tv News Al Jazeera February 22, 2023 9:00pm-10:01pm AST
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of 2060 a terrible natural disaster on the story that needs to be told from the hall of the affected area to be then to tell the people story was very important at the time. for the past year, al jazeera, his correspondence have reported on every aspect of the far reaching consequences of russia's invasion of ukraine. tom's fit by street fighting to the destruction of townsend and the light of records from the political maneuvering and global repercussions. the devastating impact on the lives of ordinary people. on both sides of the frontline, the bomb shelters, the seats of power and the reality of the ground from moscow care brushing, controlled on by and beyond, will continue to deliver in depth, unbiased personal reporting. so you get the full story on al jazeera. ah
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ah, hello, i'm tom mccrae. this is the news. how alive from tom ha! coming up in the next 60 minutes. at least 10 palestinians are killed and 100 injured in a ride by israeli troops in the occupied whist bank. article 5 is a sacred commitment where all the fan, literally every inch of native show of solidarity in warsaw as president body needs . eastern european nato leaders. oh, yeah. a rallying cry in moscow as prison who's and says russia is fighting for its historic lands, the new crane and an astronomical discovery. scientists get
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a glimpse of huge galaxies that died back to a cosmic dorm. and on pete estimate with your sport, manchester cities quest for affirmative. a champions league title continues later when they faced all be light seeks, while liverpool seems oh, but dash softer. they were thrashed by rail madrid. who are now within sight of the call to find ah, we begin this utah with violence in the occupied whist. bank. israeli forces have shot and killed at least 10 palestinians and a ride in the city of nablus. more than 100 palestinians have been injured. nearly a 1000 have been detained and $61.00 killed since the start of the year. need. abraham has this update from the house that was righted by israeli forces before these really forces came in. a witness told us that one of the soldiers was wearing
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palestinian clothes as if he was a bedouin waiting ahead, scar a fur coat, and she saw him hiding. so this is a tactic that these ready forces use whereby they use these special forces waiting to spinning flu look like the palestinians and enter the city is really forces admitted that it's killed 3 palestinians if they call them suspects. they say they're accused of committing shootings against israeli soldiers and is ready target. but we're talking about 10. tell us where you can hear the gunshot of palestinians, ag palestinians who are naming the loved ones to rest. they say that this rule doesn't even respect those who are going about their daily lives. people who are telling us that one of those who had killed a 72 year old was going to buy bread from the market. there it happened. i said am,
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which is unusual for his grades that usually happen the early hours of the morning . so it's a tense situation here. people are mourning the death. they say that israel can do and get away with what it's getting away with because of uni, maria, and the good he is senior palestine correspondent at the news websites monday with she explains why it's rarely forces have been targeting nablus cur, the really military, the israeli government, nablus, the old city and specific as well as janine refugee camp, is where the concentration of armed resistance has been growing and rising. even though it is expanding to other areas of the west bank. the line then food and the janine brigade out of junior refugee camp, continues to be the epi sensor of palestinian armed resistance. a new use groups
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fighting which is why they've become a target. the palestinian authority has released the letters of condemnation against the military incursion happening on nablus. but we also need to recall that last year the palestinian authority had arrested to palestinian under the suspicion of being parts of the line than group. so that the palestinian authority is doing what it does best, which is symbolic statements as an official body. but in terms of protection of palestinians that does not exist right now. the assaults on nablus today was through not just the military. it was also really intelligence groups and undercover officers from the inside being unit. and these are civilian intelligence . the are intelligence agents that dresses civilians, arab civilians, and specific to target and assassinate palestinians. we've got to go now to sorrow hot out and with jerusalem. and sarah, what is israel's new file? right government saying about all this,
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if they responded they have told me never nice a statement saying that the reason why they were in nablus and carried out this raid was to arrest 3 palestinians all in their twenties. one of them they said, was she one of the ringleaders for the lions den and the alms group that's in that area. now they said that they went in and all them to give up their arms, but they didn't. and that's why it resulted in some fighting with the firing from both sides and eventually all 3 were killed. of course we haven't really heard a response when we did awesome about the 60 something year old man and any of the other civilians that were targets it or within what happened as the were still to hear from that. now this is the time where israel is saying that it's raised, it's a lot, it's a lot to some high, a le, expecting that potentially there could be more attacks. they said that they killed
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who wanted poor killing a security, a sergeant rather back in october. and they said that they had planned further attacks. we've already had 3 that's been carried out by palestinians targeting israelis. but i just want to give you a sense of how tensions are high this year. last year was a difficult as it was. but in terms of the numbers, we had 171 palestinians killed in occupied west bank that was last year. and in less than the 1st 2 months, that's the time that the new israeli right when government has come into power, we've had $61.00 step. so that just gives you an indication of where the government is heading with its policies, with its fast track measures against the palestinians, and a lot of the reforms that it's trying to during including your dish or on which of course you have a question on the policy in those occupied territory. okay, thank you so much. that is not
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a hot up for us in wisc jerusalem. you in secretary general antonia good, cherish address the escalation at a security council meeting in new york saying the situation in the occupied west bank is at its most combustible and years deadly cycles of violence keep exhilarating, functions are sky high and the peace process remains stalled. situation, jerusalem, i'll goods is becoming more fragile amidst provocations, alexa violence, either they're all the only sites it thread, the aides is the ability across the region and beyond. the position of united nations is clears the startles of jerusalem, cannot be altered by unilateral excellence from the palestinian people that they want. the end of these massacres. they want the end of occupation. they want the end of a, of this, these attacks against them. they want international protection,
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they want the implementation of security council resolutions and that report of the secretary general, which was welcomed by the general assembly in expanding existing mechanisms for protection. oh, she hover tansy, joins me now from the united nations and she had of a c considerable concern for many the at the you when around these rights what, what else has been said one side of the secretary general that i was speaking of. what was a pre arranged meeting? it was the opening session of the committee on the exercise of the inalienable rights of the palestinian people, which happened to be schedule this morning in new york. that's where the secretary made those comments. and that's where the palestinian ambassador expressed his concern to the secretary journal. now what we've had since them from the palestinian ambassador is a, during that meeting, he received a phone call from the palestinian leadership and ramallah, who based,
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who told him to escalate things to get things to the attention of the un security council itself. upholstered ambassador says he's had a meeting with the current chair or the president of the security council, the maltese ambassadors drafting a letter to the security council in order to get the security council to act on the legacy israeli incursions and to as, as is, are called for and previous security council resolutions to get some sort of international presence in the occupied territories to protect the palestinians from both israeli and settler violence. and that mechanism is, or that there's negotiations and consultations without underway from the palestinian side in an attempt to bring this to the attention of the security council in the mean time and 45 minutes. also, there is scheduled to be a meeting of the arab ambassadors at the un, including the u. e, which at which is currently sitting on the un security council. so they would,
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they'll be trying to figure out that next me, we have to remember this latest violence took place just 2 days after the united states convinced the palestinians out of the u. a to drop a demand for a legally binding un security council resolution on israeli actions in the occupied territories. and in return, they were told the us had got a guarantee from the israelis of 6 months of no unilateral actions to exacerbate tensions. it was reported including a reduction in milk incursions into the occupied territories, including no more announcements of settlement activity. and this morning with hearing there is going to be there has been more settlement announcements and we have this latest violence. so clearly this also slap in the face for the u. s. administration of the girl as a bend over backwards to please a bedroom at a knock. netanyahu once again answered clearly, now the u. e and the other arab abaz's regret, well, what to do next? monday, thank you so much. that is as she have returns for us at the united nations,
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ah, russian president vladimir putin has addressed a crowd at a concert in moscow. head of the defender of the fatherland day. he said the whole country was behind the military campaign in ukraine. he would no bumper switzerland to day. we are gathered here to celebrate defender of the fatherland day. but i know that as we speak here, there is a battle going on on our historic borders for our people. these are brave heroes, if we are proud of them, none. and let us give them 3 cheers. disney. ha! when you knew the whole country supports them, making the whole country defenders of the fatherland. earlier on wednesday, let me put in mid china's top diplomat wang ye,
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a. some have been job aid reports from moscow. rock solid is how china's top diplomat describe the relationship between bridging and moscow. in his meeting with the russian president, one you said the ties between the 2 nations, but not directed against anyone, but won't accept pressure from any country as well too. we have always maintained the strategic focus and adhere to the general direction of building a multi polar world, resolutely opposed any unilateral and heck ammonia actions and safe guarded our respective sovereignty, security and development interests. a day after the russian and american presidents made speeches, the head of the anniversary of the war with ukraine. vladimir putin told china the ties extend beyond diplomacy. without goodness, we cooperated many areas in the humanitarian sphere and international organizations, including the united nations. the security council of which we are permanent members of bricks, the shanghai cooperation organization. and of course, we're waiting for the chairman of the people's republic of china to visit russia. china wants to promote its beast than to bring the warring sides in ukraine to the
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negotiating table, but with its deep rooted cooperation with russia, it's not widely seen as a neutral arbiter. china has a number of joint infrastructure projects with russia that most chinese investment in the resource rich far east region rest in sanctions mean, china is imports of russian oil. natural gas and goods have become more lucrative in south africa, russia and china are taking part in a 3 nation military exercise corporation like that is a cause for concern for the need to a military alliance back in ukraine. but being has rejected warning to refrain from providing lisa military aid and accused us of fueling the war by sending weapons to keep as best and sanctions continued to pile on russia. it's looking east, but china as its largest trading partner, president vladimir putin expects bilateral trade to balloon over $200000000000.00. and the board in ukraine goes on. russia is poised to build new alliances and forge
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old ones, so that it can avoid international isolation. some a majority of era, moscow which are biden, has told the leaders of nato's 9 eastern european members that they form quote, the front line of our collective defense. the us president was joined at the booker as 9 summers and war saw by the nato secretary general, the talks focusing on the war in ukraine. today, as we approached the, when you're anniversary of russia's further invasion, it's even more important. we continue to stand again. and i think this is proof of this how strongly we fail. that's why i wanted to meet all of you in person here today. as natives, eastern plank. you're the front lines of our collector defense. and you know, better than anyone. what's at stake in this conflict? ellen fisher has more from the polish capital. that's the motorcade leaving joe biden is on his way to the airport to head back to washington dc. after what you'll
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consider a fairly successful 3 day trip to this part of europe, of course, they heavy and symbolism with the trip to keep on monday. i kept under wraps for such a long time. and then of course the walk through the streets of keys with loading ears, landscape the physical embodiment of the, the moral support the joe biden has been given the ukraine, the in, in leader and ukraine over the last year. and then it was here to pull in to make what he regarded was a significant speech. many of the things we've had before, but he added some new passion because of course he, he'd been to keith. he'd been to see 1st hand what it was like in the capital city that has been i under attack for the last year or so. and then here i with the bucharest 9, a group that was formed back in 2015 after the russian invasion of crimea, those of the frontline states for nato, the ones closest to the russian border, and those who feel most at risk by any russian aggression and he came here,
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he wanted to speak to them to say, look, thank you for your support, and thank you for being those frontline nations. he also wanted to find out from them how they felt about how the war was going in and how it should progress. he, of course, is doing all this against the backdrop of perhaps growing uneasiness about the, the state of the war. the number of countries are seeing this as a drain on the resources, but joe biden has put this in very stark terms. he sees this is a challenge to democracy, not just in europe, but around the world and says that the united states is in this for the long haul. even though for many countries, the see this as a war which at the moment seemingly has no end in sight. there's plenty more hid on this new sal including shimmy ma begum, whose british citizenship is cancelled adjoining iso, loses her battle to have it reinstated. and the top seed on trade with live rules back from 3 match points down to reach the quarter finals and casa peter will have all the support coming up.
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ah, m a u n. delegation has visited sel can and serious ripple held north to assess the damage caused by the earthquakes. the team is trying to establish what the primary needs are in the area. local people struggling with the aftermath have criticized delays in receiving. i'd even after a deal that opened 2 additional border crossings, you wrestle said i met some survivors in the worst hit syrian town of gender us. and in these people are trying to find whatever is left in their destroyed homes. this rubble was, was up to where a zack hassan's house. now he fears he may even lose this if, if he has to find the title, murphy. but he had this other. willoughby did a felony. no one helped us, not a ghost excavators on machines by the state,
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under the rubber for days, and we lost so much. now i have to find the title deed to prove this was my home. jim doris with a population of 18000 people, was the worst he had town in north mysteria from 2 earthquakes struck earlier this month. the devastation is absolute. more than a 1000 buildings here had either collapsed or been heavily damaged. hundreds of people died and thousands were injured. the survivors are now trying to cop in this isolated rebel held area, they can only rely on international how many students here are served only one meal at day, and many receive even less. they say they don't receive enough international aid, and it is poorly organized. he les leslie, a man has lost dozens of relatives and france. she says her family has been
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displaced several times, but i know it was rainy and cold. after saying 8 stays on the street, we got this tent, but it's not for winter. it's tiny. kids can't sleep during the night because of the cold. i want nothing. just the proper tent for my kids. the impact of the earthquakes left many families chattered here. they faced as bad, the weight of loss and devastation, many scenes here town. they had survived the worst of the enduring to well the years of civil war and conflict. but now, in the aftermath of the earthquakes, they have lost even more their homes, possessions, and sense of security. more serious here have spent years running away from the war . they are only dream, a normal life. with them a satellite to do it, we fear that the earthquake will hit again any time we just set up
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a tent here and are living in it. nowhere is safe. now. people here say most lives were lost due to lack of more than rescue equipment. and now an absence of 8 food and shelter is worse than in their misery. restroom said that al jazeera gender, us, nor to syria. for those who have survived the earthquakes, the next challenge is surviving. the weeks and months ahead. rob mcbride met one family who have returned to anti kit and took here in the hope of slowly rebuilding their lives. how cold does it get here in the mornings and it's all it's cold every morning. just released from hospital having been rescued from the rubble of their home after 3 days. this is now home, a soupy zane, his wife and daughter, lena. and for them, a new routine. ha, fuller has the bible for over to day. we will cup. prepare a small breakfast in an hour, be 12 and we'll get lunch from over there. also water, medical supplies,
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them borrow soupy, walked us around a park. this become a small city of tents because i'm a hun, there's only one place for drinking water. he tells us there's another place to get water for washing and cleaning the hot meals. there are other lines for meals at the mobile food trucks beside the pot. and elaine, the fiddler, a place that serves tea and coffee, had set times all helping to break up monotonous days. and everywhere in this park, you're just a few meters away from excavators. working through piles of rubble here, razzles, where on all sides of this park, the clearing of rubble is well underway, generating huge amounts of dust. it's a process that will only intensified in the coming weeks and months. the family has been told they'll soon move to a container. that is at least a step up from the tent and helps laina focus on a future that could include a returned to school. i mean article, it's a very hard life in
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a tent. it's always so cold, but there's nowhere else for us to go. we're simply existing. but there's another reason her parents needed to return here. they're 3 younger children, old, died in the rebels, or the village, though if there were the lena, we stayed here for the memory of our children because they were here. i came to attack him to work, but we have nothing left life he has stopped when he was in an age and i got up on the 3 surviving family members now have only each other in a place of almost unbearable loss. of rob mcbride joins me now from a camp for displaced people in entire care as we heard and share your story. one family story of how they have been getting on that there are plenty of others that are living and incredibly tough conditions also aren't there. that's right, i mean experiencing these as same conditions, i think by all of their families here is evening, has
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a fallen hair at this tentative encampment. so things have wound down for another day, but they're still hanging in the air. this acrid mix of the dust from these mountains of rubble, just a short distance away. mixing as the day goes on with more and more smoke out of these would burn as the people use it to try to stay warm. but in the evening, people largely take to their tends to try to stay warm in some of the tents we've been visiting. the people do seem to have enough in the, in the way of the blankets and so on to keep warm. but night time temperatures had still fall very sharply. so it is not a very comfortable existence. and people here have the most basic of amenities, especially when it comes to things. i like her like hygiene facilities. they are very limited even basic toilet for example. so if you are concerned here, i think the resume increasing concern just about potential health problems for when you talk to people here, there is a real mixer of opinions from gratitude to anger. as some people will tell you that
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they were left after these earthquakes with it, simply the clothes they were standing up in. they had nothing so are they are extremely grateful for any aid that they have been given. any kind of help and assistance and aid has been arriving at tented encampments like this. you go to the next tent though they people will be angry that, well, why do they take so long for this a to come? why wasn't the government there? and government agencies there to help us. so there is a real mix looking further ahead of people as simply want to get, i think out of these said tense if they haven't got the resources, the relatives and other parts of to key a to move to. and they are stuck in this area. and their options are quite limited, they are waiting for help to get them possibly into a container or the use of containers or as a stop gap measure. and there are various can tell you the touch settlements being set up by the 1000 in this corner of the key. but people know that that is only a stop gap and that may be there for several months about that. so the search
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everyone knows for a permanent home could be years in the making. yes. certainly could. thank you so much. that's rob mcbride for us and, and talk. yeah. last we have been hearing, proper shelter is the most urgent needs. now it's quite survivors. teresa bow reports from a suddenly refer it took here while this is just one of the 11 provinces that have devastated that had been effected by the earthquakes that happened in this part of the country, the united nations is estimated at 1500000 homes have been lost, forcing thousands to be displaced, and many are living in this park right now where they have setups and tense where right now some people are trying to set up a fire. it's a very cold evening here. tonight, just a few minutes ago, we saw some humanitarian organizations distributing some poor people lining up quite desperate for a piece of bread for some beef,
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for some food to put into their stomach. but humanitarian are going to, patients are not totally concerned about food and shelter. when water, but also health care, which has become a major concern, especially among women. there are many, many women and children in a camp like this. when many of them are pregnant, many others have just delivered a baby in very, very difficult circumstances. the united nations was telling us that there's over 220000 women that could be giving birth in the next month, at least 25000 of them. it is expected that could happen in the next among many hospitals have been destroyed in this area. and it's a question about whether they be able to deliver those baby safety. so they have been distributing some ape and monitoring the situation. the law is for shem of bacon who joined. i sal as a teenager said, al appeal after you. k court said the government acted legally in taking away her citizenship. they can travel to syria when she was 15. she now says she was wrong
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and wants to return to prison. nadine baba reports she stuck in a camp in northern syria and she'll be there for some time yet. she me. baker dressed in black here was just 15 when she and 2 friends left london to join eyesore. the so called islamic state on wednesday, especially immigration court, ruled britain's decision back in 2019 to take away her citizenship was lawful. but it also said it was very possible she'd been the victim of trafficking in sexual exploitation, but we have no british will be content to national care since being located in a refugee camp in 2019 she me, my baby comes expressed regret for going to join i so i do because when i, when i,
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when i thought i was going to make a family and i didn't realize what they were, the things that they were doing. she married a fighter, they had 3 children, all of whom died, give us that she seemed want to leave, but was scared, she'd be caught and tortured as a spy. she's denied being involved in any acts of violence, but britons always insisted she could pose a security threat if she returns. what children are always mentally unwell when they are on a path to radicalization or if they are complicit and violent crime. yet when it's brown on black kids and specifically muslim kids, it is inherently about tara and security risk. whereas our responsibility as citizens as an estate to ensure that all children matter. human rights group reprieve says there are currently around $25.00 british family. still in camps in syria talkies they should be brought back to the u. k. to stand trial. all of our security allies like the u. s. canada, australia, france,
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belgium. they are we patrick beth, families from ne area. so show me my begum is not treated differently to a number of the other british families out, that they are all being cast out, rejected. none of them are getting due process. this is unlikely to be the end of shoot me, me a bagel fight to get her british citizenship. but. but even if the court had ruled in her favor, that wouldn't have necessarily seen her coming back to britain anytime soon. the u . k. government is welcome. the decision for now should be ma begum remains effectively stateless. far from her family and far from the justice. she says she's ready to face in britain. miti baba al jazeera london was still hid on al jazeera, popular trading route is disrupted after tensions between pakistan and afghanistan . inaction from the champions league as natalie take control of the last 16 tie against frankfort. that's coming up with peter in schools.
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ah, the still a bit, a winter left coming out of europe in the black sea and catching the northeast of turkey. no more that temps is generally speaking had been rising. so overnight, this is overnight temperatures. they are above freezing for the most part, except in the mountains by day. whilst sunnyside, obviously things feel little bit woman, that there are showers likely on the left and on coast and parts of norden egypt as well, but the wind isn't that strong. so the cloud will be disappointing rather than blow through, i suspect. and for the most part dancer, the, every producer is a story sunshine. now there is clearly some indication of sherry stuff in q 8 and maybe in some parts of the run temperature was on the web doe house forecast for thursday. east 30. haven't seen that for a while. it doesn't change very much on friday,
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either that or drop graft codes generally fine and drive it come south and is rather more active. this is tropical cyclone freddy, which during thursday will build up to its 2nd surge in strength. it's not huge when 210 kennedy's route are not that great as movie fairly quickly westwards. but it's heading towards the low latent coast of mozambique, which is where it's like to make contact during friday. once it's in mozambique, it's hanging around for 2 or 3 days. there will be a lot studying ah, the unmanned aerial vehicles. deadly but increasingly familiar tools on the modern battlefield with the conflict in ukraine, sparking the 1st full scale drone wall and pointing to a coming age of artificial intelligence. some autonomy, weapons, people and power examines the ethical questions around this proliferating technology. and whether it poses a dystopian threat,
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drones and the future of war on a jazeera when the news breaks, families still have oh, and they say they want to leave without getting their relic was out of the problem when people need to be heard. and the story told my dad and water every way we are left without anything to keep us warm. with exclusive interviews and in depth reports on the shelving doors here, a precious thought, a faint specimen al jazeera, has t's on the ground to bring you more award. winning documentaries and live nice . lou ah,
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you're watching al jazeera reminder of our top stories, the seller at least 10 palestinians had been shot and killed and n is riley right in the occupied west bank city of nablus, or the $100.00 were injured. nearly a 1000 palestinians have been detained in $61.00 killed since the start of the year . rock solid, the verdict of china's top diplomat on his country's relationship with china, rang his meetings. let me putin and moscow just 2 days before the end of his free of rushes, invasion of you cried and to abide in his underline the importance of knighthood. eastern flank at the summit of its eastern european members in warsaw, focused on the war. and you cry of thousands of trucks have come to a halt at a major border crossing between pakistan and afghanistan to talk him crossing has been closed since sunday evening, and gunfire was reported on monday. the provincial taliban official told a news agency that pakistan stop sick people from crossing for treatment. pakistan
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has not commented of some. balkan is a political insecurity, analyst base and pakistan. she says board closures have become common since the tele bonds take over in afghanistan. the 1st issue has been that since the takeover there have been an influx of new of hon, obviously refugees. both parties on doesn't even want to call them refugees. there are new libraries that have entered, boxed on enlarged numbers. 450000 of those of people have entered, boxed on on actual medical and other visas, but they're not ready to go back because obviously there is a downturn in comic down. there are security issues inside of one is on the change of a has really the stabilizer on, especially a lot of it's very hard with. so those people i have, and very recently before the issue right now that we're talking about today,
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very recently barks on embassy and back to sign for an office. issued notifications will stop. it's embassy from issuing even medical reasons and kind of put a would a lid on it because it was generally believed that these medical visa medical checkups that allow you to end of august on to go to hospital will being misused. so that's obviously creating problems for some of the genuine people who brought over, but a lot of them are let in. i'm not exactly clear what triggered this current issue, but it seems to be that the border closure this time was done from the confines, not the bucket. funny side, not every guy. from the migrants hoping to enter the us through the border with mexico us it to face new restrictions. people who arrived without seeking protection in the country they passed through will be denied asylum. and 2019 federal judge has blocked a similar mission by the trumpet ministration. let's take a closer look at what's being proposed. the plan would require adult asylum seekers
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to use an apple near funds to book a meeting with us officials. a failure to do so would make someone in eligible for asylum. once they did reach the border, they would then be quickly to ported. and the plan would come into effect on may. the 11th, just as coven era misses that allowed the us to send migrant back to mexico are set to expire. and rights groups have promised to tie the regulation off in court to prevent it from coming into a fix. well, joining us live from tucson, arizona is alex miller. she is director of the immigration justice campaign. thank you very much for being on this news. our 5th off, can you just give us an idea of the major issues that you see with this proposed plan? well, i mean to begin with just another sat in the face or a se, earth place so many other restrictions been the 2019 transit manny just mentioned. and 3 years at reception under i'm title $42.00 related to covered 90. anything
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that restricts access to asylum based on how you entered the united states or be somebody's island before or renee, is this wrong? technically, how would this work if it was actually put into place a minute? everyone's got it. does everyone that's run across the board actually have a phone to download the app and then what sort of delay could be a b, a for people being processed through that application? yes, it's bound to be incredibly complicated. p b, p one. the app that is currently being used to schedule exemptions to title party to was likely be the at that and use to schedule appointments for a lot of under the new measure. both of face, all sorts of different issues with it, whether it is lack of appointment, whether it is issues with diesel recognition, whether it is a literacy or language access issues, you shouldn't be required to use an application to gain access to
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a file. or if this was to go through, what would be the full lab, but for that, for the people that are trying to seek asylum in the u. s. i mean, it, it could mean that people who faced persecution and potentially torture in their countries of origin are returned to their countries of origin without having a fair she at speaking a file of in the united states. okay. i mean, everyone seems to agree that there is an issue with the border and something clearly needs to be done. so if not this, then what are you suggesting? so, you know, i'm here in arizona, i'm in a border state. i've been working at the border for many years now, and our communities have demonstrated time and time again. their willingness to welcome a deeper and refugee what we need is a real investment in the humanitarian infrastructure. there is required to support asylum seeker, both at the border and out their destination. you've been no real effort for the
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for. okay, so you, so you'd like to see the the borders just throwing open? no, that's not what i was saying at all. i think, you know, a, a real process where individuals are able to dial up at court or was or cross the border without inspection, render themselves to border patrol and say, i'm afraid to go home and then have a wheel process that they can go for it okay, i mean we've seen time and time again, the board is always a major election issue. i mean, do you feel that this is going to escalate with both of the major political parties not wanting to appear weak when it comes to the border? i think that's exactly right. it's a hot button issue. it's something that americans really care about is something that has been deeply politicized. and i think we're really playing to be the fear that a certain american we can, we can have a picture border and also have
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a viable and very silent system. it doesn't have to be a trade off. okay, thank you so much. we'll have to leave it there. thank you. we really appreciate your time on al jazeera, that is alex miller, the director of the immigration justice campaign in tucson, arizona. thank you. thank you. will seattle has become the 1st city in the us to ban discrimination based on cast those from the cities self, asian communities who backs the law. so people facing cath prejudice had few protections. le opponents argued existing anti discrimination laws with the fissions. the law allows us to speak, talk about things that are wrong without god is a fear of evaluation and people do not want to talk about it. so which is why we consider this is a really big woman. and i remember people from my community calling me slot like cross the they call me slowed like you are dirty,
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blurred. seattle is the 1st city in our lower u. s. ban inc. asbestos combination. i feel i am lucky to be in this place. and i'll walk thee is spokesperson ed and bid car international center a u. s. by civil rights organization. now this is the organization that helped draft the law. he joins us from bangalore. thank you very much for being on al jazeera festival. can you just give us more of an idea of what cast base discrimination is and just how wide spread it is in the us? look at cost based discrimination is very prevalent in the out here in india and, and the pins law as more and more indians are around in the us and other countries they people, especially about because we have the booley who went 1st on getting their cars with
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them and as the new immigrant from the lord god. so look us on migrating people. i know frank, a final wanted us. he's dad, cost groups that cost actually ations. and was that find out that you belong to? so hard a cost, then they kind of exclude you from, from their groups. there have been instances where people are even asking the cost in the interview itself in the, in the employment into when we conducted interviews with the, with the base supporters of the system. in which in case we got a lot of people who suffered the fastest to mission and we have heard a lot of this. the one is in the, in the seattle consider getting people are saying that better explicitly off the car. oh, i'm running on ok. i know it is, and once they find the cost out, once they find your cars,
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they exclude you from their social gatherings. they deny you the promotions they deny. do you know the projects and so on. okay. i mean, how difficult was it to get this law pushed through and, and do you think it goes far enough, or was it watered down in that process? ah, thankfully clothing watered on. it wasn't easy, but there have been games that were made in santa clara county and other places. the boss is the constitution law and he didn't succeed. but the american universities, the brand, i know, city, the city, the city and other in the cities. how linda lee, where did they introduce the cost banding, the cost distribution in the campuses, and that guy know they were the way we what we didn't really want to know the version, things like that. however, that has been a broad coalition of not only done with it but, but the enlightened, so carpet cost people who,
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how join all $150.00 plus are going to relate to in the us. how join we does, who ensure that this legislation, this ordinance is bought lots of academics, lots of you know, city professors, i'm that relates organizations wholeheartedly supported this ordinance. i mean that it has been agreed with the fall on the way. okay, we'll have to leave it there. thank you so much for your time. that is a r d and embedded international center spokesperson. thank you. thank you. well, plenty still a hit on al jazeera, including why is some think vegetables being rationed and you case supermarkets is just the tip of the iceberg. and some kind of moves coming up and forward as these white boulders break, the ice in the arctic circle. ah
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ah ah, several supermarket chains in the u. k. have begun to ration some fruits and vegetables as a result of disruption to the supply chain. severe with a has had harvests in spain and north africa. you guy, a guy reports, no tomatoes for sale here, or blueberries, and the dwindling options of fresh produce in this supermarket have not been missed by regular shoppers. left you some pendulum way too, which we have to might do with them for now. and to re comes back i but sometimes you go to the shore, they're going be only been on the ship and where there's availability would likely
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be paying a premium, especially for out of season for juice. the supermarket affected have said that these shortages are only meant to last for another few weeks, but they're a bigger questions as to what's behind the supply issues may need from which countries these supplies are coming from. and what are the climate issues that have been affecting them? 2022 was the 2nd hottest year on record in europe. heat waves and extreme temperature, and one of europe's biggest food produces spain. have many fewer available crops to harvest. the giant gas heated green houses that grow fresh produce in countries such as the netherlands have been affected by the huge rise in energy prices caused by the war in ukraine is climate change begins to bite. we will see these impacts on the u. case food supplies, but also on the u. k is hard pressed farmers who are already paying hundreds of millions, millions of pounds extra for fertilizers and for energy. and because of the price
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of gas and who are also seeing themselves exposed to the impacts of climate change light, last year's drought, and the u. k. face is one of a particular issue. most of the countries fruit and vegetables come from the european union. and britons exit from the block has meant extra costs and bureaucracy has added to the strain, especially the perishable goods. the solution food producing organizations say, is the government to give farmers more support, such as replacing high carbon fertilizes with low carbon alternatives. and focusing on ways to protect farms against the extremes and whether that become the new normal sonic imo al jazeera london l assigned to sports. here's peter tom. thank you so much matches the city continued requests were 1st champions the titling just over an hour's time. they are in germany to face or be leipzig, the sides made in the group stage last season with 30 winning 63 at home,
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but losing the away game to one city manager pet. guardiola may have left to the trophy twice while in charge of barcelona, but he says nothing he achieves in this competition will be enough for his critics . what had the feeling were to have done all of us for many years, whatever happened was going to fail. so whatever i'm do personally with the future without undisguised, i'm going to fail. nothing would be enough in return to happen to in to happen. so at the end of destiny is already writing a written and we do our beveled, our done, we have been close, sometimes, nonsense, and closer. the other match on wednesday sees inter milan host porter at the st. siro in the 1st lake of their last 16 tide in. so i have not reached the quarter finals of the champions league since 2011. and we hoping to inflict a 1st defeat on porthos since october. he le taste. we're like your father. this will need to use our heads because these games are played in a 180 minutes and the mindset makes
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a big difference. games of this level come with difficulties, but we must be good, overcoming them by playing together as a team. porto are a great side and none of their players absent from the game, not even for a 2nd. well, all over the teens, inaction will be hoping to avoid a making the same mistake says liverpool despite taking an early lead of a hold as rail madrid. it was the spaniards took a major step towards the quarter finals. david stokes rounds up tuesday's action. ah, liverpool went back to back games heading into this one and got off to a great start in what was a repeat of luscious final on a cheeky flick from darwin. nunez, getting them up and running inside for minute mistake from tba. courts were then allowed mohammed salad to double their advantage with less than a quarter of an hour gone. but it was all downhill from their vinicius junior pulled one back, and another go keeping. ebert gave the brazil international. a 2nd. allison the
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guilty party this time, vinicius, the youngest player, to school, to european, goes against liverpool, and failed. since a 19 year old johan croyt back in 1966 to the pitch. all square at half time, but rail struck quickly after the break ada military heading in lou camacho, which is cross to put the spanish side ahead during benjamin added another meaning is now schooled in 18 consecutive champions. the campaigns lever with leonor messy the all time record the slot. it was the 1st time liverpool, the conceded for in a european home game and it got worse. the cleanser must scored another to round up a 5 to win for i out like the 1st team in the competitions history to 10 a to go deficit into a 3 go when the tory all but over heading into the 2nd leg in spain. livable at now fail to win the last 7 games against royale who were chasing a record extending. 15th title. i think carlo thinks the case over. and i think it
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as well. in a moment. yeah, yeah. the game on tuesday. so natalie take control of that. i against frankfort. victor awesome, and put them ahead in germany with his 10th gold in his last 9 games. oh frankfurt. then had a man sent off before captain giovanni delorenzo finished up a great move to seal a 2 nil victory. ha napoli, a 15 points. claire in the italian league, and now head back to naples firmly on course to reach the champions league quarter finals for the 1st time. david stokes al jazeera australian open tennis champion arena sub olenka has reached the quarter finals of the dubai championships and dumped out the defending champion in the process the number to see to bounced back from losing the opening set to you lane off the panko at the latvian hu, one here last year was no match for sub olenka who completed a 26616. manuela eggers fiance cremains on
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coastal bounce back tennessee. title de la middle east dais altercation between other she has been given a walk over into the service line as well for her to find lieutenant harrell in the frisk of her withdrew from the student for the vall. illness, she also lost just one game on her way to beating ludmilla sampson over 6. 16 love in the last 16 when they faced the means to her is in cut a ride. now top seed andre rub live has booked these place in to the quarter finals . but thats rival tell on a quick spore. didn't make it easy for the russian taking the 1st fit. group little battery in the 2nd, but in the decider. he was 52 and 3 match points down. it will finally clenching the when on a tie break. his day in brazil, the fielding reo should have been carlos al cortes will resume his match with martez alvarez. on wednesday, my brain stopped him a game away from victory. how sweet i'll caress. it's just 590 points behind wool
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number one over chalk a bitch in the rankings. but the 22 time grand slam champion isn't worried about being overhauled by the 19 year old spaniard earlier this week, jock, which tied the record of 377 weeks at the top spot. but he still thinks refound the dull with whom he shays the record of 22 slam titles is his biggest rival. my main rival is phil laval ah, in all, even though alcaraz or you know is obvious, he is number 2, he was number one. he, what is one a slam he's arguably than the next biggest thing in our sports, or he's already there. ah, i just feel nadal it all is the rivalry when a dallas is something that is difficult to eliminate her just because someone is doing her great things in the last year and a half on a doll has been the biggest rival. and. busy probably real, remain the biggest rival i ever had in my in my career. england's wrinkled taste we
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could hold a james anderson has become the oldest bowler to be ranked world number one. the englishman has returned to top spot in the latest rankings. he is 40 years and 207 days old absence career has seen him a mass, 611, tast wickets in a remarkable career, spending more than 2 decades, and will finish with some great pictures. so me arctic circle a place called the york motto in sweden. some way quoted, every showing of a missile, navigating an ice obstacles, making it easy to break the ice on the course before and with images they dropped to around minus a few. i'll see you later. for most will says some. thank you very much, peter. well, a new report in the scientific journal nature says astronomers in the united states have seen evidence of distant galaxies that challenge our understanding of the early universe colon baker has more. these 6 red dots aren't supposed to
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exist, but nearly hidden deep in one of the james web space telescopes. first images, they're starting to reveal their secrets. they might be whole galaxies as large and mature as our own milky way. but that's a surprise, because they're being seen shortly after the dawn of the universe. and they should be much smaller and simpler. the 1st galaxies began in pools of a mysterious substance, dark matter. we know how these dark matter, qualms form. we know that normal matter should follow them. we know the ratio it which dark matter normal matters us is our standard model. on these girls you seem to have too much normal matter too much matter or just stuff means the earliest stars in our universe were heavier than expected and developed sooner than expected . possibly containing some elements, a central for life. webb's ability to see new frequencies of light open up new
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areas of investigation. now the findings will challenge models of how stars were born. i expect when the dust settles when we get all of divisions, when we get more, when we get better data, we will, we will probably find that called me. ology is the same. and there's something else going on in the systems that we don't understand from combination of stars forming really early galaxies, forming way better than the expected. and maybe some exotic physics that aren't currently in our current models, even if each of the galaxy like our own, all we can see are 20 or 30 pixels in the darkness just enough to imagine worlds. it's sort of a crazy thing, colon baker alger. well that said from me for this news now the team in london will be back in just a moment with more of the day's news. ah mm
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hm. beneath the waters off the guy and east coast lies a newly discovered bounty of oil. enough to transform a country with the poverty rate near 40 percent. according to the world bank to an oil rich republic, now the nation's newfound oil wealth is funding an energy project that is electrifying the rural landscape. while guyana is just beginning to export boil to the world president here, fun all the wants to replace carbon based fuels at home with renewable energy, with a goal of cutting the cost of power in hand. the nation's energy planners are harnessing the rain forest rivers to power hydro plants like this one near kato, even in the capital of georgetown were going on. as oil boom is being felt, the most solar power is transforming the landscape and the power grid event boom,
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can continue. experts say the fossil fuel bounty of the guy and east coast has the potential to provide clean energy to the countries remotest regions and lift the fortunes of the next generation in syria citizens or collecting evidence, a show of crimes committed against civilians. we've moved out of syria now about $600000.00 pages of material so that one day they can bring the outside regime to justice. it puts a human face on the charges. it's a dead human face, but it's a human face. syria. witnesses for the prosecution on al jazeera. there are some of the media stories, a critical look at the global news media spread on al jazeera government shut off access to social media. ah.
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