tv News Al Jazeera February 26, 2023 4:00pm-5:01pm AST
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9 that is putin succeeds in ukraine, will be in invasion of your country as stoney as prime minister talks to wall juices. ah analogy 0 great with oh ha. ah hello, i'm roll matheson, this is the news all alive from doha. coming up in the next 60 minutes to israeli settlers deb south of knob low. so the occupied west bank is ready for us. is it say they're searching for the gunman?
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dozens of migrants die and a shipwrecked in the mediterranean. the italian coast guard says the boat was carrying a 120 people. when the next president to head was to want to get an idea in peace. that's what we need. we need peers, wouldn't i? judy up hopes and fears as nigeria county votes and the most typing contested presidential election and decades. 20 years since the beginning of the war in dall form and saddam still bears the stars. and on far as small have all the latest sport on once a big day of a false match, the united are looking to end their 6 year wait for a trophy when they faced new castle in the li cab final at when we thank you. ah, we're going to begin this news. i was breaking news to israeli settlers or been shot dead on a main road in the town of ha wata, south of nobliss and the occupied west. spike is ready forces. i said to be
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searching for the suspect sought highlights has the latest force from west jerusalem. what more do we know about what's been happening? sorry. well, these are 2 jewish settlers living in a settlement and they were in their call on a highway when they were shot. they didn't die immediately, but they were critically injured and they only died from that wounds later. now the israeli forces say that they're still on the hunt for the person that carried out the palestinian believes to be a palestinian and this is in a settlement that's just south of not bless. in the occupied west bank. now novelist, you know, wednesday there were levon palestinians were killed in a massive israeli right, including civilians including a man that was of the age of 60 and a teenager. and not in itself caused widespread anger against
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a story rather with amongst palestinians, with lots of shops closing as a result. now with this latest attack, checkpoints have been closed on these ready authorities say that they're still looking for the person that car that out. it's also worth noting that hamas in gaza has said that it's no surprise that this type was carried out. this is a result of continued radio occupation and the step pump in their raids. it's also the latest incident, of course, and a succession of a rising change and weeks of rising tension that we've seen for, for quite a long time now. and the timing is significant because of course, that is a meeting going on and talk about the moment at which the palestinian authority and representatives of the israeli government plus representatives in the us and other governments are trying to find some way of de escalating all of those tension yeah, absolutely, and this meeting is to try and calm those pensions that have been happening in the last few weeks, especially with this new right wing israeli government that come in there. all us
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representatives, as well as the chip shows that have tried to mediate since the last few weeks now the palestinian authority that they're looking at potentially giving them more security over the occupied territories. specifically looking now bless, janine whether it's been a lot of the top rated by the radio authorities a lot more demolitions and really too hot spots where there are many armed palestinian men. israel consent consistently says is reason why these rates are happening, but we also have to look at the wider picture with this new ultra nationalist. very right wing government, that intent on increasing the number of settlements, approving 10000 new homes in the occupied west spine that is increasing these res, these demolitions just this year alone in less than 2 months. you've had 65
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palestinians killed and it all right, so that's just a one 3rd of the number of palestinian killed killed last year, which was an extremely tense here between the israelis and palestinians. and also this need things specifically in my house. i'm goods, palestinians, because they feel that the palestinian authority just isn't doing enough. hey, there are, there are concerns that by just moving security for them to be more fully in charge of those areas is not really getting down to the bottom of why these attacks are increasing. why there's a lot more tensions on the streets. so obviously we're going to be coming back to years, we get more details about what's been going on, but for now south kata and jerusalem, thank you very much. attorneys are more breaking news now. at least $45.00 migrants have died and shipwreck off the coast of southern italy. more than 80 survivors have been rescued. 22 of them are now in hospital officials say the ship traveled to italy from took here with those on board trying to reach europe through the
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mediterranean. and in baba as for the aftermath of a tragedy is the italian coast guard, retrieve the debt. this video posted on social media show some of the dozens of bodies which washed up on the eastern coast of calabria. more bodies was spotted at sea. these photos showed local fire fighters looking for survivors. it was night time when a ship crashed on the rocks during rough weather, near the resort of staccato dakota. it was reportedly carrying as many as a 150 people. many of them were from afghanistan. a baby and several children are among the dead. scores of people have been rescued alive and being treated by the emergency services. italy's interior minister has called the incident a huge tragedy which shows the absolute need to act firmly against irregular migration channels. according to the international organization of migration, more than 20000 people have died or gone missing in the central mediterranean since
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2014, the d barbara al jazeera was more like the head of operation communications at the rescue organization s o s medi to her name. she's joining us live from paris. thank you very much indeed for being well as one of the significant things about this particular incident. and of course, there have been many incidents like this over the last few years is that it happened very close to shore. this is my day. thank you very much for inviting us. we were talking about this. i tried to be unfortunately as you say, very many, many other tried all courage series and then very recent, just last week. another tragedy claiming was probably over 70 lives of the coastal vs. we've had often comments from european government saying that they are determined to put a stop to this. they are trying to put up some sort of blockade or at least
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persuade people not to come. it simply doesn't seem to be working, does it? people do seem to be determined to try to make their way to the european continent . the whole mediterranean is a masquerade and the central mediterranean ship, neither where we associated on the operator to europe. is ben? yes, but she migration or in the whole world need people. and what do you say people is not only men and women and children and this for the recalls that again his children suddenly died today and people purge no question. will they be rescued or not? the thing is, and it's very difficult to understand people depart them crossing these very, very dangerous routes on the votes overcrowded both often without even like jenkins seeking say that's crazy. they're risking, they like to seek say,
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that is why this happening. it's been happening since 2015. and we need to actually see, understand that we read the present and have as many maritime acids and 13 rescue services available to rescue the people. obviously, back in 2015 and around that time, of course we had concepts that were going on in libya. we had concerts going on in syria, various other parts of the world as well. it was easy to understand why people were trying to make their way away from these places. have the reasons for people moving changed over the succeeding years. i. i will talk about the people that we need, that i have much on board tuition ranking in the past. 4 years, so we operate in international watchers of the go through the rescue departed from the most of the time. and the pepsi one is we have and that's are very much documented by other organizations, is that the people need from
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a hiring cycle of violence. butcher extortion, tim bopping is really distressing. it's overwhelming, and they have signs scars for torture. they are a stream, the term traumatized, exhausted. so the people who would attempt to cross the sea on such dangerous, i think these are people that will, that are facing in a way or another such a distressing situation, such and safe and security. that they would be ready to risk and thing just to try and succeed elsewhere. and in our case, i'll respond out from the last minute on a organization. thank you very much indeed for being with us. thank you. in the j. v balance are being counted after saturday's presidential and parliamentary elections believed to be the tightest in decades. some areas in one province of extended voting through sunday, after some polling stations face delays,
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their actions being held in the middle of an economic crisis as well as violence found groups in some parts of legit correspondence across the country covering this interest in leg was 1st we're going to speak to momma jim jewel, who's in the night gillian capital. have we heard anything from the electoral commission following these folks? well, rom, just in the past hour, there was a press conference given by your cooper. he's the head of the electoral commission here in nigeria. not a lot of details conveyed in that presser. but what he did say was that it was important for all political figures here in nigeria, as well as media organizations covering these elections to ensure that they reported the results only from the official figures that were going to be verified by that is the independent national electoral commission, he also said that the correlation center was officially open. what that means is
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that here in the capital and a booge out where i next is that is where they are going to be getting the vote counts from different parts of the country than they are going to be verifying certifying those votes, no more get really on when to expect a final result for these elections. but what the chairman of the electoral commission did say was that they are taking a little bit of a break right now. and that they will have another briefing for the media in about 4 hours time, about 6 pm local. we expect that perhaps some preliminary result might be announced that our, one of the things we've heard from a lot of the nigerian we've been speaking with the past couple of days is that they are happy that there hasn't been as widespread a violent incidence as they had expected might be occurring in the run up to the election and during the election at least the voting day, saturday and also and the parts of the country was extended today on sunday. here's more of what we heard from voters in our report. in the jury of capital,
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the polls didn't open as early as they were meant to. but the mood was nonetheless up beat sandra awful. who wants to see her country move in the right direction? told us how relieved she was to have voted i life my la yoga. this is boris. because we have been allowed to ruin, you know, written on the phone. how many, how many months now, for those practicing there civic duty, the significance of this day could not be overstated. no matter the heat, no matter the length of the line. people waited. despite the delayed start earlier in the day, things have gone smoothly here at this point station and everybody i've spoken to say they're prepared to stay here as long as it takes to ensure they can cast their ballot at a polling station in the battle ground seat of legal panic after gunfire broke out
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armed gunman and a minibus fired shots in the ear and snatched ballot boxes at the voting station. and follow lou junction earlier lagos, his police chief, had issued a stern warning to anyone planning to provoke unrest who hadn't. if i you, we were a, so let's you will apprehend you. i will bring you to justice for voters here growing concern, not just over the high cost of living, but even what might happen after this vote. if this was wrong, that means that we know have a see enough on sure. in the southeastern city of new go ballots were delivered late voters, both tired and bored, wondered when booths would finally be set up. poles were scheduled to close by afternoon and many worry they might not be able to vote nigerian independent national electoral commission said some areas had experienced irregularities, and tried to offer reassurance. anybody who had was only q before
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$230.00 would be allowed to vote even who 14. ready will be on the official clothes analysis, local news, 18 candidates are running for the presidency, but only 3 are seen as having a realistic chance of winning also up for election or hundreds of seats and parliament in this hotly contested election, voters only know one thing for certain, no matter who wins the challenges ahead will not be easy. and rob, let me just tell you and our viewers are where we are right now in boucher. this is the situation room for the national civic society. so you have a coalition of, of civil society groups that have come together. they've been monitoring through teams. they have found out across the country. what's been going on in these elections earlier. they also gave a press conference in which they said they were disappointed in how the government and, and how the electoral commission had handled these elections. he said the logistics weren't dealt with properly. there were other issues. they said that that, that they had problems with to that and let me bring in
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a guest that we have right now. this is clement wonk. why? he's the executive director of the policy and legal advocacy center here in nigeria . and mr. want to thank you for being with us. we appreciate it. thank here, let me ask you 1st. i was saying that earlier we heard from some of your colleagues that there was a lot of disappointment about how these elections had been handled. what do you think of how the polls have gone thus far? i think yes sir. disappointment is, or the appropriate way to use that certainly are when you have lots of people turn up to vote and this is perhaps on the largest ha, a ton out of what as we've seen in recent major and elections, when you have so many numbers of people show up to cast their votes and find that election. officials are not pulling units that stat time materials are not adequate, add them at delays. and am the, the putting units have not been, ah, properly allocated as should be the case and see vote in going away into the knives and some people not even able to vote. i think that you,
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you really would be disappointed at given the fact that we have a new electoral law that everyone thought would help to shape the elections. now, given the fact that a lot of time, ah, had been in place for the selection to be very wary, well conducted. so really yes, a lot of disappointment. one of the things mr. walk with we've heard in the past few hours is a lot of warnings from our political candidates through in nigeria, as well as from the electoral commission, warning against spreading false information about potentially false vote tallies. how much concern do you have about this and how big of a problem does it constitute right now in this period a poster voting? adding is a big problem. i, the electoral commission had a promise that he will upload results in what is called leads. that results or viewings, ah, portal, this hasn't happened. i indeed the, it's been epileptic in terms of this showing up and, and disappearing. so in a lot of ways,
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this is caused by the fact that little commission has not delivered on his promise to ensure that that bottle is active and delivering results are real time, which is what we where palm is. so in that circumstance, yes, the political parties are likely at to spread false news about babylon, results and there will not shipments. all right, that's clement one, quite his, the executive director of the policy and legal advocacy center. thanks for being with us here on al jazeera. thank you, chris. so there you go, rob, you heard there from summit one about the concerns that people have here, especially among, among these civil society groups about how the elections were handled. obviously we're going to be hearing more about this in the hours and the days i had right now what we're waiting for is potentially the 1st amount of preliminary results when it comes to the votes that are being counted. rob mohammed, jim, jim, and i was your mom and thank you very much indeed i want to bring in all my agencies are joining us live now from lagos, san lagos, one of the key battleground states in these elections. what's the situation there?
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while basically we've gone round some parts of lagos this morning before arriving here in front of the headquarters of the election commission or electoral commission. here in lego state. lagos is unusually quiet, although it's aw weekend. a sunday, a day after the boarding process. but shops usually open, stay open at this time of the day closed probably because of apprehensions of what may happen when the results and i was. but these results have not been announced yet, but the streets are calm following yesterday's incidents and something falling areas of lego state. so basically people are waiting to hear from official see how the coalition has gone on. and when will be announced that results. thank you very much, have a valid address and from lego. so obviously we're going to be checking in with a correspondence over the next few hours. is the results continue to come in,
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but i would thank you very much. ah m, it's been nearly 3 weeks since earthquakes destroyed a thousands of homes and sell them to cheer and northern syria. more than 50000 people have died and the disaster and millions have fled the devastation robert brides johnny. his live now from the city of a donna, some parts of turkey weren't as badly hit as other parts, but people there still need help build. they will that's right. i mean, the focus now is from the authorities as a building these so called container cities to offer better accommodation for people in the earthquake affected area. because the whole of to kia is facing this problem of population displacement that are literally several 1000000 people. it's estimated have actually left the area now a lot of those people will have headed off to the bigger cities,
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like it stumble in ankara, a. but still a sizable population has headed westwards away from the earthquake area along the coast with the mediterranean. still close enough to their home provinces, but far enough away from those provinces that they now feel safe. a 2 hour drive west along the coast from the earthquake stone. the big port of merton was the 1st stop for many people fleeing the disaster in southern turkey. a nice thing is very different from other cities because it's the closest safe city to the disaster. ravia in the 1st space, it was quite frightening. he saw people all around the city with nowhere to go with the airbags and with their p g. m. as on who last director is an academic and community organizer who has been helping the influx of new commerce with aid packages and centers and dormitories. throughout the city, people are in temporary accommodation with most saying they want to go back to that
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provinces. despite their ordeal, janish, if our house is rebuilt, we'll definitely go back. we can't give up on our hometown. it's estimated the 2000000 population of the city has suddenly grown by around a quarter who shared with them that city is nurse and is suffering from this. but after the tending and tiny cities completed in the earthquake zone, i believe that the people were turned to their home towns. but some reports say rents have more than doubled, making it order for existing residence to get homes. and more demands are being taught on schools and hospitals. as many people it seems are choosing to stay as a major hub, mercy has experienced influx is of newcomers over time. but there are concerns about how it will cope with this latest search. most of them won't go back. i mean, this is not, it's not the 1st time that the city mason experienced this. this city is
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mediterranean city, very calm, the pretty. and there are a lot of chances of economic survival van, you don't have resources to share. there will be conflicts, there will be very bare struggles among the peoples. the problems facing merson it seems likely to be faced nationally. it's rec, and several 1000000 people who lost their livelihoods. and homes in the disaster have left the earthquake affected area for new lives throughout turkey, even after the recovery. it's questionable just how many of them will ever go back . rob mcbride, al jazeera marsen, turkey, elf workers, and yos, are stepping up their operations. an earthquake had regions of southern turkey with growing concerns about the spread of infectious diseases. how small kabbalah reports from kara, mom of us, a race against time to play. the rubble got on my mother is among the regions
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hardest hit by earthquakes in southern turkey. drinking water is unsafe, the air is thick with dust and health experts say it's contaminated with dark scenes and pollutants from the rubble poppy, a shamela than malicious little muscle. our biggest challenge is improving hygiene incidentally condition solid, especially now that you have a growing number of displaced living in dense and gams schedules. our goal is to provide better living conditions for dancler. in this makeshift can those without homes receive bottled water, mass, hand sanitizers, and daily supplies of food, clearly traumatized. they face an uncertain future. as emergency teams clear the rubble, huge challenges are piling up the hundreds of thousands of people affected by the earthquakes with stay in shelters or well, okay, to save the houses until there's
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a rebuilt. but in the mean time, there will continue to be exposed to the threats of after shocks, diseases and toxins in the air. david whit, wic leads a team of doctors from the u. k. and his worry it, it's inevitable that you're going to see a royce in disease and it's also inevitable. there will be some kind of infectious disease your new series, how quickly we can get on top of it altogether and control it for now, people in color, my mulash are desperate to retrieve their belongings. this is all volunteers could recover from this building. a photo album for the family that once lived here by they hope it will help survivors and relatives of those who have died to pick up the pieces and move on. hash marbella al, jazeera calamine, marsh. so his white helmets are wanting of the growing threat of cholera and rattle
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held areas as a result of the earthquakes. the civil defense group says the damaged infrastructure and sanitation has been massive and they could be a real catastrophe. for civilians are also reporting cracks in many residential buildings and schools, leaving them too dangerous to use. stand for the weather now and hears everton. hallo, it's got to be a very wintry start to the week right across that west coast of the u. s. so our offending area of low pressure, the, brought the heavy snow into california that still in place is now making its way across the rockies, trailing cold front all the way down across the far north, west of mexico. cold air getting right down his north western parts of mexico as he go on through the next couple of days. this system makes his way further east was to pull up a southerly wind a mile to wind. lots of rain across the plains, snow on the northern flank of that terrace guys into central parts through monday. you notice, but over towards the west, allies should be about 20 degrees at this time of year struggling to get to 12 more
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sleet and snow. coming in on monday, going into tuesday at may, will even sink south of the border. pushing back into that far northwestern corner of mexico some more heavy rain coming through more snow, particularly across the sierra nevada push across in to where to stay. yeah. really . as a case of spot, the difference more of that snow, more of that cold air. pushing a little further south still, i think is going to be thursday before we gravity see some brighter and warmer weather. getting back into our lay, there will be some snow up towards the pacific northwest at that state, but i think much of california will be in the clear at that state. meanwhile, some very heavy storms for the southern plains still had on all the zeros struggling to tackle an electricity crisis. the head of south africa's power company was zion's, but blames the government for per system. blackouts in sport, also state control and the premier, any type of race ah,
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march oh, now jesse of devastation and its aftermath, we have more on our continuing coverage of the earthquake disaster in turkey in syria. go mafia, al jazeera investigations goes, undercover, infiltrating. criminal mit was to reveal how dirty cache is being turned into pure gold. 20 years on from the start of the iraq war, we examined how the past 2 decades have shape the country and the major challenges confronting future generations documentary within spot. whitney springs world issues into focus through compelling human stories. stars gather for the 95th oscars, celebrating the best and films from hollywood and around the world. march on up to sierra informed opinions i write extremism is real and need to be tackled as soon as possible. frank assessments. there was a joke about the interim government that it's not in forever, nor does it go inside story. on al jazeera
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lou. ah, watching all 0 reminder of our top stories, this are at least 45 people have been killed off to a migrant boat sign off the coast of southern italy. dozens of bodies have been found on the beach. their easton columbia. more than 80 survivors been rescued? 22 of them are now in hospital. also being counted in nigeria as presidential and parliamentary elections, fillings of police stations and saturday, left people waiting for hours to cast their ballots. let have been some reports of violence. to israeli settlers have been shot dead on a main road in the town of harlow south of novice only occupied was 5. is
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a life from there is really forces are searching for the suspects when the shooting comes, as officials from israel, the palestinian authority, the u. s. jordan and egypt meets in the city of october in jordan. officials have been discussing ways of deescalate, in the recent changes in the occupied westbank. it abraham reports. it's hard to miss growing palestinian support for i'm groups latest example of a theme at thousands demonstrated across the occupied left bank at midnight. responding to a call by the lines them. i'm hook 11 palestinians were killed in an israeli, an 8 on the city of nappies on wednesday. some were fighters from the group. now palestinian officials have flown to jordan to attend the security summit with israel organized by the us. egyptian and jordanian officials are also there. the
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the meeting on sunday is an attempt to de escalate growing tensions way and we established palestinian security control in nablus and g need them to cities where fighters are operating by mrs leather for ac. emily, the americans don't want a full blown escalation that would destabilize the region at a time. they and the rest of the world are busy with ukraine and its ramifications . the worst that could happen is we implement their plan to push the t. i security to take over from these reli occupational that would lead to civil. well, the 5th palestine depends on international 8th and a large sum of the money it gets goes to the security forces. most graduates from this military academy and up joining the ranks of palestinian authority security forces. even though it has fluctuated support for the security establishment hasn't stopped. critics say such heavy international investment in the security forces. this empowers palestinians and many question coordination between the palestinian
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authority and israel on security. nearly 30 percent of international aid to the palestinian authority goes towards security. when the boston authority was established, the main goal of international aid was to keep the peace process go away. but this has changed over the years and many say that the goal now is to ensure stability. while many world leaders are calling for de escalation intention, palestinian said they're missing the obvious problem, israel's military occupation. and without addressing that, they say any other discussions will only prolong get me that rahim edges. eda, the occupied westbank. it's been 20 years since the stuart of the war in door for hundreds of thousands of people to be killed and millions more. have been forced out of their homes. fighting has eased, but many people are still living in camps with nowhere else to go on to zeros here we're morgan has more from north star for this was once
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a home in the village of shadow and to dance north star for as alma adam stands amongst the rooms where his home once stood, he remembered his life here before being forced out when the were and are for began on her lana and a love for them. cuz of people came and raided the village. there was 6 cars loaded of guns. some one horses and someone camelback, they were from the arab tribes. they killed the men and bent the village down and looted property and livestock. we had just kept the mountains to survive. my body less or more good about the worst started in 2003 with therefore we tribes rebelling against the government and accusing it of marginalization. the government responded with airstrikes and attacks on villages proceeds to be allied to the rebels. more than 300000 people were killed and over 2000000 displaced in the years that followed. the un describe the war as ethnic cleansing against the tribes here
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and 20 years on evidence of the we're still remains. hundreds of villages across the dock for region were burned during the years of war and what was known as courts. earth policy, many of those who are able to flee are now in camps waiting for the implementation of a peace agreement signed in 2020, to be able to return home. the deal signed between the government and various troubled groups included compensation for victims upper war. but some displaced people say other issues keep them from returning when it is yet not another couple of the people who killed us and burns, our villages are still out there and still aren't. we can leave the camp without being assorted by owns men are running into pickups with loaded guns on them as local authority, see security will be provided for those wanting to return. we actually agreed you were peace agreement in there, in a security protocol agreement that we said that do those returns. they must go back
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to their original village and we have to establish the force to carry out the mission for protect them when they are going back to their original village. after 20 years of displacement, armor wants to return home, but he needs to be sure it is safe. he doesn't want to be forced to leave again. debora law has done in his life from the elbow shook internally, displaced persons camp in north star for her. but even though a peace agreement has been signed, it's hard to imagine that people are still having to live in camps like the one that you're out. well we've spoken to displaced people here and we've asked them despite the fact that it's been more than 2 years as since that disagreement was signed. they say that they want to remain here, not because they don't want to go back to their villages. but rather because of the insecurity that continues outside the, the parameters of these camps at the fact that they can't access their farms,
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they say, which are occupied by people who they say were responsible for their attacks. that makes them not ready to go back home. so many of them here say that the insecurity outside the camps, the fact that they don't know any other place, but the camps, especially the youth busy that they have not received proper education. they don't have job opportunities. and this is the life that they know, and they don't know how to set up any other life outside these parameters. so for many of them, this camp has become home. but for the older generation, those who were spoken to they say that the fear and the fact that the reminders of the were, are still out there. that makes them hesitant to go back at the fact that the villagers are yet to be rebuild. the fact that they still have to have access there yet to have access to basic social services. that's why they're remaining in the camps. so 20 years on rob, rob, many people here say they want to make sure that there is complete security that they have access to basic services before they leave this camps, or where they've been here for an hour 20 years and go back to their villages to be
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able to reestablish their lives here, but thank you very much. it does have a morgan talking to some of the other shook internally, displaced persons come in north door for want to bring in a while and, and really bore who's an expert on governance of development in dar 4 is also the author of dar, for the last colony is joining us from dora. thank you very much. indeed sir, for being with us. and why is it that the government seems unable to be able to provide the security that people want to protect them when they return to the villages? it's a basically lack of quality can will. and when you look at that situation, you notice that each and every single piece agreement of the casualties and the killing it increases. this is due to the fact that the, the, me to the security sales and then military officers who have committed the genocide, they have more, they have not been changed. i need to say for all to try and,
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and that massey supp lot if they don't feel secure due to the fact that there is no, there isn't any gesture of justice. if you look at the machine and the other 2 individuals were supposed to be handed over to the i c c. no that was taken to the i c. c lot be brought to try. ringback deborah was talking there about to people that she had spoken to in that particular camp who had grown up in the camp who had had very little education and knew nothing. but the count one would imagine that this is incredibly damaging for the future of the country. because these are young people on whom this country is going to depend. oh absolutely, and this is not, this is not a sticky problem of that thought. i think it supported him of the all sudan, his nation applauded. that that there is a total lack of
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a strategic planning did on into any that this the, to the studies that knowledge was planning for the future. and i don't think that this interest he leads, have given much thought into the injustices committed again. is that, that 40 in groups, especially in the idp, can't save you look at that for. and you think that, and we know that once a, a population leaves in id p, camp's in southern sudan and that for then it's very obvious that since the dime of that inclusion, it has been like 40 years, are they, there hasn't been any deep thinking about the future of these, he and generations, and even some mode, some dire consequences might happen in the future because they can easily be a $1000000.00 interruption because i'm fortunate they were running slightly out of
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time. but i do want to ask you very briefly, if you wouldn't mind, sir, given the fact that as you say, that appears to be a lack of enthusiasm for doing anything about this problem on the part of the government. what in your opinion, would it take in order to break the cycle that door for is facing just very briefly, sorry, if you don't mind. i think we have to start by adopting a bottom up approach that will dig that the interest of the masses into consideration so far. i own i came sawyer door to what made to bring a militia leaders to the negotiation tank one and without taking into consideration. ah, that the interest and ambitions of them as his am at the cloud. so to answer your question, more precisely, it has to be a bottom up approach that needs to be needs to be adopted, to bring peace to that or what he'd made about. we appreciate that,
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sir. thank you very much indeed. ranking ah, russian president vladimir prudence, accused nato of being an indirect accomplice to crimes. committed by cave is also accused western powers of working to disintegrate and control russia on the ground . the moscow back lawgroup says it's fighters have captured the village of ja, he'd named north of backward fighting has been concentrated around the city for weeks. while for more on the view from moscow, we're going to speak to some of each of it in the russian capital. it's the 1st time we've heard from pro russian president vladimir putin. since the latest round of western sanctions. more than 11000 sanctions have been imposed on russia in the last one year. the latest round, including $87.00 individuals and $34.00 entities, which have been targeted at the you seems to be horning in on the people and
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entities and commercial and legal of which have been able to allow moscow to operate in circumvent. all of these are the sanctions that have been implemented. resident regimen fulton, again making a point to his local and international audience that russia remains in this war because it is an existential issue for russia. because russia feels that it is not just fighting ukraine, but it is fighting an alliance which wants to break it apart. sewer. the shackles, luke, i go, sir lucius, thrown another into de circumstances when all leading nato countries have declared their main aim as to inflict a strategic defeat on us so that our people suffer as they say. so how can we not consider their nuclear capabilities under these circumstances, especially as their supplying tens of billions of dollars worth of weapons to ukraine? you and these comments come as in the eastern parts of ukraine in russian held tara
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trees. there is a further push to try an inch closer into deeper into ukrainian territory. the contested town of battles remains a flash point if heard from the bargaining group today, seeing that they have taken more areas in the north of bar mode. but they've also accused ukrainian troops of bill blowing up a dam to try and slow the advance of these forces. so it remains a flash point. the eastern parts of ukraine remained contested, where shelling continues from both sides and peace remains a distant possibility. or some been surveyed in moscow with some of thank you. c, i a director william burns says the u. s. believes iranian leaders are not pursuing a nuclear weapon ization program at this time. last week, the u. n's nuclear watchdog said terran enhanced the material to near military grade level. at a ron's leaders made the decision to pursue
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a nuclear weapon. to the best of our knowledge, we don't believe that the supreme leader in iran has yet made a decision to resume the weapon ization. a program that we church that they suspended or stopped at the end of 2003. we're going to bring in our dorsal dsl, our, he's an expert on iran's military and security policy is also professor of international relations at the university of cut all if he's joining us from rome. thank you very much. indeed, sir, for being with us. can you help me out with some and i will the definition really more than anything else. this is he, i a director also in that, at that report had also said that iran had been enriching it's, it's nuclear facilities and, and it had also been developing it's delivery systems. then he said that nuclear weapons zation was not a decision that had been taken. what is the nuclear weapon ization element of that? well, that's an important question. but before that we need to consider that this cia
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announcement is quite significant. it's consistent with previous assessments of the agency about the fact that iran is not moving toward nuclear. bob, i'm, i mean, to answer your question, we need to go back a bit to history of 2019. when you run decided to have a new car program. you know, the nuclear program was basically seen as, as a way to resolve the conventional military capability the iran has lost during the war in iraq. so it was basically motivated by the fact that he was military was weak. i think that capitalists into iran has largely changed in lays days or years after, after 2010, especially when iran was managed to successfully to have a powerful niece. our forces joined with the original proxies. it's machine proxy around around region and it's a symmetrical capability. so iran's need actually for conventional
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a non conventional weapons which is here and nuclear bomb is, has, is last now. and that's the logic behind the ring and leaderships. i'm not going to work that even is ation. also, there is a fact that iran well understood the international costs of any fin is ation program. that means that iran has chosen another strategy. it is keeping the capability, but it is not moving toward having the final bond at its disposal. there are other foreign governments who are absolutely determined that iran is heading towards our nuclear weapons asian program as you describe it. not least, of course, israel given the announcement that we've heard from the cia i'm who's right. well, i think that that's an important factor here. i mean, it's important to notice about the timing of this announcement because basically that is happening during the time that there is a kind of
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a high tension in the region within israel and iran and diverse leak about the fact that he's really considering a military operation. against iran, and that basically might, might be interpreted that the united states wants to shore the original actors that iran is not moving toward that. and that could be seen as a sort of d escalation attempt by the united states to keep the region called. but more importantly, i think iran is also considering the fact that there is the risk of is, is really reaction. but also there is the risk that other original actors like saudi arabia and united arab emirates respond to iran if it goes to toward the nuclear bomb. and that response from the ring inside is kind of a factor that changed their capital is what i mean is that for iran would be very difficult to enter into her arms race with suit ravia on the new car arms race. that actually requires a lot of resources, requires a lot of international aid. why soon to rave?
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you have all these resources and international aid iran doesn't have. so here comes to the calculus that a position of regional actors is influencing iran's decision. more importantly, also iran's own allies. most importantly, china and russia is another factor that is quite important. we have not seen any change in russians and chinese position regarding iran's nuclear activity. there are determines and their, their principal policies preventing iran from having a nuclear weapon. and that has not changed. so i think they basically under strategy level, while nothing specific has changed, iran is trying to keep that capability as it could be in the position of a threshold nuclear state in order to improve its leverage in future negotiations on ross. so there are forgive me for interrupting you. i do apologize, but i'm afraid time is against us, but we appreciate your being with us and i'll just, you know,
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thank you very much indeed. and. busy the head of south africa, state park companies left his job officer, accusing government officials and the governing party of corruption. the countries being facing records, power cuts, the state of disaster is declared to tackle the crisis. i'm going to mila has more from john, this book, jill abraham chicks, the fuel level, and what's become a necessity for businesses in south africa, a generator to keep the lights on. as rolling blackouts possessed without power, the cold storage fridges at the small won't work. sometimes forcing job to bury the dead quicker than usual, the unforeseen over here. that estrogen with the date. you've got the budget itself . let's say hypothetically, random makes 10000 times a week because of the power car. it's not doubled that you've got now you've got to inflate your expenditures. these are the worst power cuts in 16 years, leaving large parts of the country without electricity for 10 hours or more
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a day. the cause, old and badly maintained facilities for management and allegations of corruption at the state owned power utility. s. com. more than $10000000000.00 worth of contracts given by the power utility that companies have been red, flags suspected of being corrupt. grafted s. com is made, the power cuts worse. critics say very little been done to fix it. just a handful of senior management at esco have been investigated and arrested. and now the persistent load, residents will run reports as declared a state of disaster to tackle the crisis from. but critics say it's purely administrative and will do little to help. a new minister for electricity is being appointed alongside the already existing minister for energy and skeptics. it will only cause for the confusion. meanwhile, the public utility c. o is resigned. you investigative journalist cow cohen has written extensively about what he calls the sabotage of s. com, this physical sabotage and the sabotage in the border. people are physically
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breaking down power stations cutting down pylons, adding rocks into coal, trying to cause pass stations to break down either secure contract. well, because of ideological motivations in the boardroom, they are a series of incidence, you know, trying to target the executive of ask, i'm trying to make them look bad. some say there's a lack of political will to end the power cuts. meanwhile, businesses like job struggled to keep running, while thousands of other small businesses have already shut their doors for me to mala, ultra 0, johannesburg. it's time for the sport his father. thank you so much. rob of the 1st major trophy of the english football season is on the line later manchester, united face new castle, a leak of funnel at wembley. man, you were looking to win their 1st piece of silverware since 2017. they go into this final after knocking barcelona out of the rope league, and eric 10 hug cider in contention to end the season with for trophies. new counselor, also enjoying an impressive campaign at the house,
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men are currently 5th in the premier league. if they win the lea cap, it will be their 1st major domestic prize since 1955. we've been speaking to scotland legend and being sports presenter abby grey about how he sees the mount going. both teens are suffering trophy drought. but who, in your opinion really needs to win this? well, if you've gotten 60 plus years and never won a trophy domestic trophy, 5040 since you want any trophy your castle or is it manchester nature? the biggest club in the world who haven't won anything for coming up 6 years. i think both desperately want to win at both need to win it. whose need is greater? probably manchester in eighty's and attic 10 hiv i think any progress newcastle of done this season is a positive. so getting to a final was a positive fodder. and if they don't win, that's okay. as long as i've put prepared to move on. but for united, it would be a major disappointment if they don't, when this will be big favorites, but it's got final yet, and that doesn't always work out favors winning. well,
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in your opinion, where do you see this game being won and lost? wow. well, if you have arguably the best forward in europe, possibly the world playing for you at the moment, marcus, russia. yeah. and better form that any one and europe you have to keep them quiet. can you do that? if they do it they'll, they'll go a long way to being in this game. the beautiful newcastle fight is the only last to ping a li gimme a season. that's less than anyone. so don't lose many football matches. but what they don't do a scoring of goals. so i think if they're gonna win at newcastle, the steamer gwinnett, gwinnett gwinnett, and i lost gordon game. i think it again tiff a shootout. unity will be them. so if they can keep in a to quiet defensively, then it will be up to them to see of people like alexander eve sack, callum wilson, alice at maximum, if they can do a little bit magic on the day. but i think most people up up from your castle funds will feel before the game starts at manchester. united how tailors are so has
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stayed in control and the english premier league title raised the goal from gabrielle martin. now he decided their game at lester and he sent you points clear title. rivals matches your city who also won on saturday. and the 1st time the gunners claim consecutive the winds in more than a month or so. now have games coming up against everton. warning. building. allen's new zealand cricketers have staged a bit of a fight back against england and wellington, after being dismissed for 209 and being forced to follow on. the block caps managed to reach 202 for 3 was tom late and impressed with about scoring 8340 cell trail mailings. first, endings total of a $435.00 by $24.00 rounds. and despite their efforts, the play of the day belong to the tourists. jack leech completely bamboozled. new zealand batsman, well yeah, he's been trying for that. he's been dreaming. now one of the middle east, that biggest equestrian events has been taking place here and katara,
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the 10th edition of the c h i. l. chicago featured more than a 130 riders from 28 countries. santa hamish reports, ah, right, isn't horses from around the world have landed in cut off for one of the biggest events on the question calendar. c h i, i'll shut up the is the only contest of its kind in asia. top ranking international stars competing in the olympic disciplines of show jumping, dressage and parent dress, such a shag, it became overnight, a sensational event where rob, it's became one of the top 5 in the world. we're seeing a lot of development happening lastly for years actually. where now top competitors and horses are joining every year. and we're looking forward for the next 3 years to support and encourage the horse riding in this country. since it's
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a core part of our, our dna. germany leads the way when it comes to olympic, a question that success and the why does have once again been collect entitled here and cut off a country which also has a historic commitment to the sport. the i'll check up santo is established more than the decades ago by the former emmy of katasha amendment highly for outstanding . the aims to preserve and promote the arabian no force agreed. also it provides what class facilities for events like this. alongside the top level 5 saw show jumping, events that have big fences and prize money to match competitions with lower fences and the lowest star rating allow emerging writers to gain valuable experience on it's a chance for cut to ride them. ha mcalisio back at to take the next step in his career . i realizing from sir 2012 for the lending school in her catheter christopher
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division. and this is my 1st year in this international. sure. this your choice to thought is under the some griffith of the international shoulders. i always compete against other people from other regions and other countries. this also gives you a potential like to, to improve and or to do bigger things like the for games and also asian games. francis demand list is an established name at the top of the show dumping world rankings. he's using the event to continue his build up to next year's paralympics every other wednesday that went to beth ride going to waldron india with her beth all seasons. one of the biggest, her sure, starting outside before we came from the indoor season. so to put her thoughts, hope things are really a good test. dash there are plenty more tests to come for all the riders aiming for
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title success in the common season and beyond. sun ha most i'll just hear. okay, and that is all you support for now back t roberts far. thank you very much. indeed. i'm going to be back in a couple of minutes with more on all these stories. join me for. can i move madison goodbye. ah ah. a is one of them, most of the case in the world. it has an incredible thankful recognition technology . how did the narrative improve public opinion better?
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no. wasn't asked. how is it, jim? if it leaks flaming, the video spread like wildfire, they denied the platform or in your brain. the listening post dissects the media. we don't cover the move, we cover the way the news is covered. in syria citizens are 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 acid 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, 2002 was the 5th hottest year on global record stretching back more than a century. government report says 2022 was a bad year for whether 2023 isn't shaping up to be much better already year in
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california series of severe storms as battered the coast line and the interior of the state wasn't a number of deaths and up to a $1000000000.00 in damages. climate scientists say the warming is caused by industrial age, heat trapping, gas emissions, which have been rising steeply since the 1960. they say rapid reductions and emissions are needed across the globe to slow or reverse the greenhouse effect. o 2 israeli settlers dead in the occupied west bank is really forces say they're searching for the gunman. ah, about this and this is, are you alive from doha. also tell me all the dozens of migrants die in a shipwreck in the mediterranean. the.
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