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tv   News  Al Jazeera  February 25, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

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the lens today they are the government africans, health security is also global health care receipt on an online at your voice. there is no right to defense. there is no right to protest. we can't just keep relying on aid. there has to be some work towards a sustainable economy at the end of the day. it is ordinary objects that are paying the price. mystery analogies there. ah ah. our only clog this isn't news our life. coming up in the next 60 minutes. many still in line to call services nigeria and the most unpredictable presidential polls indicates our correspondence are in lego. so new and a bridger ascii vote is about concerns. candidates and the countries future is
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separated by the earthquake and turkey and syria. the difficult task of reunited children with their loved ones. who will grab the golden bear? we look at the selection offer. this is bernard, a film and is for england's curtis have taken control of the 2nd test against new zealand wickets humbling on dating. as england seek to secure a series ah, so we begin, this news are in nigeria where voting is continuing and what seen as the most unpredictable presidential race and decades more than 93000000 people are registered to vote for new president as well as members of the national assembly, 18 presidential candidates are in the contest but only 3 as seen as having a realistic chance of winning nigerians or hoping their next leader will improve
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the economy and in years of worsening violence. oh, we got a team of correspondence covering the election. i'm jumped you is in the niger and capital of buddha. harry metasource lie from a new group in the southeast of nigeria. but we started coverage with almond address and he has more from a teacher in lagos. oh, like millions of nigerians cross time voter fighting my own, all uncle is worried about the high cost of living and having experienced violence during elections in the past. he's also worried about what might happen after this vote on a new, it's a fast, i'm concerned. they are banking on this electron. i mean if this, if this was wrong, that means that we don't have a see enough on sure damage than nothing else can come and we can dr. wally get. the election process was marked by on the started. they got us in many parts of the country and with more than 6000000 people expected to vote in this battle,
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ground stage of lagos, securities type, of he should say, secure to officious hop, been deployed on the ground at sea. and in there, i 1x5ww deploying case legacy police chief warrant against any one provoking in rest. who had and to fail. we will, will let you will apprehend you. i will bring you to justice in the interests of our national security and democratic heritage. oh, $18.00 presidential candidates are running in saturday's presidential election on the 3 hour seen as having a realistic chance of winning also up for election,
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a hundreds of seats in parliament. but whoever wins the presidency will have a tough task ahead. dealing with struggling economy insecurity and high cost of living. well, we can speak to our managers live right now. i'm. it does tell us what the latest is. i think there have been lots of delays of men. voters went to wrapped up a couple of hours ago. nick basically of a delay we've seen in the early hours of today is what is resulting and the conclusion of voting and various calling stations across nigeria writes here, people are still queued up 2 hours after voting were supposed to have ended. and this is what is happening here. a lot of people are still on cure, but the electra law insist that whoever is actually on the queue before the closing of voting and accreditation should be allowed to q. now if i move out
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of frame that 1st box, the one marked with a red tag over there is what attention is focusing on, mostly by an agency. and the international community that box represents who is at the end of the day, going to be elected to run this country for the next 4 years. apart from the presidential election, there are 2 other seats that are up for grabs. i mean 400 seats in parliament, the national parliament, 109 in the senate, and the rest in the house of representatives. these 2 are also being contested today. now, who are those running for election today? we have people who are governors in this country. our material was governor of lego state. this state in particular, where we are right now, a run the state for 8 good years and has been the power behind the emergence of the incumbent. president obama wiring in 2015 and also getting him re elected in 2019.
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it's all right now he's running for that same, said he position somebody else to run a fax from bonham mckinney. but we have also at eco obamacare, a former vice president of nigeria. he was elected initially as governor of ida most in the north east of the country before he abundant the job. when he was nominated to serve as running, made to the person who won the election in 1009 to 9 chief on michigan about syndrome. he held that office for 8 years and says, then he is run or contested for the seat of president. this will be the 6th time the 3rd candidate will be or is peter or b. i, governor of i number of it in the southeast of nigeria. he held that position for 8 years as well. incidentally, it was running me try to cooperate with her in the last election in 2019. now, when this election cycle started, he wanted to run on the same platform of the people's democratic party, nitrous biggest opposition, but then realized that his ambition is better realised on the platform of labor
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parties. that's why he's writing. he is the youngest of 4 front runners in this election. the 3rd, 4th, and the 4th cause of course is robbie. and which i called congress on a former senator the governor. twice in con, no state. he sat for 8 years and also served as defense minister of this country. while he was there, he was, he is expected to lead in some of the state where he is based and that his in current o'connell, by the way, has the 2nd largest number of votes after they goes in this election. so attention is being focused in these 2 states. whoever wins lagos convincingly, and colonel and a few key other states will be well on his way to victory in this election. but it's too close to call right now because of the incidence is, or what we've seen, the political changes we've seen over the last few weeks during the end of the campaigns and even before the campaign season. so people are watching closely what happens and how many pallets will be counted for each of the candidate in boxes
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marked in red across nigeria today, nick, or that see a picture in lego. somebody was reporting that thanks. i've met, let's move across to a buddha. now i'm a jammed eunice study by for the summer. how many of you got a sense in your reporting about how people feel about the integrity of this foot? ah, well, nick, 1st let me tell you where we are, where we move locations we are now at the, in a serious civil society situation room. there are all manner of activists that are here with civil society groups that are checking with their teams across the country. to see how the election is going thus far from the people that i've been speaking with here in a boucher throughout the day. they have been quite happy mostly that it has been going smoothly here. up until the start of to day. i've been speaking to voters in the past couple of days that had been concerned that even in
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a boucher there might be violent incidents. but they said they were committed to come out to express their voice to cast their ballot in such a consequential election. let me bring in a guest that we have here right now. this is anita a wang, she's a researcher with the africa division for human rights watch. and, and yet i want to ask you about some of the concerns that human rights watch has expressed in these past few days. and it said that is concerned about impunity and insecurity in these elections. why is that the case? well, thank you for having me, michael. first and foremost is important to highlight the fact that these elections are taking place against going back to a wide spread insecurity across the country. so quite from the book around conflict in the north east, you've got a valid vanity crisis in the northwest. that is spiraling out of control and has displaced entire communities and rendered them inaccessible for voting. you also have the situation in the southeast to where they're valentino government agitators
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who in the lead up to the elections have a tax to pulling units and n attacks. police stations and offices of the national electoral commission, and this is really created a climate of fear that may very well, i'm discourage people from going out to votes to day while in places like a buddha. the situation is quite calm and they're still concerns that and these are valenze situations outside the country with the security forces have not been able to curb will disenfranchise a lot of good. what have you been hearing thus far from your sources across the country as far as how it's going to day to day? i think that the large majority of people are feeling and reports. that's avenue. they're able to cast their votes, albeit with sometimes a lot of money problems with election materials or delays at the pulling units. but largely people have been able to cast their vote and they're quite determined to. but then of course, that's the situation in places like legals, where we're seeing attacks by political thugs,
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against citizens and pulling units. and this is really worrying because the security forces have given assurances that people will be able to go out and calculate in a very safe and secure environment. but we're seeing this sort of results come out . and that's really been no instance where there's been a quick response from you authorities where we've seen early warning mechanisms work to ensure that these bicycle plugs do not have their way. i need to learn pick up on the point that you were just making because human rights watch also said that the authority should put in place adequate systems and plans that will allow citizens to exercise their vote safely from your perspective. is there a response mechanism or an adequate response mechanism in place now to ensure that people can actually vote safely? well, like i said, the authorities have come out with a lot of statements about the fact that they've deployed extensive security across the country. but i can tell you for a fact that in many communities, especially don't where they're really a lot of heightened security threats. say for example,
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the states in the south east. people who are coming out to vote are doing so out of share, resilient, and hope that that's as they can actually do so safely. but the insurances of the security forces really make little or no difference or dam. and this is something that has to change apart from the fact that we have these threats by non state actors. we also call into question, sometimes the role that security forces themselves play in really penetrating valenze during elections. and we saw in 2019 military forces carry out killings and disrupt electro classes in space like real estate. and there's been no accountability for that. and without the sort of accountability, the issue of the terrans become something that is not easy to really push forward. and we'll see this happening in cycles of elections in will remain the concern. and there were men of thought line in 90 elections until they're addressed. alright, and yet why researcher with the african division of human rights watch. thank you so much for joining us and thank you for your time. thank you very much. was a pleasure, appreciate it. so there you hear it, nick. that was in the a to
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a wang who's with human rights watch talking about the concerns that a, her group has about ensuring that people can vote safely throughout the country about the reports that they're getting from different regions. i will say one of the things we've noticed today is people believe that there will be a high voter turn out of that's been a really interesting topic of discussion leading up to today because there are over 93000000 registered voters, of course, only about 87000000 will actually be allowed to vote because about 6000000 or so did not get their voting cards in time. that all being said, there is high enthusiasm here in a boucher amongst all that we've spoken with here at this monitoring center of the civil society groups. you know, they believe that they are making a difference right now that they are trying to ensure that this election will be as free and fair as possible. nick? yep. important worker mohammed, thanks that muhammad jammah june, the a boucher lead. sorry crossover to a new you know,
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hiring natasha. standing by then, and harry at voting a think still on having their windsor, la dropoff. well, but the looks of things of it looks like it could be a couple of hours, and that's because the process here is really, really slow this month. the biggest polling stations in a new one of those that opened late the people behind me are the ones voted. but someone saying they're not going home yet because they want to stay monitor the process. they're worried about the slow pace of things. there was some of the chaos they've seen is and they want to try to avoid vote timeframe. but look at all those people. they who are still waiting to vote may meet young people, some saying they'll stay all night if they have to, until they cost the pilots and the ones. yeah, there's been a bit of commotion this side. some of the voting machines have not been working from people, not finding names on the register. so they are concerned about whether they would
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be able to vote. you've seen some pushing and shoving and shouting, people getting agitated because they say the process is just taking too long. if mainly young people come with them 1st time voters. but a concern in this particular part of the country, the se, if more about insecurity on wednesday, they heard that amount of money for senator was shot and killed in a new who is black. people are very, very worried, and they want to know that we have a when the selection will deal with the issues of insecurity as well as the economy, the other things as well. another concern is when you talk about young people, the young, the riskless agitated people in this part of the country would feel they've been neglected by the government in which, who feel that they've been marginalized and say that they don't have access jobs is too much poverty. and the space and other parts of the country. so they all sun. yeah. trying to exercise their right to vote. of course the question is how long this is going to take? it looks like it's going to be a few hours. many of them are right. thanks for that, hurry matessa reporting they more still ahead on the news are including the fight
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to save the indigenous young mammy of people of brazil left without food or drink of water because of pollution from illegal mining. we report from the philippines where cheaper imports rising transport costs. so for some farmers to dump the coaches who does holcomb, we'll hear from the premier league manager who says he's received death runs from his team or by for a plant proposed by china to end the war in ukraine and set to be discussed in beijing in the next few weeks, french president manuel micron says he will travel that in early april. michael says it's important to put pressure on russia to avoid any escalation in the conflict in ukraine, where the belly mercy and president, alexander lucas shanker and his and out he will visit begging in the coming days. china in belarus are russia strategic partners,
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la c. uminski allowed the kremlin to use its territory to launch attacks on ukraine . ukraine's president says he would also like to meet the chinese neither seizing ping to discuss a peace proposal table by raging china released its plan for peace between russia and ukraine on friday. and that followed talks between at top a chinese diplomat when ye and president vladimir putin, a beijing as calling for an end to western sanctions on russia. ukraine says the proposal is a positive side upset. yup. first of all, i planned to meet changing, paying, and believe this will be beneficial for countries and for security in the world. we have a large trade turnover with china. the issue is not only the war, the issue that we are states that are interested in maintaining economic relations . i really want to believe that china will not supply weapons to russia. this is very important to me. this is a priority because i'm a rusher, is faith in new round of sanctions from the european union. the block says it wants to limit the criminal ability to pay for the war. it also wants to plot rushes
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military from acquiring new technology or getting spare parts. united states has imposed new sanctions, including at 200 percent tariff on russian minion, washington as coordinating its efforts with other g 7 countries. republican victoria spots is the only ukranian born member of the us congress and she's calling for more proactive western support to force russia into negotiating. well, i think, you know, every war will and with the peace, but the matter off what common people are going to die and how one is going to be and how much money are going to spend, and how many lives and livelihoods are going to destroy. and russia needs to understand that the west to serious the global community need to do a better job to get involved with this. we have a situation like you am completely dysfunctional not doing as soon as i was cut up
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for the reason to be able to prevent things like that happening. you know, so i think what we'll do is ukrainian when, but a lot of ukrainian, some russians are going to die. so i think we need to be more proactive, provide better assistance now that russia will get to the table and understand that is not acceptable. and we're not going to have a tax like that on free countries. all right, let's begin. natalie. nick was diverse. she's a professor of international affairs. at the new school, she joined us now from new york. i need a thanks to join you, sir. i understand you've been in russia recently researching a book on your great grandfather and nikita khrushchev, how did you find it? and particularly, how did you find support or otherwise for the president? well, i didn't really experience that much support for, for the war. there was certainly concern about the sanctions. there's a concern that the war brought, they call a special meal preparation, brought essentially hold to people's plans for the future. there
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is a severe restrictions on civil society and in fact i was there in the last 6 month . and so when i got their savings, society was functioning at 5 percent. 95 percent was already we knew. so in the last 6 months, the remaining 4 and a half percent, so there's still half percent remain. so all of this is a concern. people are talking about it all the time and all aspects of this. i the special notes, reparation and the war ukraine, relatives in ukraine. how they are going to survive, how russia is going to survive. yes, the polling is showing is showing that pollutants supported at 7070 plus percent. but you can imagine that when the act then the quote when there was no civil society, we meaning the question is, do you support president putin?
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very few people would actually say, well, you know what? now i'm not supporting because you don't know what the consequences of it's going to be. so i would imagine that the actual support for the war is probably about 25 percent. perhaps for put in over 60 just because there was no other leader they had to emerge to say, no, we don't want to do that. i think the russian societies and great disarray right now. now you meds mean a you met bruce and when he was 1st elected, you say the different man? no. oh yes, well i mean hard to say probably i actually met him even before he was elected and he was a very kind of short, scrawny, very charming man, who could read his audience very, very well and kind of address people. they went to want it to be addressed. he showed great reverence to the russian intelligentsia, the cultural society,
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which by the way, today we're not seeing because essentially every, a cultural aspect of, of russian life is being eliminated. if people are, if, say, actors or directors or writers speak not even against the war, even if they just speak for peace. there, there plays a being canceled in books. i being, i be shoved to. ready to the back of the either the library or, or the bookstore. so yes, he's a different man. he has been in power. let's remember that 22 years and you know, this is very under regional for me to say, but it's so true. absolute power corrupts absolutely. so we see and bending pollutant, who thinks it's his way or no i the way through the people in russia you think sense away out of this because it's, it seems pretty stun exit route to a moment. so out of people in the street from about it, oh, that's kind of, that's a incredible question and which doesn't have an incredible, any answer. in fact,
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when sputum puts a speaking on now just now february 21st to to whatever the federation council kind of this annual address to the nation um, so to speak. the speech was very grim. the speech was very existential. we have to stand, it's us or that moved very, actually very cold war, a very capital capitalism. so versus socialism speech or a communism versus democracy speech. certainly, but it had really absolutely no exit strategy. it showed nothing, basically was be afraid. trumbull will win, but we don't know how we don't know when and when are going to tell you. ultimately, it just, it's all about the fight. and i think that makes russians incredibly nervous. and i was actually talking to people after the speech and in moscow and in various other cities that i know what even central in central russia and they were even if they
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say, well, we support the nation. we don't want strategic defeat of russia. however, we absolutely can't imagine when it's over, what are we going to be? how we're going to have relationship with the world? because imagining no relationship with the world as much as a kremlin cell, that is going to be wonderful, really is really not wonderful to most of the russian population. and so that's something that makes questions incredibly anxious and incredibly, very much in despair and fascinating. talking to the duncan in sodom, was supposed to thank you. thank you. ah . the death toll from devastating earthquakes and turkey and syria has now passed 50000 rescuers in northern syria, continued to dig through the rubble of buildings destroyed. 2 weeks ago, aid has been slow to reach the region in opposition held. there is many families as
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searching by hand for the bodies of missy relatives. i saw booked on the and we were removing rock after rock and finding nothing underneath. when people were under the concrete screaming get us out, get us out. but we'd come up with empty hands, but will not allow them to hardy. other people spent 2 or 3 days under the rebel. some stable if i for days. nothing was working for the hands alone weren't enough. we lost children. i lost my brother and his children and my cousins and their children, 25 people. so i say whether earthquake separated many children from their parents, social service staff in turkey. so many families have be reunited, but more than 100 babies haven't been identified. and they're still under the care of the state. single scioli reports now from the turkish capital of anchor people here called us baby, a survivor pulled from hon. knife was brought to this child care complex from
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a donna just a week ago. like all these babies, earthquakes that hit 10 cities in southeast and took here on february 6th, separated naive from his parents until they are reunited with their families. they are cared for by child development officers likely be carried eligible them. we may not be their mothers, but we're doing our best self confidence and contact is very important for children under the age of 2. they have already been through a lot. i'm just trying to ease their loneliness at us. social services say 1353 children out of nearly 1900, have been reunited with their families. but 106 haven't yet been identified. by entering children's national id numbers on minute threw up page families are able to search for the last children. since thirst quakes happened, there has been a huge demand among turkey citizens to either adopt these babies or foster other
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than children who been orphaned. but official say they will be the thing under government protection. some, all these babies have no names other than what the nurses call them. the spaby girl's name tech says, 7 days old. i live in olive oil while we learn whether or not these children have families in the hospital. then in line with child protection laws, we keep them safe here after obtaining the necessary permits. then we for any clue that may come from their city and we have no room for uncertainty. there is no way someone can come in and just claim a child. come on on the counselor while we were filming. we weren't told a men claiming to be knives. father was undergoing a dna test overseen by public prosecutors orphans who survived. the earthquakes have also been transferred to this complex in and cut out some have already started going to school in this new city, trying to pick up as best as they can from where they left off scene and car solar out a 0 on credit. i join now by teresa, but she's in kind of a marsh in tuck,
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it was yep. essentially one of the upgrade and it offered a huge amount of damage. it's, it's raised 1st up. it's clear that this whole efforts to clear everything up, millions of tons of rebel needs be removed. it's gonna take months. yeah. is that correct? for in this part of the item on my actual large part were destroyed of hundreds of buildings and thousands of people died. oh no around this area. i need some major concern. not tony how to deal with people that have been left out to home. but whole so about how to cope with large amounts of rubble that is all around this city and all around south eastern turkey. earlier today, we were just outside the city where we saw dozens of trucks unloading this rubble in other parts are just outside the city. any of the major concerns about what to
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do with the united nations is saying that around $200000000.00 tons of rubble need to be disposed of. if you were to put this into a number in a picture, it would cover around a 100 with a square kilometers. so you can imagine how large this area is. so, you know, there's not some concerns also about you know, what to what to do with this. what to do with the situation in cities such as there's when i'm not far, you know, just a while ago there still people who have lost their loved ones coming here. i saw a woman who have lost part of a family coming to this area. she was sitting, she was crying, she was trying to find pictures some of her belongings because people are wrong. so those 3rd here. so i'm trying to cope with the magnitude of what happened here or 2 . thanks very much to be traced by the recording from cut on them rush. i still had hair on al jazeera, more prominent critics arrested in was described as to news is biggest cracked on since president. i saw you. he golden state turns a shade of white is the sizes,
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gets his 1st visit with florida record breaking game in the bay and he will be here ah hello. we have seen some very heavy rain recently into a paraguay sliding down towards the southeast of brazil eating across and to uruguay, running down towards the river place. have you a shout as will remain here as he go on through the next house. i got a nasty little system you can see to swirling away just off the coast of argentina . pig showers continue to run their way up towards the western side of their brazil as we go on through sunday. some live the showers to just up to was sure enough, and guy, and i want to showers to him into the caribbean,
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but nothing much to speak of. he is lottie fine, dry and settled that pretty good, big a showers, pretty much wise, but across the western side of the region. but i, which was yes, a good deal of fine and sunny weather, lots of warm sunshine continuing. not too much warm sunshine across north america. though we have got, when she went up to was a ne, i had of course horribly when she weather just over towards that western side of the u. s. and very heavy snow for continuing across california, causing further problems. could see up to we half a meter of snow. i with the high ground that just around the sierra nevada that will make its way further east, which as we go 13 monday, vegas seeing some snow by the state. but notice rod across that west coast estate, wintry ah women, ron micro businesses are key to center goals development and to improved food security . access to finance helps them succeed since 2014, nearly
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a $180.00 micro enterprises, collectives and small businesses across synagogue received concession re financing . these loans were made possible by an initiative administered by the q right good . will fund the q 8 fund partners in development in depth analysis of the days headlines from around the world. if i write extremely, there is real and need to be tackled as soon as possible informed opinions. why is the sale of position concerned about this rather small between turkey and sue, lose them on the really roof, a little turkey misses and so forth. frank assessments, you know, that was a joke about the interim government that it's not inter and nor does it got inside story on al jazeera lou.
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ah, okay, you're watching out 0. might of our top stories issa voting is underway and what's being described as nigeria is most unpredictable presidential and parliamentary elections. in decades. more than 93000000 people are registered to vote for new president, as well as members of the national assembly. the death toll from devastating earthquakes and turkey syria has now passed 50000 rescues in northern syria, continued to dig through the rubble of buildings destroyed more than 2 weeks ago. the cranes president says he'd like to meet china's leader to discuss a peace plan table by badging. it calls for an end to western sanctions on moscow. crane is asking china not to supply weapons to russia. the united states has accepted more than 2000 ukrainian refugees during the past year. many travel to new
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york city is hosting the largest ukranian population in the country. guerrillas hondo spoke to one couple from odessa. i know they had no plans to be in america, but here they are. on a recent day in new york's washington square park cree low dorshek, a 26 year old dancer and his girlfriend. i saw more men, nova a 24 year old up and coming journalist. now did you just look, i don't think that ever much should of a life was good back in odessa. here she is reporting about tourism. okay. yeah. they had big dreams together, leaving ukraine wasn't one of them. i said was the yarbrough lab rosters are gone of some water. i loved my work. i had a perfect life. i never wanted to come to america. i never had the american dream. i had everything new crazy town. then russia began its full scale invasion. and after quickly seizing her song, set their sights on creole and isolate home town of odessa lamb. why not?
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so before man scholar, we started to receive news that russian soldiers were raping ukrainian women and kids. those troops could arrive where i lived any day. that was the scariest i had panic attacks, but that's what i knew. i had to leave 3rd to bay. she left almost immediately after the invasion began. he stayed behind but was unable to join the military due to a back injury. so he followed i saw out later, same thing, positive man, positive. looking. after nearly 9 months apart, they are reunited in new york where he is trying to earn money to send back home to support his mom. they're only contact with family is on daily video cause we're both carrillo and i. so are trying to make the best of life here in new york city, but both want to return home to ukraine. i have somewhat differing opinions on if or when that will even be possible. i hope we will celebrate our victory. the hope
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is going to be soon and then after that for sure, want to go back. see our family. and i want to see my mom. i want to see my grandma athletics because at the shaw, i don't want to live as a refugee. i want to be home helping my own country and my own people left out a young couple who left everything back home except each other. this for gabriel is hondo al jazeera new york tin is or is now holding several of the most prominent opposition. politicians in pre trial detention kazi chuck roach is the latest off opponent of president case site to be detained. several government critics have been arrested in the past month. president saeed dissolved parliament and 2021. elections in december were boycotted by the opposition who q side of a paragraph. israeli settlers have attacked palestinians in the village of burin, which slides south of nablus in the occupied west bank. they set 2 cars on fire,
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israeli human rights groups, and says settlers currently feel empowered by israel's governing far right coalitions. police in brazil are investigating businessman, lawyers and civil servants allegedly involved in trafficking. gold is believed have been legally extracted from the indigenous young mammy territory. and in the states, every army, a task force is tackling and humanitarian crisis caused by a legal mining on a key on a key of has a story. ah, a desperate effort to save lives in a makeshift clinic in the yano money territory. the numbers are staggering. 570 children have died during the past 4 years. victims of the onslaught of illegal mining in brazil's largest indigenous reservation. while doctors and nurses attend to the sick, the recently created task force is forcing thousands of miners out. hundreds are
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leaving and canoes taking all the can, and filming their flight. i somewhat total sample by january 20000 illegal miners were occupying 5000 hector's of protected indigenous land, polluting the waters with mercury and spreading disease. there are almost as many as the whole yellow mommy population. 30000. i'm the mom over there. our villages were surrounded by mines, says ha sienna, mommy, we were left with no drinking water, no food, no medicine. she staying at the emergency health clinic built 2 weeks ago in boy vista, the capital of the northern state, of what i'ma. like many here, she wants to go home, but does not know when dice must have lost. it'll take us decades to help nature and our homeland, to recover and bologna, be safe from invaders. if the government all forties maintain their presence in our
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reservation. some miners who have fled still hoped to make it back into the yano my me territory. they have nowhere else to go with history. robert gilbert herbert the government, doesn't have the money to maintain a task force operating 247 in the region. if a doesn't open legal minds will find an alternative way for minors to make a living. they will go back risking their lives because the need to put food on the table. but what i my has little to offer the huge statue of a minor in the center of boy vista is symbol of how much the local economy depended on gold before its extraction was forbidden. in protected territories, this small village is 40 kilometers away from the gateway to the young manny indigenous territory. it has grown much over the years, partly because of the thousands of illegal miners that have been coming here to buy food supplies, medicine and have made the economy of this city boom. since president,
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losing us to let us hubert took office in january and ordered the task force to destroy the legal mines, people in his lunch, i have seen the cities commerce slowly fade away. i knew this area was filled to the top with corn. now we are no longer renewing the stock because there is nobody to buy at god for those living in hot i'ma in the city or in the rain forest. to morrow is another battle, monica, and i give al jazeera boy vista, brazil, at least 19 people who have been injured off to 3 exclusions targeted. the amount come are in a race of awe. is the under the ban takes place in the south with regional capital, where english speaking separate his fighters had warned athletes not to participate in the race so far. no one has claim responsibility for the attack. at
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least 3 people have died as a major win to stall rages across united states. more than 2 meters of snow is forecast parts of california. as victoria gate and be now reports fresh. know is a rare site in lake hughes in california. the town is normally known for its blue skies, dry hilltops and warm weather. but it's a welcome change for jeremiah domingo as yet will i live where there's like no snow ever. like the only snow i've got was hail and like 1st grade. and it's pretty exciting. we've been building snow and, and then breaking live a slow moving winter storm. the california has triggered the 1st blizzard warning in 30 years. in parts of los angeles. state authorities have closed major roads including sections of interstate 5. that's the main north south highway that connects mexico california, the pacific northwest and canada, commuters say the snow and ice is causing travel chaos. this morning we had like
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a foot and a foot and a half of snow. and i couldn't go to work. we live on top of the hill, so all of our, our whole entire road was, was covered in snow. california is experiencing an unusually cold and wet winter with flooding mud slides in a state long affected by drought and wildfires. people here say they've been warned to prepare for more extreme weather in the coming days. i think that is one of the biggest concerns is we are looking at a lot of rainfall, snow, the snow melts and the wind. and we worry about that my slides and the flooding since we've had it twice already. experts say powerful winter storms mixed with spells of extreme heat and dry weather, a symptoms of climate change. and they're expected to become more frequent and intense. victoria gay to be al jazeera farmers in the philippines, a cheaper imports and rising transport costs are forcing them to dump their produce . but some people have formed a group on social media to prevent that or below reports. now from the look of. so
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in the northern philippines, uncle miss, i said alice or india ferdinand repugnant, came close to throwing away collie flowers. he's grown since october. i'll go to florida. are safe to eat. the leaves are infested by white flies. in ferdinand says, business men aren't likely to buy them. they will man interval napa, lucy, the blunt in this condition, philip, and just want to give up on them. because pesticides her costly will just end up losing money. but ferdinand bound help a facebook group of about 38000 members and growing is sending rescue trucks to farmers who have difficulty selling their produce. an idea that started when ease and andy estrada saw tons of vegetables rotting away during pandemic locked outs. over all, there's a lot of distribution gaps for farmers bringing them to don't worry, care the buyers are not there at that moment. and so there's really a lot of disconnect on the system. and even if the buyers are there, they don't be the right price. ferdinand says the same is happening with onions.
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prices rose to as high as $12.00, a kilo in december, but would imports. now flooding markets, they've dropped. the cost of growing his and harvested audience is way above their market value. it was, i've been, i've been, i'm bargaining graders would see they have bought up in the storage so they can only buy low. but if you want to sell, he'll just have to sell low for it in an would have face to same problem. what is called the flowers, if it wasn't for the striders and their non profit group, rural rising, coming to the rescue and buying them at a fair price. one of the reasons vegetables and other farm products have become so expensive is because they're past from one trader, so another before they reach markets. well, these vegetables are going straight to manila, and many have been pre ordered through facebook at below retail prices. one truck, 3 tons of cali flowers in a few 100 kilograms of onions. small amounts,
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but these so called vegetable rescuer, said they're making a difference. one farmer and one community at a time. barnaby low al jazeera, he lockwitzer northern philippines. germany's chancellor says he's committed to agreeing a free trade deal between india and the european union. olaf schultz is in new delhi for talks with the prime minister, nor andrew modi. berlin once, close ties with india and to discourage it from cooperating with moscow. he seeking a $5200000000.00 deal to sell india 6 conventional submarines. india is refusing to impose sanctions on russia. miss become a major importer of its oil and metals life inside iran. it's a major theme at this year's berlin film festival filmmakers looked at what happened before and after the islamic revolution. others examined how the state deals with the political prisoners for when it came reports now from burning. alyssa, they've gotten it, got them pull to the side of life in iran, the few in the wider world have seen the experience of prisoners in jails. there is
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one of the main features of 2 films at the berlin allah, both made by the same director in which he tries to explore the psychological effect of interrogation on the questioner. and the questioned miss rand tama don believes prisoners in his country are still suffering to this day. it has it for my main objective is for the interrogators to actually see themselves so that it could be a mirror for them to be able to do. so. the throttle of the iranian people are a key theme at this year's belly. another one film exam is the history of protest in iran and draws a parallel with what has been happening in different in recent times. another explorer, the 198th war with iraq and the effects this had on a generation of children exposed to the violence set in the city of about done through animation. the film, the siren shows us the world through the eyes of 11 year old, omit the innocence of
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a game of football is shattered by the arrival of the iraqi rockets, which will eventually raise the city. we follow omit struggle to survive. a smith chip is the sense of struggle is a key element of the works of the films director separate a fussy oh, it is bomb, the common ground of our struggle, which has been there since 1979. i. and so you're aware of the fact that women right away after the revolution, the so called resolution, the kid, not one hind act, one ah, they took to the streets to, to, to resist against the monday to him. vale with the tankless. ok. we see these events in the film between the revolutions, which is also showing at the band in ala drawing on archive of the situation in iran, but also in romania which saw its own revolution. 10 years later, we view life as women at the time did in both countries, us fast forward,
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44 years. and it's at this festival in the german capital that several prominent iranian women have been making their case hard to say are on, are fighting with there are it's, it's there whether ours is it with on. so, and i know that already are presenting it and making these really until that happens. these women say of their fight will go on dominant cane al jazeera berlin sled here announced 0 turkeys said poor patrol. the rescue is helping to reunite earthquakes. of i was with that beloved and in sport of moments of forget for this footballer in japan's top league that story on its way. ah. ready a catastrophic series of earthquakes into kia and syria has taken thousands of people's lives and left many more homeless. and major mobilization of
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humanitarian support is underway. ah. our teams on the ground will bring you continuous updates to t n, syria quakes on al jazeera, unmanned aerial vehicles, deadly but increasingly familiar to on the modern battlefield with the conflict in ukraine, sparking the 1st full scale drawn war 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. drones and the future of war on a jazeera ah
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ah, now turkey is a nation of animal lovers and in the aftermath of the earthquakes early this month, many surviving pets have been found. the low in the rubble, stephanie decked her reports from the town of helms town on the efforts to rescue them and if possible, re unite them with their families. auntie b, a cat is brought in, found injured in the rubble. they died nose a broken leg. this mobile clinic in the town of l. b stand is part of a volunteer association. yes, i mean you'll ma's and, and her team focus on rescuing pets from damaged buildings. they have rescued more than 70 cats and dogs. since the earthquakes hit it and cut off much cards, we find them in the rubble. most are very scared and stressed. if they're healthy,
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they don't want to leave their homes on their area. the most tragic is those whose owners have died. we noticed they don't want it nice. they get depressed about one dog stop teasing for 5 days or albus down was the api center of the 2nd earthquake and southeastern tre, kia it is not recognizable now. but for those who survived and who have pets, finding them is a priority. they are part of the family. our home and furniture are gone. what is important now? is old card. she's our so. yes, i mean tries till you're the cat minish. out of the rubble of their home. she is traumatized. we're told and refuses to come out. every day they come here to the top left of their homes. try your me news. out of the robber, they placed her, she does. but then she had like inside is she
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afraid they are not successful on this day, but say they'll keep trying back at the mobile clinic, turkish forces bring in their cadaver dog. he cut his poor while searching for the many dead, and it requires stitches and newly rescued they have named him past school. he is clearly a house dog but has no micro chip. it will be much harder to find his owners. all that we have had were unions, the owners cry, we get emotional watching. thus, every one cries, actually, the family and the dog passed cool craves affection. jumping on fatty or camera man, as he films on my, his little face is a winner with every one. it's unlikely past school will be reunited with his family and he will now be sent to istanbul away from these devastated cities be put up for adoption. stephanie decker al jazeera, i'll be stan southeastern, took gear. okay,
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let's get onto the sport now. his and thanks. so much nicole arsenal are aiming to insane. there lead in the english premier league, they headed into their game at lester with a 2 point advance edge over title, rivals, manchester, city, hostile, i mean to secure consecutively wins. for the 1st time in more than a month, half time in this game, it still nil nil. manchester city face ball moth a little later on city dropped points against nottingham forest in their last league game. also drew mid week and champions league against our b. leipzig bourne must have never been in city in 17 previous league meetings of courtroom, 5 and 42 years for city to new life sometimes, isn't it? so it happened. the happiness is all worse, demean. it'll show up on the people before that. let me finish my philosophy. yeah. next
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live a full play crystal palace in the late game, yoga corp, looking to pick his team up after their 5 to lost against ran madrid in the champions league. you can lose against where moderate but and on thing a lot of teams can cause them to problems because i'm in the 1st 2025 minutes so that that's again, that sometimes the co santa quality as well. so i don't know was interested in it because it was only 20 minutes and then you lose a game. but it's still very important for us that be that i could see that that, but i why, that's why i was not in a, in all really bad mod afterwards. because as yes, if you make the mistakes we made it answer really difficult or impossible to get anything about it, but there were some good stuff. chelsea manager, graham potter says he and his family have received death threats in the wake of the seems poor form. chelsea was just through the last 14 games of despite spending more than 400000000 dollars on new players during the january transfer window. the team of 10 in the table heading in su,
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sundays game against taunton in the mood. and he was always been relatively positive and respectful. so, but it's not to say that it's easy at all because your family like suffers your mental health suffers your personality. you know, it's hard. but you know, you know, really not a duck. religious necessarily. if a player in japan, salt lake, had a moment to forget, in his team's latest game, yokohama, see play so clear water hit, attempting a fairly, i'm vicious, pass across his own penalty area. dad ended up in his own despite rather costumes like that. his son did at least punish to go on and draw. madge no, andy murray is targeting his 1st tool title. his 2019 he's taking on daniel med. fidel, in the final of the cuts are open or he's been in good form this year as he continues his recovery from korea saving hip surgery. scott said 5 match points in
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a semi final wind against your la hetcher method for 3 up in the 1st. now english craters and put themselves in a strong position to beat new zealand in wellington, of declaring on 435 on the 2nd. so many with the bull. james understood exactly both picked up 3 as they reduced at new zealand to 137. and i hope to do more damage. how the whole seat by rain with play ending early in the late the series one. now not hearing this position at the end of the day, 2 of them 7 down with a huge ladies is obviously very satisfying right now. hopefully we can follow through and, and, and can continue some very good cricket with plato. still now. south africa women l through to the t 20 will come final. the 1st time the host spacing england by 6 runs in the last 4 months in cape town,
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south africa face reigning champion astray earlier in sunday. part of the 2nd season of the saudi bank live gold series on the way in mexico. english pul, casey show 6 on the past. 65 to take the 1st round lead along with american chasing the co, correct. the series will be played of a full team tournaments for the combined price, purse of more than $400000000.00. the players on arrival ph yates all are in florida for the honda classic look at this for recovery from cal stanley, the american found himself in the woods on the 15th then managed to hole out from the drops on 2 rescued par sunny. just made the halfway companies named 10 shots, a drift of late at justin been again to remember in the n. b a, the sacramento kings bates. eniela clip is 176, the 175. it was the 2nd high scoring match in ambia history. the teams also combined to score $4043.00 points is that is an old time and be
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a record. yamba is highest scoring gang took place in 1993 when the detroit pistons beat the denver nuggets 186-2184. okay, god, his full neck. i'd be very, very much we'll see a bit later. that's it for this news. i'll be back in a couple of minutes with you. ah. mm hm. in the laboratory of the dentist pharmacy in paris medicines being prepared in this case, it's the common antibiotic amoxicillin diona here says, since people stopped wearing mosques, they are catching more infections again. so the demand for simple medication is
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higher and the major pharmaceutical companies cannot. the problem is not just affecting simple pain killers and antibiotics across the continents. the european medicines agency says currently, 13 key drugs are in short supply. the shortage of medicine applies across europe. this berlin pharmacy stones are increasingly having to find alternative drugs to those doctors are prescribed in order to help their patients. and 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 relief and not the active ingredient more strongly. it was prescribed and theme had to adjust the dosage. indonesia spun face more and more women before me stuff that brought both crowds and criticism. one on 18th, meet the rebel bike of risking life, and we didn't shake they drink on al jazeera one year after washes
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invasion of ukraine. what are the lessons learned? what i've learned is that in europe, we are a small continent, but we don't really know each other's history. how worried on the if putin succeeds in ukraine will be an invasion of your country. as stoney as prime minister talks to wild, you see, ah, many people still in the line to kosovo to nigeria in the most unpredictable presidential polls in decades. ah, allow mccloud, this is al jazeera live from the also coming up shanicea hold several opposition politic.

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