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tv   News  Al Jazeera  February 22, 2023 10:00pm-10:31pm AST

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most solar power is transforming the landscape and the power grid event boom, can continue. experts say the fossil fuels 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, a 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 of critical look at the global news media cast right on al jazeera government shutoff access to social media. ah,
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at least 10 palestinians killed and a 100 injured in a ride buys righty. troops in the occupied west bank. ah. hello i marianna mozy in london. you're watching al jazeera also coming up on the program. the sour pushing a piece plan for ukraine. china's top diplomat had to moscow, he says, his country's relationship with russia is rock solid. why the united nations is sounding the alarm over the health of tens of thousands of displaced women now living in turkish 10 cities. and we bring you the photograph of james, what telescope, which has changed the way we think about the origins of the universe. ah,
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ah le israeli forces of shot and killed at least 10 palisades and a major operation in the occupied west bank? well than a 100 others were injured in the raid. israel military confirm the operation in nablus a flash point city and the conflicts nablus. a nearby jeanine have been the focus of violent incursions that israel has intensified of the last year. israel said it was trying to detain palestinians suspected of planning attacks and that its soldiers responded after they came on the fire. this is now a 2nd deadliest day for palestinians in the occupied west bank this year. and brings the number of those killed by israeli forces in 2023 to 61 spokesperson for pakistan. present mahmoud abbas condemned the raid in nablus, and called for an end to the continued attacks against our people. he said, aren't there, isn't it it? abram has more now from the house that was rated in nablus. before these really forces came in, a witness told us that one of the soldiers was wearing palestinian clothes as if he
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was a bedouin whitting, a headscarf, 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 palestinian clothes look like they are palestinians and entered the old city. he is really forces admitted that it killed 3 palestinians. if they call them fust specks, they say they're accused of committing shootings against israeli soldiers then is ready targets. but we're talking about 10 palestinian hills. and you can hear the gunshots of palestinians angry palestinians who are naming the loved ones to rest. they say that israel 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 at 10 am,
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which is unusual for his rate of the 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 unity. these railey military says it's forces came under heavy fire during the right. government has been cracking down on what it calls terrorist groups in the occupied westbank sort of hierarchy has worn out from west jerusalem. release 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 in the arms group that's in that area . now they said that they went in an awesome to give up their arms, but they didn't. and that's why it resulted in some fighting with the fire fire
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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 targeted or within what happened as we're still to hear from that. now this is at the time where israel is saying that it's res, it's a lot, it's a lot system to high a la and it's expecting that potentially there could be more attacks. they said that those men that they killed were wanted for 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. well, you inspector general target harris has been speaking about this. he spoke about the escalation security council meeting in new york. he said the situation now in the occupied westbank is as it's most combustible for years. deadly cycles of
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violence keep exhilarating tensions sky high. and the peace process remains stalled . situations, it was alone. our codes is becoming more for a dry limits, publications, and that's a violence either. there are the only sites, it's ready to stability across the region and beyond. the position of the united nations is clears the status of jerusalem, cannot be altered by unilateral actions from the palestinian people that they want . the end of these massacres, they want the end of occupation. they want the end of her, of this, these attacks against them. they want international protection, they want the implementation of security council resolutions and the report of the secretary general, which was welcomed by the general assembly in expanding existing mechanisms for protection. ah,
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china's top diplomat says beijing's relationship with russia is rock solid. following a meeting with the president vladimir putin, one year visit to moscow comes just 2 days before the anniversary of russia's invasion of ukraine. a drink says its position on russia's invasion is neutral. that has become a major trading partner since russia was hit by western sanctions in response to the conflicts sullivan java reports now from moscow. rock solid is how china's top diplomat describe the relationship, had been beijing and moscow in his meeting with the russian president. wong, ye said the ties between the 2 nations, but not directed against any one, but won't accept pressure from any country as well. okay, true. we have always maintained the strategic focus and adhere to the general direction of building a multi polar world, resolutely opposed any unilateral and hegemonic actions and safeguarded our respective sovereignty. security and development interests. a day after the russian
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and american presidents made speeches, the head of the anniversary of the war with ukraine. vladimir putin told china their ties extend beyond diplomacy. hey, scott, was our group this year. we cooperated many areas and a humanitarian sphere and international organizations, including united nations, the security council of which we are permanent members, bricks the shanghai corporation organization. and of course, we're waiting for the chairman of the people's republic of china to visit russia. china wants to promote it's b span to bring the war insides in ukraine to the negotiating table. but with its deep rooted cooperation with russia, it's not widely seen as a neutral arbiter. china had the number of joint infrastructure projects with russia, but most chinese investment in the resource rich parties, region rest and sanctions mean china's 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 cooperation like that is
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a cause for concern for the nato military alliance backing ukraine. but beijing has rejected warning to refrain from providing lethal military aid and execute the u. s . of fueling the war by sending weapons to keep as rest and sanctions continued to pile on russia. it's looking east to bit china as its largest trading partner, president vladimir putin expects bilateral trade to balloon over $200000000000.00. and as the warden ukraine goes on, russia is poised to build new alliances and forge all at once so that it can avoid international isolation. sama married others era. moscow. joe biden is told leaders of native 9 eastern european members at thea form quote, the front line of our collective defense as present as just left the polish capitalized and rallying support for ukraine as the war enters a 2nd year. alan fisher is reporting from warsaw. ah, it will be the enduring image of jo biden's trip to europe. a walk through the
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streets of keith with president vladimir zalinski ki has captured a part of my heart. i must say a physical expression of support after the youth of war from the man whose lead the international effort to help. this is a bit of an unprecedented and visit for a commander in chief to, to go to a war zone in which you have no american troops. no, no combat presence. that certainly increased the level of risk to fight and was always going to visit poland. he was he, the years ago after russian tanks moved into ukraine. he spoke then as he didn't know about the threat from russia. but this time with a warning that the fight could be a long term commitment. the defense of freedom is not the work of a day or a year. it's always difficult. it's always important. as ukraine continued to defend itself against the russian onslaught and launch counter
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offensive as of its own, there will continue to be hard and very bitter days. victories and tragedies would ukraine steel for the fight ahead. joe biden will consider his trip here to be a success. it was heavy on symbolism and messages of support at a time when countries are growing weary of a war that seemingly has no end in sight. alan fisher al jazeera warsaw it out. is there a life in london more still to venue on the planet? from returning to the u. k. shanina vega, who joined to isolate the age of 15. it is a bit to regain british citizenship. i can friday test reports of madagascar killing at least 4 people in displacing thousands ah. with some distinct, cole stood on the right,
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very edge of europe. this massive greyness here is cloud watches, low temperatures, the satellite reads both, and it's this real code and it's pushing dazzle barrows and ukraine, but his focus actually western russia. and then to the west of that, jenny, speaking things have been quite mild, especially so in western europe. that's changed remarkably in the last 24 hours or so. and he's now rate old snow for spain, i grant. and also for a good part of france. in fact, the sunshine isn't now a rare visitor for much of central europe. and the still snow falling out the sky just catching the handle of the turkey. and probably ga otherwise is a wind, but there's not much wind left in ukraine. it's minus 4 best and keep. but the sunny side, he says any consolation. and as i say most are used, eastern europe now disappointingly dull and damp. possibly some snowed it. it's just not feeling quite had the last few days that the suns come back to france and
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a good part of spain. but that's not true for the north west. expect some snow up on the mountains here and it's still disappointing me cool. and sherry in morocco, not just the mines, i have to say the wind is no stronger hamas, as it was with dust in its flow. and the machine is creeping back into the coast of west africa. ah, to ukrainian filmmakers join the army to fight against russian separatists in 2014 . they document their journey from civilians to soldiers. as the fighting intensifies the tools of their trade become weapons of war what will be the toll for ukraine's brave hearts? witness on al jazeera lou.
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ah, welcome back. a look at the main stories are following now, and disraeli forces of shot and killed at least 10 palestinians in a major operation in the occupied by bank more than a 100. others were injured. military saying it was trying to detain palestinians suspected of planning attacks. the top chinese diplomat says beijing's relationship with russia is rock solid, falling meeting with the russian president. one nice visit to moscow comes just 2 days before the anniversary of russia's invasion of ukraine. well, health organization is saying it's taking advantage of a temporary easing of sanctions against syria designed to allow easier distribution of aid after the deadly earthquakes. many people who survived those quakes in
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turkey and syria and now adapting to a new routine of face. many challenges in the weeks and months ahead. in the hope of surly we're building their lives, are just errors. robert pride met one family who returned to the turkish city of and takia. 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 soup, his aim, his wife and daughter, lena, went for them. a new routine. ha ha, ha, ha. label for her to day we woke up. prepare us for breakfast. in an hour, be 12. we'll get lunch from over there. also water, medical supplies, and bottles soupy. walked us around or park. i mean, it's become a small city of tents because i'm a 100. there's only one place for drinking water. he tells us there's another place to get water for washing and cleaning the hot hot meals. there are other lines for
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meals at the mobile food trucks beside the par, o. m a. go for a place that serves tea and coffee at set times. all helping to break up, but not to days. and everywhere in this park, you're just a few meters away from excavators, working through piles of rubble. here as elsewhere on all sides of this part, the clearing of rubble is well underway, generating huge amounts of dust. it's a process that will only intensified in the coming weeks. among 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 focused on a future that could include a returned to school. and even took so it's a very hard life in 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,
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died in the rubble. both of those still with a lender. we stayed here for the memory of our children because they were here. i came to and tuck it to work, but we have nothing left life he has stopped when he left. i got off the 3 surviving family members now have only each other in a place of almost unbearable loss. and rob joins his live now from the camp of featured in that story and tell us a bit more about what conditions like particularly now, that nicest fallen that's right. i mean, these are experiences i think shared by so many families here at tented, encampments like this one, the other 10 cities in public spaces in parts throughout these devastated cities. here is nightfall. things pretty much wind down again, people take to that tends to try to stay warm as night time type, which is still full sharply and still in the air. is this accurate mix of this dust from these mountains of rubble that are close by and where the excavators have been
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busy all day, now mixed more and more as the evening comes on. as people try to stay warm with the smoke from the woods that they use here to mix and hangs in the air, there are really basic services being provided by a comes like this one, but very essential services. but when it comes to things like basic hygiene facilities for keeping yourself clean and so on, those are sadly lacking even just basic toilet. so you are, there is increasing concern about health problems in the future. when you talk to people here about the services that getting the help they are getting, there's a real mix of 110 that will be gratitude. people will accept the fact that they were left with nothing from these earthquakes. in many cases, apart from the clothes they were standing up and they are extremely grateful for any aid that they are given. idea you go to the next 1010 people that will be angry,
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angry that the government was providing more help, a quicker fashion as they might expect. so there is still less residual anger for a lot of people. i think that looking ahead and trying to get out of these tests if they don't have other options such as relatives and other positive to key a or the result is to move from here. then the next best best option will be something like the shipping containers which are going to be used as temporary shelters, which are being set up in these that can in the cities, if you like, by the 1000, in this corner of the key. but everyone knows that that is just another temporary measure. they may be there for months of the actual search for a permanent home again will probably take years. thank you very much for just giving us a sense of what it's light, they're at and tack your intake here in one of those camps for displace people. thanks rob. is it now as we were hearing their proper shelter is really one of the most urgent needs. now for those who survived,
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and among the many of lost their homes and possessions a more than 350000 pregnant women, it is across both countries many expected to give birth. in the next month, the u. n. is saying these women urgently need access to reproductive health care, to raise a bow has mourn out for on this from one of the many homeless camps. and sandra afer 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 was estimated that 1500000 homes have been lost at 14, thousands, to be displaced, and many are living in this park right now where they have setups and tents 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 food people lining up quite desperate for a piece of bread for some beef, for some food to put into their stomach. but humanitarian are going to,
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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 $25000.00 of them. it is expected that could happen in the next month. 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 8th and monitoring the situation on the ground in order to assess that we've been talking to some of this women or the 7 months pregnant woman who told us she doesn't know yet where she's going to give birth. another one who just just had her baby and it's taking hero mean under the current circumstances,
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you can imagine how difficult the situation is and, and what's happening on the ground. and the possibility of rebuilding this country, the government is hoping to build around $200000.00 homes are probably thing to do it in one year. it's going to be a major challenge because of the difficulties that exist on the ground right now. the us says that they need at least $1400000000.00 more to deal with the scale of what happened. your schools have been destroyed, hospitals have been destroyed. lots of people have been injured aside from the difficulty that women in camps like this one are facing today. and what complicates the situation even more are the earthquakes there with another earthquake on monday . people are afraid they're after shocks all the time, and that is something that scares people very, very much in places like this one. and of course it makes it very, very difficult for them to go back to their normal lives. now shimmy ma baker, who joined. i feel as a teenager has lost her appeal against the removal of her petition citizenship.
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begum left her london home at the age of 15 and travelled to syria. the british government cancelled had nationality on security grounds after she was discovered later in a syrian refugee camp in 2019 a. d baba rings as the story. now. she's stuck in a camp in northern syria and she'll be there for some time yet. she may, begum dressed in black hair, was just 15 when she and 2 friends left london to join. i saw 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. ah, we say no, but i will be protective. nation
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since being located in a refugee camp in 2019 shima baker expressed regret for going to join. i saw other guy because when i was one and well, i thought i was going to make a family and i didn't realize what millard things that they were doing. she married a fighter, they had 3 children, all of whom died. bacon had said she soon wanted to leave, but was scared, she'd be caught and tortured as a spy. she is denied being involved in any acts of violence, but britons always insisted she could pose a security threats if she returns white. children are always mentally unwell and when they are on a path to radicalization or if they are complicit in violent crime, yet when it's a brown and black kids and specifically muslim kids, it is inherently about tara, an a, an earnest security risk. where is 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 families
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still in camps in syria. it argues they should be brought back to the u. k to stand trial. all of our security allies like the u. s. canada, australia, france, belgium. they are re patching bare families from not the syria. so shima begum is not being treated differently to a number of the other british families out there. they are all being cast out, rejected. none of them are getting to process. this is unlikely to be the end of shima begum fight to get her british citizenship back. but even if this 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. sure. beemer begum remains effectively stateless. far from her family and far from the justice. she says she's ready to face in britain. nadine barbara al jazeera london now the death tolan, madagascar from tropical site. and freddy, as reason to at least for friday, made landfall in southeast, in madagascar on tuesday with wind gusts of up to
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a 180 kilometers per hour. ruse were ripped off houses in many areas flooded. more than 11000 people have been displaced. storm system is now moving westwards. mainland africa. it could impact more than 3000000 people across mozambique, madagascar, and zimbabwe. i gotta run some food unless yes, we're afraid of rising walters and wins that can destroy everything, like electricity poles. that is what traumatized me the most, so it's better to prepare for this danger. that's why i moved it. we used to be worried about wind gusts, but now it's more the rising. the walsh of that scares us because our house is at the bottom of a bridge, we're afraid of flooding in the race to find the next big thing. an artificial intelligence tag giant to competing to release new gadgets to consumers later in the chat bought 1st dominating a market that has rob reynolds reports from los angeles, some of those technologies, a raising concerns. you know, even the chat g p
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d moment, as i think captured people's imagination. microsoft c e o sot yona della may not welcome the kind of attention his company's bet on advanced artificial intelligence is getting. last month microsoft confirmed a multi $1000000000.00 investment in open a i the company behind chat g p t. now the company is restricting access to the a i chat feature of its being browser. after reports of unsettling conversations with the chat bought microsoft recently gave technology reporters an opportunity to test the chat bought before it was publicly released. one reporter wrote that after a long conversation about the chat box capabilities, it said it was in love with him and urged him to and his marriage. it also mused about skills it had but was forbidden to use, including developing a biological weapon and stealing nuclear secrets. the chat bought took a belligerent tone with another reporter comparing him to hitler and stalin.
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microsoft is now being talked about as a company that's putting out an innovative idea. so for them, this is a when, even if there are some embarrassing bumps along the way. on tuesday, microsoft announced being chat will now answer only 6 questions for conversation after which users are told to start a new topic. users will also be limited to 60 questions per day. in total, microsoft said long conversations quote, can't confuse the underlying chat model. google is also racing to bring a i capabilities to its browser, which it says will be called bard observers say the model could power a new technology and information revolution. but critic, so artificial intelligence have long speculated about doomsday scenarios. late physicists, stephen hawking. ward, fully intelligent a, i could quote, spell the end of the human race,
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rob reynolds al jazeera los angeles. now astronomers say observations by masses at james web space telescope, a challenging our understanding of the early universe. a se, data obtained by the telescope reveals ancient galaxies far larger than what was presumed possible. so early after the big bang, calling baker has wall. these 6 red dots aren't supposed to 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 medical form. we know that normal matter should follow them. we know the ratio which dark matter normal matter is as part of our
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standard model. and these galaxy 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 essential for life. webb's ability to see new frequencies of light opened up new 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 our divisions, when we get more, when we get better data, we will, we will probably find that cosmo 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.

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