeping for my children are getting sick from the cold. i can't imagine a tuition or standard wonderful pain and suffering may not be new to many who have endured years of war. but it's one of the biggest tragedies that's
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befallen them. and now they're just trying to find neural con algae theorem will attain out from rental soda has more for the border between turkey and syria to take your city and board, there is $800.00 border crossing and not far away from here. just thank you. them, it is away at the town of gender as inside syria, it is one of the worst. she had the town in the northwest, syria, more than a 1000 people have died in the earthquake and so far in the northwest or syria, there are 7800 people that dive. and many of them are still missing under the rubble and 150000 people are displaced here. so gender as an italian american, as so can particularly displeases where the worst he had. and now the 8th convoys quite late. however, through the last couple of days,
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they have their stuff up there afford to get the a to deliver to the a to this much needed place is i have talked to some of the syrians, they're quite sad and angry. they say we have been forgotten by the international community that they didn't receive the property shipments proper aid food, and they are suffering from the lack of electricity, lack of the heaters and, and the water as well. these are the essentials in this much needed places. so i have talked to one of the syrian rescuers here. he said that particularly during the 1st 3 days, they were just working with the demand, 3 coup men's. and they didn't have any digger what ask away to what have lived in machineries. they were almost working with their bare hands and they said if they had more than equipment, they probably will be able to save powers and thousands of the that the lives here oliver, that is the situation in, in syria. so these areas northwest syria, have had been, had been born heavily balled by the syrian regime for over to that of 12 years of
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the civil war. the many of how this and the towns here are already are already heavily shelled and damaged or correct. and the people, syrians, how build, make shift homes and the camps here. it wasn't too much, but still it was warm for that. however, this earthquake has taken that also from them. so disaster of their disaster for syrian and why we were the crew, the campbell crossing the border here, we have seen hundreds of the city and families that are trying to pass the border to go inside syria and to find a relative or to, to, to join their funerals, the syrians, how me tricky home for them. so over the last decade and now they had been hit by the hurt earthquake. and inside syria, they have houses of the relatives. they have lost humbles off their beloved ones. now they are trying to pass the border and to join their funerals or to meet up.
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those who survived went away from the towns and cities. small villages and turkey have been flattened. stephanie deca traveled to chuck mike in the province of doesn't the destruction to the small village of chuck mac is absolute. the earthquake hasn't spared a single home here. the chief of the village takes us to what's left of his house. he says he can't believe he made it out alive, up with somebody. my wife and i were asleep. we don't know what happened to us. how we woke up when i tried to go outside. i got injured on my head is enough. we were terrified the earthquake threw me, it was very hard. it made me lose my mind. the incredibly, no one lost their lives here. but just as large parts of so many towns and cities, this village too, will need to be completely rebuilt in another village. further up the mountain,
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even the dead have been disturbed. the grave shifted as the earth cracked. if you look at the ground in the cemetery, you can see where the earthquake has disturbed all the bricks. and then over here, it has literally pushed a grave out of the ground and then leaving absolutely no doubt as to the power of mother nature, the violence with, with which it split the earth. yes. used to be 5 meters deep, but emergency services have filled it back and checkmark, this village tells us they thought it was the last day of the world. kedusha mar them earlier shown that i never fell an earthquake like this before. nobody else. i asked either, 1st there was a terrifying sound. we felt a huge pressure. the land kept moving. i was convinced no one was alive any more. it felt never ending. it was so strong. they tell us, help came on the 2nd day. now they sleep intense,
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provided by turkey's disaster agencies set up inside the village. no one intends to leave here. as we finish filming a few villages are removing what they can from their broken homes before they will be demolished. they are determined to rebuild. they tell us as soon as possible, stephanie decker, al jazeera chuck mock village in south eastern to kia. let's cross the idea, man now and be thrusted, beg, who's in a camp there in turkeys? i said millions of the displaced are ending up, some of them in camps. what kind of provision is there for them where you are while they have tense, some of them have heating. many of them don't, it is bitterly cold. here. there's a constant smell of burning in the air, not only at this camp across the city of their burning board paper and plastic, but there is aid, get an end. so if i can get vulcans to just show you where people are lining up to get their afternoon lunch, now they are meals provided a several times a day,
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or 2 people hair. there's water tanks that come in, there's trucks that take away the rubbish. but there, there is a fear of that because of the lack of sanitation and people living so close together that there will be a spread of disease, but at least is one thing that there is clothing. there is, there is food getting in, but the other daily tasks are very difficult. like what you're washing the children's clothes, washing dishes, things like that because of the cold temperatures are extremely difficult for people out elsewhere in the city. and they are taking away the rubble and we saw the municipality workers out on the street or cleaning up the those streets. but there is a real concern about what happens next. what happens when all these people that you're seeing? her hair have stayed in the tents? when do they return to their homes? what's happened to their homes when they demolish them? when are they going to start rebuilding pres? the over the under said that they were rebuild it in a, in a, in
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a year's time or within a year. but that's still a huge chassis. is a vast area that has been affected. and for these people, they cannot remain here for longer. it's bitterly cold or, and they are struggling even though age is getting on. now, the question remains for the government and the authorities. how do they get people out of these 10 cities and back into homes? all right, i said thanks for that as a by reporting there from 90 man. well, the turkish government is using fairies to provide services to people affected by the earthquakes. 2 of them have doctrine extended on a one has been used as a shelter for those with no. where to go. i miss natasha. good name reports. the 2nd will transport survivors to other cities. these children are too young to know the word earthquake. they asked their parents why their house shook so violently. they want to go home,
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but they say they're tuned scared disclosable enough to get a psychologically, it affected my 5 children a lot. i could barely rescue them all my savings is gone with because at the factory i saved my children and that is enough for me. from this theory has been converted into an emergency shelter and medical clinic. every one we met on board has been living in tents. it arrived from istanbul 2 days ago, and is docked in the mediterranean port city of iskander, an in her tie. the mayor says, 14000 people have died across the province. the survivors feel nami grappling with trauma. they're only just beginning to articulate what we're forego, mother. oh, well, nothing is left. i don't want to live here anymore. i cannot live with disappear. you can't believe what we've seen. horrible things are. psychology is badly
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affected by it. there were so many sounds, everything shaking it stopped and then we ran. survivors can get psychological support on board the ship. the president of the turkish red crescent says it's providing mental health services across the region, but calls its capacity humble compared to the immense gale of the need. are they deal with them? whatever god says it happens, but we are very afraid. i experienced a moment of death. i have nobody a little more than a week ago these earthquake survivors had beds to sleep in hot food to eat basic necessities. most people take for granted. now there, among more than 13000000 people, carrying the worst of southern tre, kias collective trauma. natasha g n e l to 0 is scan duran, turkey,
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where the earthquakes have of course, devastated entire communities leaving children in particular at risk in either the united nation says more than 7000000 are affected in turkey and syria. at many schools, health facilities and family senses have been completely destroyed, aid organization, so the children urgently need psychological support, as well as shelter, water and food. let's begin james elder. now he is at eunice as spokesman and jones now from geneva. jane's thanks for joining us. here it's, it's when you see the children, it really brings it all home. this how hard this is. millions in fact, are affected by this is one of the most immediate concerns for the children in struggling with the effects of this earthquake. danny, how a heinz every moment says now for i am last monday for these children. it's everything. it's life saving support. so that's claim water. we've already seen your correspondence. they talked about a risk of a disease outbreaks. these areas in northwest syria later had
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a color outbreak late last year on the line and how much these people had gone through and how much the children with a gotten before this the so it's quite struck. so clean water, whether that's fuel for generators, whether that's water purification tablets, food blankets, psychological support, that we've heard your team mention that it's so important. i mean, this is trauma. on top of trauma for these children particularly dies and syria who just enjoyed so much. there's not a little boy or girl in syria who's there 12 rhonda. the whole life has been conflicts around now. they need the full gamut of support, you know, medical supplies to hospitals. it's sergio equipment, maternity equipment. it's literally everything for children who, you know, don, 10 days ago, a state crumbling called crate in their pajamas, into the phrasing colton. yeah, incredible, isn't it? and it's those as well is still trapped on the rubber and some is still being pulled out. there's a 17 year old early today off the 10 days under the rubble. i mean you talking
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about psychological support for people who have been in that is if a kids have been trumped in that situation is just shocking and how they recover from that. it still that, that recent story to puts a tingle down the spine of those rescue workers. and as you, you showed as well the just everyday citizens getting in there and trying to, to move rubble it's, it's so drive, so heroic rowing, it's so important because he's mine bought the numbers, you know, so many thousands of children have died on this so many grieving parents out there and yeah, you tap into that one story of that child who is still alive will the head master i spoke to yesterday, northwestern syria, who survived. and it's still trying to get children back into some sort of safe space with use. and so he can give them that psychological support, which we know takes months and months, but you have to stop now. you know, safe, his long maintained that yes, it's clean water, it's blankets, it's food, it's medical supplies. but psychological 1st aid education. there's
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a life saving as well. what these boys and girls are going through. i was gonna say that the big part of that se space is some kind of routine, isn't it? trying to get them back to some kind of schooling and giving them this, this things that would come no may be normal for children to areas to play in. yeah, absolutely strong. they get that sense, apply a sense of normalcy. you know, just anything children are pretty extraordinary in the way that they can bounce back if you will, but they need moments of no malice. and that's with friends, that's with a teacher. that's what someone that you know, you know, stuff is trained. and then that also gives parents response. we must never forget that it's these parents who really are the front line responders in a crisis like this lay, old guy laid a moment just to china, to catch the bearings and see where they are as to, you know, as do all those bright continents. you just have worked with many of those who lost
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their lives. i had colleagues in northwest syria now who sleep under desks at nights in offices, and then work through the dye and, and then bright 3 or 4 times a day to go to funerals. these are the people who are also native, right? because right now there are nothing but trying to respond to so many children who still need support or i, james, were living there a day. appreciate him. you join his hair now to 0. change all to that from you to so thank you. now, nato sect you general against oldenburg is in turkey and will visit areas affected by that is awesome. he held at media briefing with the turkish foreign minister member to casino in ankara. the day off the earthquake, naples de sauls to response center issued an immediate request for assistance to all night long laws on partners since then, thousands of emergency response personnel have been deployed to tokyo to support the reef efforts, including with search and rescue teams,
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firefighters medical personnel and seismic experts and let's bring it in and conceal to who joins us live from the turkish capital of ankara and sent him at what was interesting to have from the night to 2nd. you general saying that the, this was a deadliest natural disaster to strike a nato a country since the alliance was full. yes, nick, he was here to express his condolences and show the solidarity of the nato alliance . and with true care, the 2nd largest, the army. it within the alliance, and, ah, secretary general mentioned that odd, there will be an international bonner's conference in march. also we heard earlier that e u countries are also supporting and working on a such a donors conference to help add to the victims of the earthquake. that's how that
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shook trickier and as syria, and he mentioned that a 1000 tens of thousands of shelters are being provided for the people in the earthquake areas, along with $0.10 or the tense are being carried by a carriers which is a very important element in delivering the 8th this fi trickier as is the 2nd largest nato and a has a very decent inventory. ah, since there are 10 cities affected more than 13 millions lives are directly affected by this earthquake a, even as so many carriers are not enough in our colleague. i saw him as a tom, they done a reported rominger look a race about this situation as well. ah, besides these ha, nato secretary general pointed out the legitimate security concerns of to kia with regard to a p k, k. the outlaw kurdistan workers party and of course the, the n n a nato membership of sweden and finland. i was one of the main topics along
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with the ukraine war, but the press conference oh, turned out to be, i took it turn, it topic turned out to be about sweden and finland succession. but apparently the alliance and the 2nd largest army of this alliance suki are not on the same page because to kia has come some concerns about the way how sweden a on that this relation with the uncle to the some workers party in the country. and is asking for some extra additions. and also the burning of the a holy book in sweden was a matter of reactions into ken. and as the secretary general mentioned, that burning the whole book was a very disgraceful act then. ah, he on the line this, of course, ah, to kid things a finland can be a member alone, maybe sweden's membership can be discussed later. but the secretary general is
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mainly saying it main essays that it doesn't matter whether these are a small tenuously, a given access to nato. but they should be members as soon as possible as fight against terrorism is very important. and to nordic countries will contribute on that. very much, nick. all right, thanks adam. but to picture from uncrossing inclusive thinking. ah, another new zealand and indonesian officials are negotiating with rebels for the release of a pilot, taken hostage and the internees is half were province separate just fine to say he will not be freed until indonesia acknowledges the independence of the region. so our clar, christmas report, separate as rebels from the west poplin national liberation army released images of new zealand pilot, philip merton's, the group kidnapped him last tuesday. after i landed his plane in papa's remote
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province of duka. his 5 passengers were released burton's aircraft, which belongs to an indonesian ideation company with satellites. the indonesian police are now scouring the remote area where he was taken hostage. papa and police are working with the new zealand authorities in a bid to negotiate his cipher lease up up in the military of police already. we will not back down wherever they are, but the safety of a human being is more important. that's the highest low. so his safety is our priority ending in $961.00, but indonesia to controlled 2 years later, independent fighter, the armed wing, the free population, an avowed to fight and to the territory games, freedom from indonesia, island in this region. around the secessionist, the independence movement has been long standing, but we have said a not taking it in the last 18 months. locals anticipating further violence,
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and now being evacuated from the area. i met with dr. sarah class algebra or people in new zealand to grapple with the aftermath of a devastating cycling that the killed 5 people clean up and recovery efforts are underway and gets bored. and hawkes bay on north island. so i'm gabrielle, cause catastrophic flooding, landslides and damage homes on monday. well, the 3000 people were displace government says a disaster is the country's worst. in decades, hundreds of people of retired people in china, protesting against major cuts to the medical benefits gathered in whoo, han, and nor the northeastern city of delhi. and it is the latest unrest since nation. my protest against cuba, $900.00 restrictions were held last year. the provincial authorities reducing medical expense claims by more than one half events are being held this week in north korea to mark the birth date of former leader kim jong il is destined 2012
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led kim john to lead to control into taking over. now the recent appearance of kim's daughters fuel speculation about a possible future succession from abroad reports from so kim du a was 1st introduced to the world accompanying her father, kim jung, and as a miss lawrence last november. but it was this appearance that a military parade in pyongyang last week that has further fuel speculations about her being groomed as a future leader. kim's beloved daughter says, the commentator who later describes her as the respected daughter, unusual, perhaps in such a patriarchal society do is the 2nd female to be linked to power. kim jungle insist yo john came to prominence during the summit, diplomacy of recent years taped as a possible successor in the event of her brother's demise. by introducing his
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daughter now and list say came, could be trying to avoid his own experience of having power thrust upon him. when the health of his father, kim jung, il suddenly declined, can join you after 2008, give joan and had to learn how to lead state affairs very quickly and went through a difficult period building his power base. this week, the birth date of kim jong il is being marked just one of many anniversaries in a national calendar dominated by the one kim family. such a her read the 3 hierarchy now 3 generations old and seemingly preparing for a 4th is unheard of in the communist world. but it came into being more by chance than by design. north korea founder song came to power after world war 2, as one of a group of leaders that he has to sweep away to ultimately establish the kim family, dentistry, or coven. unlike other social the systems. after removing his opponent,
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there was no 1st to stop this, her detroit succession, the physical likeness of the current leader, to the young, kim il sung, is said to have cemented the grandson's hold on power. just as the similarity with his daughter now seemingly helped confirm her position as repairing of the bride al jazeera. so i still had here now 0. the world health organization increases health surveillance in equitorial guinea offline and fish disease reporting. and we me to reenter refugees who have made the treacherous journey to escape persecution. minima spoke out to real madrid, keeping their title hoops along. mentally gushing is coming out of ah
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hello, there are science is some warmer weather. coming in to southern parts of europe over the next couple of days till a little bit of cloud. they're just around the black sea. northern parts of the kia could still see a little bit of snow, but temperatures will ease up as we go on through the next couple of days for central airs. if you have high pressure still in charge here. so quiet and dry, good deal of pleasant sunshine coming through once in the alley morning mr. fog clears for that is the case to the central pos, but up towards the north west. we do have bands of cloud and rain weather systems rolling in. so some wet weather coming in across england and wells all and seeing some heavy rain, some brisk winds as well. blustery showers rolling across northern ireland to that western side of scott. and his all makes his way into scandinavia. tended to snow as it pushes across into a good part of norway over the next couple days as a snow down towards northern parts of the care. 2 degrees celsius in anc rabbit. getting up to around 7 celsius on friday by the week. and we should be knocking up
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into double figures. i'm pleased to say when windy weather continues to make his way across scandinavia, mo, blustery showers across the western side of europe. not too bad at all across much spain. to put it to the b teens. here for the south got some rather wet weather into a good part of morocco easing into west now tyria. ah, ah, ah ah.
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we town the untold story. ah, we speak when others done. ah, we cover all sides. no matter where it takes us. a maya. and power in pasha. we tell your stories. we are your voice, your news, your net al jazeera, hulu. ah again you're watching out 0 reminder about top stories is our syrian refugees and turkey are trying to head following the opening of border crossing spots. despite
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the devastation in syria after last week's earthquakes, millions fled to the neighboring country during serious 12 years civil war. affairs growing that diseases may spread and syria is people's struggle to survive low temperatures. well, telephone conversation says it's concerned about the health situation in the region is military and is taking a to regions cut off cincy earthquakes. people are in need of shelter, food or certain clothing. and some is done now. reports teams are facing a challenging task in delivering to remote areas. a busy military control room received a request for help from aries, more numerous than the pen to write them all down with the military decide to send a helicopter to carry aid out to a shot. now. so it's one of the many earthquake villages high up in the mountains of a remote part of southern tortilla. in no time the chop is ready. the aid is loaded
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on drinks, food and clothes, amongst other things. they don't want all journey or one hour, 10 minutes, the pilot that everybody is hopeful. when we get that, we will find no value with people alive and able to help unload and get to help people who needed the most. soon the mountains appear, the temperature drops and every peak is covered in snow. this does not look like an easy place to lose even if you haven't suffered devastating earthquake. i think what landing looks like off the top of a very c mountain here all down. but again, we're on the ground now. the military on taking the bottom, we're looking at the pool where what happens to the villages?
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what happens to the people living here we all people that made it shaking in a dream. taking the day we desperately wanted to get out and ask the villages what they've experienced. whether there are still people trapped under the rubble and how they've survived. but the army asked us to stay on the chopper and we didn't want to get in the way of saving lives. i wrote a generating file road below. you know, that good thing is ready and emotionally hall moment because i want to get out to those people like me, looks like a grandfather in so many young children. well, we have to go. we have to go. it's heartbreaking. look down and see these kids that we fly, all waving out of it won't situation the holiday going to i was gonna say,
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what situation do they go home to? i'm not sure how much of a home they have left. it was a difficult flight back. thinking of those left on the top of mountains sit on the ground, we witnessed the cycle of loading aid and delivering duncan again. thermal of nature, nature conspire against people. earthquakes of what the aid effort has let some like through the very dark clouds horizon semi se, down into like air base to the key, you know, not jurors. president how many bahati has approved a 60 day extension for people to turn in old bank? so part of the plan to replace the country's currency, the narrow with redesigned notes, the old currency was supposed to be replaced by saturday, but some bank failed to hand out enough money triggered widespread protests. nobody dresses more now from one degree in nigeria. president obama. how do you speak
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interpreted widely as a different attempt to start a pool grown writers over the past few days. we've seen angry protest just on the speech of nigeria. angry about the shortage of new and i don't know it's like relation as well as using some commercial sub, to swap. the old kind of is when you watch, at least in social media, we've seen one bank set on fire by angry customers who say the officials in the bank of refuse to open up their bank to offer services to them to exchange their current says, now over the last few months when this currency swap, they came into effect. we've seen a lot of disruption to the economy. the economy is dependent on the informal factor, 60, to 65 percent of the economy is run by this particular sector. and this is a country while 40 percent of the population and bank in fact now get us one of the top 5. i'm bank campers, in the war with large population not having access to financial services,
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financial services, offered by the bank. now the new moon, if such that only the old 200 and i don't know if legal tender they 501000 not. no, we don't accept it. at the central bank offices across the country, i even have that any customer taking huge amount of money to buy, to swap for the new currency. when have to explain how we got the money in the possibly. now the world health organization is monitoring the 1st recorded outbreak of the mob virus and equitorial guinea. at least 9 people have died. marburg is considered to be as infectious as a bowler and causes severe fever, bleeding and organ feta tape, so we can speak to or well tomatti who's religious with redeemer university joins live now from lagos. welcome to the program. so this is highly infectious. similar to a bonus, but actually it's a different disease. is that right?
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so the sound is for all right, let me just try again. i'm hoping you might be able to hear me now. i just could you tell us more about this my disease, please. thank you very much. sure. and you said you yeah, we've clearly got problems with the are well, it's more i will try and get him back and explore more about this disease. now malory is battling, as well as color outbreak on record more than 1000 people have died during the past year. the government declared the disease and national disaster in december. but health workers are struggling with large numbers of patients. catherine, so as the details, this man has symptoms of a disease that has been declared a national disaster in malawi his week and has been brought to this health center in blan tire to be treated for clara. crispin lever brought his sick wife
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here several days ago, and in time she's now recovering. i really am by the races over more than cassandra, woody. when i return home, i will insist on my family's hygiene. my wife must cover food properly for food must be well cooked. i will see twitter that they have soap at home for daily hand washing more than 1000 people have died in malawi in the last one year. more or coming to facilities like this to get help with the health work is he has said this outbreak of clara is a crisis. the mortality is habitually just because we are admitting our trista acton patients per day. so compared to previous was people in the villages in communities. they have to understand that color is still here, and they have to come to hospital elia so that they should minimize and also reduce pressure to those people that are waking in the hospital. the outbreak started in
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march during the rainy season and has spread to different parts of the country. health officials have struggled to vaccinate everyone. oral vaccines have run out, is due at high risk. from the corridor went by the numbers of was less likely going down a but still we are getting over 500. this is on a daily basis which is what is some glass and even very number of people were. 5 dying on a daily basis, you get maybe 1015, but they would just do their wedding for their for as such, outbreak have been often in malawi, but this is the was on record. the disease is spread by contaminated food, water, and pool high gin. while it is easy to treat and treated, it can kill within hours. health workers are warning people about the importance of keeping their homes, neighborhoods, and markets clean,
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and are hoping that message gets across. catherine soy al jazeera, at least 73 people trying to reach europe are missing and presumed dead following the shipwreck of the libyan coast. on tuesday, the un migration agency says the boat was carrying 80 people when it left casara out a year earlier that day. as 7 survivors were taking the hospital in critical condition, at least 130 migrants of di trying to cross the central mediterranean mediterranean so far this year. now an increasing number of were injured refugees from ma'am are making a dangerous journey by seeds rich south east asia. hundreds of arrived in india, indonesia is at northern most province of arch in recent months. jessica washington report enough from jakarta in our j. northern indonesia. hundreds of for him over he cheese have found shelter in the government building close to the coast safe at last after dangerous journey to get to southeast asia. 3rd and gone live
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out of gas out a 3rd, a hanover on the boat. we didn't have food, water or medicine, we felt like we were dead. alright, interested, and i heard that a child died on the boat. so i sal since he left bangladesh after around 6 years in a crowded and impoverished camp. others say they boarded the boat, thinking of their children and their, their mother. she as she that we wanted to go to malaysia, but our boat ran out of gas and we ended up in indonesia. you had a we were searching for a place where we could find peace and give our children education. many told al jazeera about the joy they felt in their feet, touched the ground for the 1st time in almost a month for gerardo. did he thought it might be from the we are very grateful to the indonesian government and people for providing us with medical treatment and a safe place to stay at elac. indonesia hosts around $13000.00 refugees. they don't have any rights to employment residency or citizenship here. or not, belinda,
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we don't want to stay here that we want to leave this place. and our plan is to live freely and to attain nationality. according to the international organization for migration, more than 3000 ringo arrived in the region in 2020, to an increase of almost 300 percent. on the previous year. this year, several boats with hundreds of or hanging people have arrived in into the jakarta has calls on southeast asian countries to work together to address the crisis, including cooperation on rescues. as seen, human rights groups say indonesia must lead the regional block to a solution as then should not just discuss this as a, as a diplomatic level. but more importantly, taking more concrete steps to make sure that the root cause is being address indonesia. f a chair has to discuss this with all us in government in the region to define
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a solution on how to best approach the flux of refugee from from men mar. for now this group says they are happy, the worst is over for then. now they a wondering what comes next that we want to laugh and live together in peace. we just want a place where we can be happy. after years of trauma and uncertainty, she does says she's unsure with a such a place exists. jessica washington aren't 0 to cancer. at least one person has been killed and 3 injured in the shooting at a shopping man in the us state of texas. it happened in the city of el paso. please say one person is in custody. they're looking for another they say, could be linked to the attack. a u. s. court has sentence a man to life without parole for killing 10 people last year and a racially motivated mass shooting. it's a 19 year old, peyton, gender and targeted african americans at a supermarket in buffalo in the state of new york. it was one of the worst in
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a series of mass shootings that have led to increased cause for more gun controls. forensic experts have concluded the chile and poets and nobel laureate pabo no ruder, died of poisoning nearly 50 years ago. a family member says high levels of talks in had been administered to him. router was officially declared to have died from prostate cancer threats both as this report he was, she lives most renowned offer and over laureate love poems are known around the world. the official story says palo needed with that died on september 23rd of 1973 of prostate cancer in a hospital in san diego. but his nephew, for ladies effect to prove the official stories false. he says he's uncle was killed for political reasons or by the ending in 2017. a panel of experts concluded that he did not die of cancer,
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but they found large quantities of clostridium botulinum, which is a lethal bacteria. that is what his remains had when his body was exuberant. in september, 11th 1973 left wing precedence in the was forced out of office by right when members of the military lead by dictator, out of the presidential palace was bombarding spider jets and tense as in the who had been in office for almost 3 years. killed himself, made all that with a member of the communist party, and for many his life was at risk, etc. so the problem with that was ready to go in exile after the cou dictatorship had already killed presidents about dora and the single victim. and the only person who could unify the opposition and the left was nevada. he had been a presidential candidate, a senator and ambassador, and the winner of the nobel prize. they couldn't leave him alive. 10 years ago,
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a chilean judge ordered the exclamation of natal that remains following claims way . the driver who set the point was injected with poison in the hospital where he was being treated samples were sent to forensic laboratories around the world. and in 2015, the julian government acknowledged that a 3rd party could have been involved in his death. now the report carried out by a panel of experts has been presented to julius to dish sherry to continue with the investigation on whether natal that was killed by chilean state agents and was also a victim of a dictatorship that killed thousands of people in the country. the result could finally help solve a mystery that has haunted chiller for decades. base, i will, i'll just see to italy's former prime minister silvio berlusconi has been acquitted of charges of bribing witnesses to lie about so called book
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a book of parties. tele media cleaned the term to describe it, but it's going to lead sex parties. verdict through a court in milan came off to a 6 year trial study was accused of paying young female guests and others to give full testimonies about the allegations being carried 19 primed amec in russia's invasion of ukraine has effected the global food supply chain. farmers being forced to adapt as challenges are expected to continue in the future. reynolds reports now from the well diaper financial expo in california. the expo features giant tractors and combined harvesters and multi $1000000000.00 corporations that manufacture all sorts of farming equipment. not to mention a full line of brush shredders, new technologies are changing how farming is done, where i really add the cost while the revolution in agricultural technology and that's has a lot of implications for food and food production. this tractor is fully electric,
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carries multiple cameras and sensors and gathers data. a fleet of them can be operated autonomously without drivers, by a single farmer acting as a controller. farmers are essentially figuring out how to feed the was growing population at a time and they have less resources. so we need to use less of these resources, but yet still produce more food than our before. so that is the challenge we all have, and that's where technology has a role to play. and technology based formerly believe can bridge that gap. the challenge to global agriculture is immense. right now there are 8000000000 people on earth, 345000000 of whom are considered acutely food insecure. by mid century, the population will grow to about 10000000000. and global warming is threatening crop yields a nasa study projects. world mays production will drop nearly a quarter by 2100 due to global heating the u. s. world food organization estimates
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that by 2050 the world will have to increase its food production by 70 percent in order to feed an ever growing population. one way to close the gap is to farm and consume with less waste. right? now if we were to take away food waste and food losses, we would ride away, increase or foot production by about 30 percent. increased production, better technology, less waste, a merger of technology and farming to feed a hungry planet. rob reynolds al jazeera to larry california. to add here on al jazeera, we goes full tommy, up a dramatic nights as the flight to be number one, he's up for many options. ah
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. with full.
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ah ah. all right, let's get on to the sports and bunch. the city of claimed a major win as they looked to retain that premier league title, they beat all tribals, all small at the m r at stadium. so how magic as the action in those to my just to move this one. and there was the biggest match of the premier leaks these in a flow fall igloo, top 2 teams off. manchester city faced often a title, a showdown filled with goals and a fair share of drama. post sauce lou, top the table going into this match as they look for their 1st li crowns is 2004, with the 1st team to buckle on the pressure and on the back pump
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bye to nero. tommy each opened the door for kevin bruno to put raining champions. manchester city ahead to ensure the gunners hit back though ford eddie and catch a winning a penalty. thanks to a late challenge, my man city keeper edison should already over hello remember. because i could set up and deliver to these to make it one all but despite squandering the lead, did he didn't lose focus. they pushed hard in the 2nd half and thought they'd want a penalty of the brazilian defend gabrielle brought down norwegian star earling holland. but via cancelled out for 5 years that didn't deter pet guardiola teams with more sloppy play by gabrielle helping man city make it to one england international jack relish with the gold trailers wager.
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then with less than 10 minutes to go to holland, finally got on the score sheep, his strike ceiling at $31.00 and sending city top of the table and go difference having played one game more than their opponents with qualities. then the impact of how the way they play the open it has to adapt. what they're doing is there still there. they have long im latches. i consider they are double delay. if you leave 3 goes away the way we did just give them the game. and especially when you dump with us well after them, their chances are be chances that we had a way then day their margin for error with emmys almost 0. nothing. manchester said he were at one stage 8 points behind off know they now however very much look like the t to be so hail malice, al jazeera maker, real madrid have trimmed the barcelona as it lead at the top of la lea, get to 8 points of blankets were up against l. j to find themselves bottom of the
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table, you're golden scored in a fine fashion. take a look at this from mocker, since you. oh, yes i got, i met ben zimmer doubled and tripled the lead with a couple of penalties. we all went on twin for now the world championships and by slow which is a combination of cross country skiing and rifle marksmanship taking place in germany. the sport has its roots in scandinavia. the north of sweden even has high schools dedicated by a flock. the students are able to combine their studies with their dreams of world and olympic. glory, worries reports now from awesome. these youngsters in the north of sweden being taught to be the winter sports of the future. this is just an average morning lesson at their high school in arson, one of many in sweden, the time to give it students by academic and athletic success. in this case in the
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sport of by offline. it's very important because you can train on the morning and then you can focus on school or on the afternoon flyer in between to be in the olympic games and the word temperature. i'm in the 3 the championships, i have heard become a battalion hour and i'm starting to climb away, but they are a long way to go. the students have the swedish national team for company as they train their cross country skiing and rifle shooting before returning to classes in spanish or law at young clumsy nauseum. high school west where they can also get their ski shop and by their fellow students next day expect sharpening their skills in one of the most uniquely demanding winter sports. now one of the challenges with bath one is after a long birth thing, spring on skis. the athlete then needs to slow down their pulse and i breath enough to make 5 very accurate shots with a rifle. otherwise,
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all the effort is for nothing. i did, i day up the other end of the python skills spectrum. sweden is doing very well. thanks to olympic champions, sebastian, some your son and the earl berry sisters, elvira and hannah, who won gold at the world championships and germany on wednesday. it means by off on clubs like tool us the biggest can sweden now have a waiting list for youngsters wanting to join the o. d really? he'll be. oh it, it's very strenuous. that's why i love it and not have conditioning. my f one has its roots in norwegian mobile infantry regiments, later adopted by finland during the winter war against russia some 84 years ago. those military uses are very much in the past here. but learning from tradition means that the metals keep on coming back to scandinavia. horace out his era as to son, sweden, american world, number 6, echo gulf is
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a through to the quarter finals of the country open window hall. she faced a trough test of her title credentials on wednesday against 2 times wimbledon. when a gaming her, a b check is a former champion in doha too, would go for managed to get the job done 6376, and let it remain the clock for this news. our rob will be here a couple minutes with another. hover will seal it ah ah, and in the laboratory of the dentist pharmacy in paris, medicines have being prepared. in this case it's the common antibiotic amoxicillin
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deonna here says since people stopped wearing mosques, they are catching more infections again. so the demand for simple medication is higher and the major pharmaceutical companies can not to keep. the problem is not just affecting simple pain killers and antibiotics across the continent. the european medicines agency says currently, 13 key drugs are in short supply. the shortage of medicine applies across europe at this berlin pharmacy staff are increasingly having to find alternative trucks to those doctors and prescribed in order to help their patients. i'm very quickly, we have a lot more work to do to supply the population with medicine. so far we have still somehow found the solution for people, but we often had to improvise. so sometimes we release and not the active ingredient will strongly, it was prescribed and theme had to adjust the dice fridge. in november 2020 austrian security service is carried out operation lock,
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so against dozens of muslims. i opened a sort of machine gun pointed with my head, but a court found the race on no fault. and now charges have been dropped against one of the accused. one, the reason why they are doing this is because they want to intimidate antiterrorist measure or discrimination. austria operation looks all on algebra. tough times the man tough question. what exactly are you asking for you? what troops on the ground? rigorous debate we challenge conventional with and demand the truth upfront with me, mark lamond hill, what al jazeera, ah, i struggled to help the sick and injured affairs medical facilities in no 4, so you are close to collapse following last week south wakes ah.

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