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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 3, 2023 4:00pm-5:01pm AST

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[000:00:00;00] ah, wherever you go in the world, one airline goes to make it feel exceptional. katara always going places to go on counting the coffee, you benz petrol power caused by 2035. is this the end of combustion engine vehicles, airlines profit flying high, became the industry keep up with the search and demand plus student forgotten crisis? will any one come to doff was a counting the cost on al jazeera? ah ah. hello, so robin, you're watching the al jazeera news, our life,
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my headquarters here in the hall, coming up in the next 60 minutes. dozens of migrants sent back to guinea days after tennessee, as president accuses subsaharan africans of creating a crime wave liberal peace prize winner. last viet ski is handed a 10 year jail sentence in belarus rights group, say the trial was a sham. dozens of police officers are held hostage in columbia. as rural protest is demanding better a lock access to an oil field. as we dive into how countries are trying to protect international waters where there are few, if any regulations, i'm joining us, roscoe with thought as practiced, begin to the 1st race of the for me on season and ball, rain and bus on the edge around the dread in the 1st leg of the semi final. all right, ah,
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welcome to the program guineas. military leader has criticize what he calls that degrading treatment of sub saharan african migrants in tune as dozens of migrants from guinea have been arrested and re pat, created in a crackdown during the past month. and that's after president. i saw you to q, subs our and africans applying to change tennessee as demographic makeup. he then ordered undocumented migrants to be expelled many her since last that jobs and housing and some say they've been attacked. the situation has been very difficult to neesha live in health. we don't go out. people who have papers or afraid to go out when we go out the catches and put us in jail because people talk about recreation. normally they send you to the airport, but they have prepared special prison for subsaharan. when they catch you, they said you did what? there are many demeans who are imprison. well, these are pictures outside i because mc into nicea earlier this week and not countries, governments,
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as about 500 people have expressed interest in returning home. the african union has criticized changes yet managed to avoid what it cold racial hate speech to nicea has rejected those allegations of racism. while joining me now ish way a parent could research it. sciences po who studies blackness into nicea and joined us not from post. talk with us on the news. i mean, how to the words of the to niecy in president told the actions of black africans to be willingly repatriated surprise you i will say that the comment is coming from guy said haven't surprised me. they have shocked me. they haven't surprised me because of what the, the fees that he made, the kind of conspiracy type paid speech. you know that being thanks to the granting placement theory, the roots already there in the society and for the past months we have been seeing
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more and more in the course at the level we had, people already espousing this type of period of, you know, we need to get rid of the, the african, i mean, because, you know, there's other ring of the social imagination of africans, of africa indonesia. so this idea that you know, the africans need to be, need to be kicked out because they are taking the jobs are eating away the rides all because there are a lot of these goods are missing currently from grocery stores. a lot of like, popular understanding of this missing product is that always, africans, quote, unquote are who are eating away our food. because just simply pre, eh, i just jump in a shrink because you say that your research and tweets were not very well received . and that you asked to remove them. i mean i want to ask you to research it wasn't
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ever wise to publish while you were in to nicea why not leave such comments and a full evaluation and report after you've left the country? why did you can ask, did you try? did you find to antagonize the authorities? so about the treat and sit in the states from june 2020 to last year, june. like a lot of sub there and colleagues in geneva. i had also applied to have residents on that side, you know, and i've been applying since 20 twenty's and it says my presence of tenicia. i never received a card yet on it. so this is like june 2022. i'm going back and forth to the police, and of course there's no card in the residence guard. doesn't show upside on my twitter on my twitter page being like, oh, i went to look for my gosh, the social which is the residence permit. it's still not there. and the next day the police 3 police folks showed up at my door and i asked them like,
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what the reason for the i'm sticking to the police station and asked to remove the the street. so this, i mean, this crack down, it is already been going on on global. why grants, specifically the african migrant population. you know, i know of cases bear during my bond last year. i mean i'm thinking of alcohol is good for everyone. entities even during normal and accept like selling of alcohol or prohibitions on that. but like drinking comes human are invited spaces in your home. it's totally fine. but allegations made against groups of workshops and students that they owe that they were parting too much, or like even too much i'll call didn't ramadan to the new birth. and they were called the police and david put in jail for about 12 or 13 young still like some african day or because of this type of part, donald already been there for like weird,
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so the and by the civilian population as well as the police population you think you say that your research in your study is about sort of the history of anti blackness in tennessee and generally north africa. how far back does this go? where does your research begin? and what evidence is there that this difference in whether you are darker or lighter is or is not acceptable in certain parts of the continent? marita specifically focuses on the contemporary starting 2011 starting the revolution. but i mean by history. reading text by some accident folks out in a dolly and people are just a story and has done a lot of work and sort of like digging through the genealogies of black tunisia, population, indonesia. so you have black, anyone population into neat,
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were all homogeneous, the zoomed to trade, the genealogy to the x and sleeved populations. and what she's argue in her work is that, you know, the, the geology, the black confusion population with more complicated. you know, you had migrations from the south like my good like economy, my grand or like folks like political persecution. so. ringback so you have this like trees in terms of like, crease them, a lot of the term that are used to name the black bodies, indonesia, today's sort of trace them from that the migration of slavery. so for example, you have a bid like that, the storm that is used in air because it means they are sleep over. and so we take keeping trucks because i think as a for our view as the clarity as well on your position and your research. so basically, you know, you have the scenario where climate change and even conflict can make people move
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from one location to another. if you add them part of the equation into to nicea, and you see, to nicea in the political instability that it's experiencing right now. it's, you might say a combination of 2 experiences clashing and therefore one has to be an escaped go to do you get the sense that black africans are being scapegoating to distract from the current problems that tissue is facing? absolutely, i mean this is the, you know, the, the wretched richard, i mean, the most wretched in the wretched but even in the most marginalized space, as you man, manage to create another much less population for the, you know, the, the margins of the margins, of course, i mean, the, it's always easier to name someone who's more marginalized and society and say that they are the cause of the problem that are happening. so, i mean that it's clear,
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you know, the political level, like the movement of this, this discourse is, is very much linked to sort of like in a sort of, you know, giving away the responsibility to this constructed other. and it's constructed. the other is, is not just something i mean currently of course, it's huge. i mean, of course, i mean the whole read that the falling under the constructed other african is huge . but i mean, it's also into like our political opponents tunisia guarantee bidding today, n g o z. and since guys i came to bother since he came to the full in 2021. he's also for the under this law and reducing foreign funding and jones and other civil society organizations and denisia. so he's after any other that he can find and guidelines are there in the big goober fund that he has created as
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a sub african population or should see what happens at near for the moment to transfer. right. thanks so much for joining us from perry. you can thank you. that is any politicians and to his main opposition party have been arrested. is the latest step across don on critics of president chi site, several opposition figures, judges under radio station director have been hell since last month. the sites sacked, the government and for his parliament in 2021. moving through by decree, now the u. s. has criticized what it called an escalating pattern of arrests of opposition figures. a court in bella luce, her sentence. the 2022 nobel peace prize winner alas, bell, yet ski to 10 years in prison. the pro democracy activists was convicted of smuggling and financing activities violated public order. he said that he was being persecuted for political reasons. by law. ski is the founder of isna human rights group that supports demonstrators will be held by a lot sky set up vans now. 2 years ago after alexander the cushion,
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k. begin the president of salaries in 1994. it's work has documented, done by look to shank and his security forces sought to help detained protest as under families phonetic 30 years, and other spare lat. sky was detained after major demonstrations. they followed look shank his victory and the presidential vote in 2020. so the opposition said was wrecked. his group tracked the numbers of people detained in protest and police raids costs a star do bet is the external communications manager for that. he has no human rights center. he's of us now lie from vilios. in lithuania, you could have it with us on the program to just get your reaction to the sentence that we're hearing about it. they're actually simple, outraged. it's simply insane. they the,
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the length of the time that they go way just breaking off what, what, why all the authorities so concerned and so paranoid about your organization and about what earlier has said in the past is it's possible because of what is mentioned because we've been opposing the government, the illegal policy of the government for 4 years. so apparently his regime of mine tomorrow as enemies. so that makes sense. revenge. so in terms of the situation on the ground at the moment, can you just give us an idea of what life is like for the ordinary man and woman in bella? ruth, now in terms of the civil rights there are no. in a nutshell, there are no tubal rights anymore,
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and those that can be exercised just were canceled by decree. on the, on the outside the life did not change a lot of what we can give from people to put them on in the society which paralyzes. all in dependent movements, processes this free will off expression and you decide to act on poland, online or offline to your understanding other avenues other. any avenues of appeal that mr. scott can actually pursue you with those that are representing him at the moment. if there is anybody represent, again, in this court case, ah,
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could you think it can be appeal against a sentence? yeah, i mean, officially you can, and you will like the other 2 defendants in fairfield. but we do not expect this process will bring any results in a positive results for us and for them that we've seen. and i mean, we've seen so many times in similar cases since you are trials. and for this appeal hearing, this did not change anything in the sentence remain in place some the exact same it was stopped by the prosecution and then ordered by the judge to expect the ancestral community to do anything besides verbally condemn what's going on. ah,
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we expect them to take any phone political movements. i know that the politicians in the west many opportunities that in many options to impact the regime field. they have the sanctions, all the options which are not so public. and so we hope that today is outrages prism turns over by the coordinator, will let them petition fact more decided with well to see what comes out from western capital's in the coming out cost. yeah, so to do that, thanks so much for joining us and bilious in the way you. thank you, sir. thank you for plenty more had here. all the news are including living with a disability after 2 devastating earthquakes or visit housing complex into kia, made from containers and when chillies border with bolivia where soldiers have been deployed to keep out undocumented migrants and in sport,
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australia beat india to book their plays. the final of the world championships. that's all coming up with jo. ah. the most problem opposition leader in cambodia has been sentenced to 27 years house arrest for treason cabinets. a car was charged with trying to overthrow the government of prime minister and sent in collusion with the united states rights group. say the charges are fabricated and aimed at barring soccer from politics ahead of elections. in july 20 chang reports setting off to court on friday morning cam. soccer knew that there would only be one verdict. the trial which has dragged on for 3 years had seen many delays, but very little real evidence. nonetheless, it was clear with elections coming up. cambodian main opposition leader was unlikely to walk free. the multi year process,
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the silent chem saca based on a fabricated conspiracy. is a miscarriage of justice. the veteran of cambodian politics chem, so cars rise to the top, started in 2012 when he joined forces with sam, rain c, the other main opposition politician. the party they formed. the cambodian national rescue party posed a serious threat to the ruling cambodian peoples party and local and national politics until it was dissolved in 2017. at the time many party members were jailed or fled the country by the parties co founder sam ranging hon sign. he's very afraid of the opposition, especially. he's a friend of the cambodian nation, our rescue party, which is a growing very popular. it is why he has to condemn. come so ha, ha, and sin. now the world's longest serving prime minister has effectively been in
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power since 1985. now he's preparing to hand over control to his son. the cambodian people's party will contest a general election in july. with chem succasunna permanently removed from the political landscape as very little opposition. cam. so car is an indicator of the death of democracy. what has happened him shows that the democratic aspirations that were contained from attack on, on, you know, when the international community came together to sort of help reconstruct cambodia . that democratic dream has been killed by linda comstock. our legal team say they will appeal and then may be the opportunities to negotiate a reduction and sentence. but that's unlikely to happen until after the elections. and one sends confirmation of another fully is empower tony chang al jazeera. a funeral has been held in the occupied west bang for a 15 year old palestinian killed by the israeli army. on thursday, the hubbard and donald selene was short after his ready forces entered the town of
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as soon in the occupied west bank. 2 others were wounded, including a child who's now in a critical condition that the 66 palestinians have been killed by as ready for civil settlers since the beginning of this year. and israeli forces of fid tegan on international and israeli demonstrators marching in solidarity with those in who are in the occupied west bank settler, set 5 hundreds of homes and calls in the town last week that happened 3 palestinian kill, 2 israelis in the area. water remains under locked up. sarah kyra as well. well we're here just outside of hell. why are the town that was pushed by hundreds of israeli settlers earlier in the week? these righty forces have been inside what all 4 days. now shops are on the locked down and is also a protest. hey, bias israelis that i have, i said in solidarity with the palestinians on water who have had their homes shop
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and their business is destroyed. now will be speaking to some of them there. you'll see them, they all coming through this road. they're going to end up at the main check point that the just a few hours ago, the israeli posters were stopping them from coming in. now can we speak to some of the protesters? hey, why you hear protesting their me. the reason is the program and how long? few days ago on the so they can stay at home. such a terrible thing happen. i can hear also more generally to express my objection to help your patients. okay. and how did you come to get him wherever you come from? tell you not too far and all of you have come, especially for this solidarity much today course role met and came together. we're trying to get into how we ask the military to show cause a show where military zone. busy are in not allowing us, but
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a refuse afterwards started to use violence including a brutal violence including a san grenade. and apparently, as someone that was arrested and hearing the radio, what they are trying to prevent us going to however, because they want to see a picture while we are so to do with the victims of the pogroms of i'm sorry to say is a jewish person that is a descendant of all of us provider, but what happened unfortunately was a pure greece. i'm not orchestrated by the israeli government enabled by the israeli military that was present over there. and unfortunately, the international community is not doing anything in order to have israel liable for his crimes against our people and against humanity. what is just down the road here? this is a main road that takes you all the way it connects. the northern parts of the west bank to the center of the west bank. it's also surrounded by several illegal
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israeli settlements. one of hundreds here in the occupied west bank. the officials and gaza. her call for help to put out a fire at a landfill site. and they say the blaze could last for days, and course environmental catastrophe, because it's not yet known. ortiz calling the international pressure on israel to lift its blockade and let in equipments ah, in festa 2 devastating earthquakes killed the 51000 people, inter tia and syria. millions have been left homeless, 10 camps and container cities have replaced houses and apartments for those who struggle with disabilities. the challenge is even greater theresa by reports from the here in gaussian to province. oh, walking has become almost impossible to 72 year old. cathy looked on bush, he's house was destroyed by the earthquake, and he's now living in
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a container. cadina's wife xhylia says her husband desperately needs a wheelchair. yeah, but normally when we own, we don't know what to do. either he needs to be taken to his special care center or he needs an electrical wheelchair so he can go outside. he's always in doors of these crutches. and we found them in a container in his law here at town that like so many others was devastated by the earthquakes last month. though not the only one struggling to cope with the situation is she or stork is also living here and was waiting for surgery before the earthquake happened. and so he's had the j who's struggling with paralysis. there's over 8000000 people with disabilities into the kia and many are living in the areas affected by the earthquake surviving in a disaster zone is a major challenge because it's not only difficult for them to reach the age distribution points, but also they're shortages of well chair,
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crutches and other personal care items that did not far away in another town. sylvester is 22 years old and has special needs. the rehabilitation center she attended was also damaged during the earthquakes. and that's why she's here at this kindergarten that was set up in attend for children who have lost their homes. annella, let them know that them. i told my mother an earthquake is happening. i cried and was afraid. it was raining. children here do sports and music activities. teachers i hoping to help them forget about the struggles they're facing every day. the fresh debbie funding that we have 5 disabled students here. i'll specialist spend time with them individually as we know what they liked doing in the past. we do the same activities with them now, so they can remember the past. oh, how chip is everywhere in southeastern, to kia these days. and when many are struggling to cover their most basic needs.
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others like later on today, i desperate for more help. and we allow them to cope with a new life. but he said, well i guess eda is here till kia. are the number of people killed and a train crash and northern greece has risen to 57, but as expected to rise as crews continue searching through the wreckage. rail workers across greece took part in a strike on thursday as anger against or forty's grows. but as to say, they feel frustrated by years of under funding and inadequate safety infrastructure . columbia has sent a high level delegation to diffuse protests at an oil facility after a police officer was killed. negotiators are trying to broke the release of 79 other officers and 9 oil field workers. there were taken hostage by protesters and the southern province of keta. on thursday, alice under amputee, has the story. i got another letter goggan. i bet about hundreds of farmers in indigenous people clash with police earlier thursday. they have attacked an oil field in
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a rural area of somebody sent to that coin in southern columbia. protesters that burned the offices, another infrastructure of the field, owned by international oil company, emerald energy, a police officer in protest, sir, have been killed, allegedly, by gunshots. the community den detained at least $79.00 police officers and 9 oil workers. they were forced to march in line well being marked by the demonstrators. general marano columbia's ombudsman repudiated the violins lament that muscularity plus you. and we regret the confrontational situation that left a police officer and a farmer dead, and many injured lind violent act. only create more violence and don't use the path toward spaces of dialogue between the people to find agreement. oh, tensions has been rising in the area for over a month as communities blocked access to the oil field, demanding improvements to local roads and other infrastructure. okay,
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one region as long been a focus of conflict, dissidence factions of glue, miss former fight rebels, operate in the region, and may be involved the indian rest. in a tweet, president, gustavo petro, as ordered that the vial and stop dispatching a joint commission from columbus defense and interior ministries, as well as the armed forces to the region that opposition politicians in an attack against the government. fabian rest. as a consequence of petra's feeling, security policies, the favor dialogue and negotiations with criminal elements. you look this up as a lawyer, what's happening, today's the consequence of the lack of presence in action of the national government. we are going back to the time when criminals took control of columbia's territory lay them thursday. the officers remain hostages, as the government scrambles to bring the situation under control. allison that i'm ph. d,
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and just either over the weather his rob with news on flooding in malaysia. i think colombo and singapore have a skate. what has been about 3 or 4 days of persistent, heavy rain lead to widespread flooding in peninsula malaysia. couple of figures giving out the depth is waste to chest tie, possibly showed a high places. and that's because of more than $700.00 millimeters of ray, the lower 4 states, all 4 got significant and widespread flooding. now the rate hasn't stopped yet, but in the forecast for saturday that rain is tend to go off shore, so it'll lighten at least and then probably disappear. be altogether, it doesn't mean the funding will go. of course it's still going to be funding around. but the rain heavy has disappeared, at least by the weekend. now, let's jump a little bit further eastwards towards the south pacific and see the 2nd of 2 tropical cycling that have crossed venue are 2 in the last 3 days. this one is just a little less strong on the 1st one, which was judy. so kevin was going cross right now. and the last couple of hours
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has got wins about $140.00 calories rag. just to be a bit stronger than the $120000.00 people will be exposed, that sort of wind. and the last time it happened 2 days ago, it brought down trees, paralyzed some degree. there are 14 meter waves at sea, so unsurprisingly, that is also a risk. it goes away though, fairly quickly during saturday. well, still had here on al jazeera. i've never seen this much snow in this punch water close for business. california's popular yosemite national park is forced to shut down indefinitely. uninstalled the drive to put more women behind the wheel of a 4 wheeler, one car, that story coming up with joe in school. so that going ah, a passion for supporting local communities and pioneering innovative african
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science and technology projects. college. how beautiful, how glorious are all of us on this planet. not just africa, out to sierra, for as a leading by chemist. determined to use his scientific knowledge to serve africa. women make science from the lab to the field are now to sierra to often of canister is portrayed through the prism of war. but there were many of canister thanks to the brave individuals who risk their lives to protect it from destruction. an extraordinary film archives spanning for decades reveals the forgotten truths of the country's modern history. the forbidden real part one, the birth of afghan cinema on
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a just 0. 0, a look like you're watching over there with lisa hill rom, the reminder of volatile story guineas, military leader has criticized 4040 degrading treatment of sub saharan africa into nicea. dozens of canadians have been repaired, treated after 2 nearly as president accuse migrants of creating a crime wave. because in batteries, a sentence, the 2022 nobel peace prize winner from yet key to 10 years in prison. the pro democracy activists with convicted of smuggling and finance. the activities that violates public order. the most prominent opposition leader income barrier has been sentenced to 27 years of house arrest a treason chemist. the car was charged with trying to overthrow the government inclusion with the united states. he denies the accusations chilly,
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stepped up its military presence on its northern border with peru and bolivia. the government is trying to stop the influx, undocumented migrants authorities as say, there are around 1400000 undocumented migrants within its borders. los come from venezuela, peru, haiti, and colombia concerns over immigration of damage the approval rating of president gabriel borage. laughed in america editor lucy, and even is not the chilly in boulder. with bolivia, we are in perhaps one of the world's most dry, desolate, and dusty places. as you can see here, this is the bolivia, chilly border and right behind me are soldiers. as they are right behind me. they are stopping migrants who are undocumented from trying to come into the country for the 1st time in years. and it actually seems to be working, at least in this section. right, right in front of them are bolivians only. they have a right to come in here,
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but even they are having their documents checked, even though they have the custom of just coming through without any a with us as though the water was completely open, the previous president had dug a ditch. this is what was supposed to stop the migrants from entering into tilly, but it didn't work, it was useless. now they are hoping that by, by deploying the army and that the army is able to actually detain people who are undocumented, that that will make a difference. but what we've been hearing from almost everyone is that it's really only stopping the undocumented migrants from coming here into called china. and that what they're doing is they're taking the very, very long route a far longer and more dangerous route to go all the way around here to get into chile through this very, very long border, at least in this section alone, it's a 150 kilometers and we are being told that only about 20 percent of it is being patrolled by the army. so there are ways to,
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to avoid detection authorities in the philippines a working to contain an oil spill from a tanker. now the ship carrying $800000.00 leases of diesel fuel sank there. an island southwest of manila on tuesday. fishing and swimming has been banned in the southern coastal homes of this village flows south. such seemed way to find the ship. at least 12 people have been killed, an explosion as an oil pipeline in nigeria, according to local police. the incident took place in the country's del to region. local law enforcement said the people are attempting to steal crude oil when the side caught fire. several vehicles also damaged police caution to others against pipeline vandalism, an oil theft switch, a common in the area. the oceans for a new treaty of the high seas are reaching their final stages. delegates from you and member states. a meeting in new york are concerned about the impact of unregulated, deep sea mining and factory fishing. current regulations only cover
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a distance of 200 nautical miles from the coast and beyond that, the international waters, them little or no governance. our environment editor nick clark explains ah, most of the oceans on our planets alike, the wild west. when it comes to conservation, open to exploitation. the high seas come at 3 fifths of the world and the home to an extraordinary display of life. from the ocean giants at my great around the planet sequester c o 2. when they die to the ocean, drifters plankton we produce half the oxygen we breathe. we know more about the surface of mars in the ocean depths. as i learnt when i company agree piece expedition, the chart and unexplored deep sea reef, the atlantic of south america diving teams went to the
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limits of human endurance, discovered extraordinary by diversity. samples was sent up to the surface and we hold them on board to be assessed. there was all manner of life like mollusks, crustaceans sponges and starfish la you finally, i don't recognize, well, wednesday, wednesday because this is all the thought very, very few people know that he ran kilometer is below the surface lie hydrothermal vents. areas rich and minerals, useful for batteries in this develope age of renewable energy. these ecosystems also contain genetic resources with potential, particularly for medical applications, all of great interest to mining companies. but their affairs of what could happen without regulation. we're only just starting to to pair into those mackey debts and understand what is there in our ability to, to impact on a system far outweigh,
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outstrips currently r o evidence, who knowledge of what exists that it seems to me to be prudent and precautionary to make sure that we don't destroy things before we fully had a chance to, to, to understand them, to explore them to study them. a treaty would govern human activity on an under the high seas and stop a free for all like unsustainable fishing practices. regulating how much and from where precious resources can be taken. that clock al jazeera laura mila, is the asians campaigner greenpeace, and joins us now from new york. good. have you had a sun program? miss miller? who owns wat on where ern seems to be the main sticking points at the moment. i think, and the very question of who owns the heis is, is a question at the moment. and the global ocean treaty is our lifetimes. biggest
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opportunity to put conservation and equity at the heart of how we look after our oceans. after decades of mismanagement and exploitation and right now m governments have the opportunity to secure rules for effectively deciding on where they're protected areas can be created and how they are managed. and, and one of the, one of the key issues on the table right now is on marine genetic resources, the building blocks of life. and that scientist, scientific discoveries can potentially unlock big profits from in the future. but it's also, i just jump in like i just opened up a smell because obviously it's also a conversation, isn't it? between countries at the moment about those countries that have the resources to scour the c bed and those that don't. and how there is you might say
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a fed division of what they discover in the future and how they all benefit from that discovery. exactly. that is, 011 side of the, the question is and how, how these are, how the benefits are shared in a fair and equitable way. and the other side of it is how can everybody have access to generating the knowledge about the oceans that can help solve their problems. i mean, you, you've always, the spoken green piece has 2 countries in the, in the rich northern hemisphere. and also, you might say in the poorer a southern hemisphere varies that divide again. this diary we're hearing various arguments with arguments is perhaps too strong a word but debate amongst the rich north and the poor south as to who actually benefits from this. that those arguments are being raised, are they not? yes,
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and then i believe from the global south perspective, the key and key issue is an equity. and what providing access transparency and i am sharing the benefits, showing the scientific discoveries, but also more broadly what, what would you like to see come out of this agreement? what is green piece, want to see out of this agreement that would benefit everybody on this is and this global ocean, true to needs to be a tool that can create a network of ocean sanctuaries across the blue planet. as it was just 2 months ago that all governments agreed to protecting at least 30 percent of the oceans by 2030 . that's a target that scientist say is the bare minimum to allow marian life
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a chance to heal. and, and currently this is not possible and for the majority of the world's oceans because they don't have the legal to us. and so this global ocean treaty and is that to will, to create that create protection time is running out on the 30 by 30 target. and that's why it's so critical that the treaty is agreed here and now, oh see what does happen? certainly in the coming out maybe the coming days for the moment to load about thanks for joining us from new york. thank you. you somebody national park has been forced to shut down after major storms of california's west coast. they brought rain, snow and floods rub rentals. how's the story? waterfalls plunged from cliffs into california's yosemite valley, one of the jewels of the us national park system. months of epic storms have piled up snow with a recent storm dumping 4 and
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a half meters. the blizzards have forced the park to close down to visitors, but have also filled up lakes and reservoirs and given drought stricken california hope for a return to more plentiful water in all my here she here and yosemite, i've never seen this much know in this much water in this it, at this time year. in mid february, the snow pack in the sierra, nevada mountains was nearly 200 per cent of normal for this time of year. as the year goes on, warmer weather will melt the snow and ice. once the water leaves the park to hammer said river, it goes in and the water here in the marsh had river is mostly used for agriculture . on the central valley, which grows about 80 percent of the fruits and vegetables in the united states. but along with the benefits extreme weather brings it also disrupts wildlife habitat. this actually was a really vegetated backdrop where butterfly's womb hang out.
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i don't see any now because the vegetation can fluctuate. having said that it created a better breeding problem for the new. so again, that's where, you know, the winners eluded and there's a few things here looking for law too much snow all at once. can change landscapes and ecosystems. recently a huge rock fall was observed on the face of famed granite monolith, el capitan. as human cause, global warming leads to more weather extremes of dry and wet. managers of national parks like yosemite are adapting, we move campgrounds away from rivers, we move roads away from rivers, we're building up some campsite at higher elevation. so we're making all of these changes as much as we can. climate change, we'll continue to affect not only the humans who marvel at the park spectacular beauty, but also the 400 species of mammals, birds, fish, and other animals that make the park their home. rob reynolds al jazeera, well still had, hey, all the nisa rom on
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a roll will tell you about another great performance by gulps number one. that's all coming up in sport with jack.
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ah ah ah ah ah, look back scientist egypt took confirmed a hidden corridor has been found in the great pyramid of jesus. it was detected using a new imaging technique and could lead to more discoveries. as barbara agatha explains, sealed off for thousands of years at tiny camera within a 6 millimeters thick,
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t u reveals a descending tunnel and gazes largest pyramid scientists from a project called scanned. pyramids confirmed the existence of the corridor. 9 meters long and more than 2 meters wide were hip and oracle, we are continuing work and scientific research. i'm using technology and advancing completely safe scientific methods to reveal more secrets of the ancient egyptian civilization. the great permit was built about 4 and a half 1000 years ago as a monumental team during the reign of pharaoh cooper, san, to say the passage could have been created, to redistribute the weight of the pyramids around at centrists. and it could be protecting an undiscovered chamber egyptologist, a hoping that could be an undisturbed last 2 thousands of years after it was constructed. there still no consensus on how the great pyramid was spelt. santas
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say the tunnel could shed more light on the only surviving structure of the 7 wonders of the ancient world. barbara and groper alto, sarah, his time is foreigner, his check fail. thank you very much. the new for me on season is underway and bar ryan is the drive is set pace in friday practice. red bulls such a paris and quickest in the 1st session ahead of fernando alonzo and paris, his teammate. and while champion max, the stop and action from those sessions coming up a little bit later, but the big news off the track this week has been the launch of an old female drive, a series called f. one academy led by former racing driver and team manager susie wolf, 40 percent of those watching for me to want to women, but not one of the 20 drivers is female. jessica baldwin reports on the push to change that ah, macy hitter is going a 120 kilometers per hour, centimeters off the ground. she's only 15 and has spent 7 years practicing racing training weekend after weekend,
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month after month. and she's faced an additional hurdle when like women comes, the shock is boys very confused. so of why the heck is, is met by a male dominated school. a lot of them do not want to be in by go say i've had, you know, challenging with hands. i've been taken off of things about hitter a champion go cutter is hoping to make the jump to cars. she raced in f for car this summer, but her career has stone. women find it more difficult to find sponsors. a women only series last year ran out of money mid season, but that may be changed. cape evan, a long time formula. one executive is behind an initiative to figure out what's holding women back with a need to talent spot. there is a very small proportion of the rice and dr. is in the world, ah female. and we need to find where they are, pluck them, and then take them, develop their skills. whether that is physical, mental rice, croft,
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and help drive them all the way up to formula one. most motor sport experts say it's not a question of strength. more women have gone into space than raced on a formula one track. the g forces at 340 kilometers per hour are all in a day's work for jamie chadwick. now racing in the us indie car feeder series. chadwick said the industry is finally ready to accept female drivers, but it won't happen overnight. ah, there are a lot of innovators in love organizations that already really came to, to make it happen. and i don't have an issue with it being a 10 years on the line as long as we don't look back in 10 years time and they call was still in the same position. the popularity of formula one has exploded in recent years. tickets for july's british grand prix. here it's silver stone, sold out in record time 40 percent of formula one found. so now women the
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percentage of female drivers, exactly 0. and despite the promising initiatives, it's unlikely we're going to see a formula one female driver on this podium anytime soon. jessica baldwin al jazeera silver stone in morocco and parasol man footballer asher, of a key me has been charged with right. the 24 year old woman claims he sexually assaulted her, his home near paris. on february the 25th. she didn't file a formal complaint spurts, prosecutors opened an investigation and questioned a key mi on thursday. before charging him came, he denies the allegations. the 24 year old defender played a key part in morocco's historic cron at last year's world cup scoring the penalty that sent them into the semi finals. now, so the classic in spain and its advantage bos loaner and that copper delray semi final against rail madrid. they won the 1st like one know away from home at the barn about stadium, an own go for madrid, defender and tell the difference between the 2 sides. the 2nd leg is on april, the 5th that the new camp,
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but they'll play each other before that in spanish league on march, the 19th buffalo currently 7 point clear rail leak australia is chris is beaten india on day 3. it's a 3rd test. they knocked off the $76.00 rooms. they needed an endorse when by 9 which hits with one over 2 days to spare the victory to strain the replacement well test championship final. this june, india still leave the series to one and also reach the final if they, when the last test in mad about it starts on thursday. there are few sportsmen on the planet right now on a hot streak, then golf number one, john rome, the spanish star shot, a 7 on de paul opening around to 65 at the arnold palmer invitational. closing his last 3 hope with eagle. $3030.00, that put him to shot claire at the leaderboard. stats are incredible moment. there already came 3 pga tour titles. the season $15.00 is his off 9 foreman. i'm finished the top 10 of each of his last 10 in the m b. a. one of the most casual
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pulses you'll ever see much the nice place to be here comes harvey. hi nancy. yes. that was james houghton setting up joel and beat for the philadelphia $76.00 is against the dallas mavericks. but there was better partnership on the night. don't pitch korea, they wrapped up 82 points between them to help dollars come away with the when i don't teach school, 40 tune, i think 40 the 1st time any dallas my see might have both school at least 40 in the same game with the 6 years spring training is well underway ahead of the major league baseball season, the new pitch designed to speed up. but new york yankees picture one to peralta went all out in that training game against the pittsburgh pirates. the camera in the even catch his 1st pitch. and he went on to throw 2 more so quickly that he struck out the batter in less than 20 seconds. may can't one of the fastest
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strikeouts ever yankees won the game 9110 as well. not one of our joke which is a step closer to a 6 to buy championship title. he was up against his seat hope at who to catch in the courses. and he was showing off his skills that it was the well number one who came through in straight sets to reach the semi finals job, which is now on a 15 match winning streak and says he's getting back to full fitness after a hamstring injury, which caused some problems at the australian open 2023. know that your cruise continues to winning room. it's true that it does take a match or 2 to get into the floor and say, go back to the desired level of movement, balance coordination and stuff like this. but luckily for me, i'm feeling is as close to best that i could possibly feel. you know, of course you can always be better, but i'm playing on
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a high level and i'm happy with the tennis. something between him and a place and a final is the informed dummy. let devotion to care for no charge. 6362. as the chase 3rd title in a row of winds in rotterdam and katha. dev has 112 night she's been and gets rougher set to sleep wearing for an lympics and never easy, but it's an even greater challenge for ukrainians training in the midst of war. those athletes are also anxiously awaiting your decision on whether they will allow russians and bell russians to compete in paris as neutrals, jemma nash reports, ukrainian diver sound love, literature cones, his skill aiming for a play at the parcel and picks in 2024. but he forced to use a spring board in heave miles away from his hometown. by the aquatic center has been wiped out by war. mary poll is my home town. russian
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soldiers and putin simply destroyed the city. many does not exist. it was a ny later alleys took 74 year old grandfather died in mary, a pole in october, unable to get fight cancer treatments. he's horrified that the international olympic committee says it's considering allowing russians and better russians to compete in paris as a neutral athletes to avoid individual discrimination. despite ukraine's threat to boycott and objections from several other countries for diverse show, i hope they will not be allowed to attend the olympics because none of them publicly condemned president who, tennessee, or lucas shank over. they just do nothing and say nothing. and precisely because of a silence and inaction, all this horror is happening in our country. then competing under a neutral flag is not an option. most of the autistic swimmers, marianna, and not his love alex eva, say they boy caught paris if russian and by the russian athletes were able to compete given the trauma, they're forced to live through on
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a daily basis. sometimes we can, oh, y, i'm sigh and sometimes we can hear some a or something and somebody with the feel so about the twins, regular trading base in caucus has been destroyed. and this pool is not the ideal depth for them to practice in a rates regularly interrupt their sessions. and when a tax is shut off the pools heating, they have to train in full body wet seats. traveling to international competitions now requires a long train right into potent and onward flights. from that still, they remain determined to make it to paris. i guess these are all, let's men who wrote with no,
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with the soul ukraine way of doing. yes, john, this is does one bronze in the team events at the tokyo and picks in 2021. they hope they will get another short to assa metal come july, next year. geminus. ouch is era. all right, that is all useful for now more later with peter. so hell, thanks. i much jaron. you have a watch the out there at nisa with me. so robin joe, got you raska. i'll be back in the morning on the other side of the break until and thanks for your time and your company. ah mm hm. and i,
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every days the woman is in the matter of women and unprecedented levels of domestic violence have shelter easily to the coal. the violence is more violent violence, men are young. why does it keep happening and what can be done to still fate? this is not the price i want my daughter and all the daughters to pay. that's not the country i want witness said miss cynthia, for me is very simply the question of power on al jazeera and by 43, tomorrow, a fraud takes on the big issues. this isn't a one off. he's talking about a systemic issue here. black labs don't really matter, and the police were unflinching questions is war with lawanda, imminent rigorous debate? people who are dying because of lack of medical treatment, challenging conventional wisdom. the fact that people are starting to get angry about this is in itself a sign of progress. join me, mark him on hill for upright. what al jazeera on
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a recent february day in central park in new york city, you never have guessed it was right smack in the middle of winter. look around, people are dressed like it's spring or summer. wait, hold on. where is the snow ever seeing new york in february like this? never a new reality, perhaps with new yorkers, 1st enjoying the warm weather, but now beginning to ask themselves, will it ever snow this year? because this isn't normal, they probably don't even need to be wearing this jacket right now, because it's mid february and it's supposed to be cold. but it's not ah, dozens of migrants is at bank to guinea days of,

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