Skip to main content

tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 5, 2023 1:00pm-2:00pm AST

1:00 pm
in the blink of an eye, many lives were lost. thousands of people buried alive and more left homeless. were shocked by the number of sites we were shocked by the number of victims al jazeera goes to the most afflicted region in syria. here in northwest syria to see those affected by the earthquake and severe shortages of humanitarian aid. the full report syria, the continuing tragedy on al jazeera. ah ah. hello, i'm rob matheson and this is the news i live from doha. coming up in the next 60 minutes, a ship has reached the shore. ah, the views of negotiations, nations moran,
1:01 pm
the world agree on the 1st international treaty to protect the high seas. china sets a modest target for economic growth, but increases military spending during the opening session of parliament, the supporters of tennessee is opposition coalition demand the release of political prisoners and an end to president. i studied track down the long road to recovery, thousands of ukrainian civilians and soldiers who lost limbs in the war or struggling with physical and mental wounds. and i'm far as small. have all the latest sports as we count down to the opening race and the new formula one season match for samples. start from pole position for the bar graph. crazy aim for a 3rd. well title ah.
1:02 pm
after 15 you is of talks to you and has agreed to our historic treaty to protect the world's high seeds me the waters which are currently beyond the control of nations. and they are not subject to laws, activists or calling the agreement a monumental when it came after 38 hours of negotiations is now going to be scrutinized by lawyers before being officially adopted. at another session. ladies and gentlemen, the ship has reached the shore. wideman only one percent of the world's international waters is protected. most marine life is threatened by climate change. over fishing and shipping. the u. n. high seas treat is going to designate 30 percent of the earth oceans as protected areas by 2030 fishing and shipping lanes. are going to be restricted,
1:03 pm
more money is also going to be put into marine conservation. the e u has already announced more than $800000000.00. the treaty also creates new rules and requirements for mining, etc. we're going to bring in mat, frost, his policy, lead plymouth marine universities joining us from plymouth and the u. k. vega, to have you with us. why is this so important? this, this treaty i, it's hard to say it is because for many, many years people are believed that the see didn't really have a lot. it is considered a dead zone, right? hence the 19th century. we now know that the open seas are the high seas, contain a lot of biodiversity. there are about 240000 species. we now all but estimate saw that there are 10 times out amounts of species. and, and we have all of this unknown area, a lot of it isn't bad either. and the technologies today mean the ability for
1:04 pm
people in terms of fishing, shipping, ceeback mining as really advanced. so we just need to protect this very rich area of our planet. none of these discoveries or advances in technology have happened overnight. this certainly not happened in the last 48 hours or so. people have known that this situation has existed. why is it taken 15 years to get to this point? well, i mean there's, there's a very fun demand. so piece of marine legislation that is the freedom of the seas. so i think the mindset is very much of the open ocean is the people to do what they want and not open ocean. i think we've always had this issue, you say in fishing as well, where technologies suddenly advance leaks in by out. but i think the treaty, which has taken over a decade, remember to discuss the reason it's been so difficult to get in place is because at the hearts of it it's about fantasy. it's about the principle of the corridor
1:05 pm
coleman, the heritage of human kind. so if people are going to be going out and finding on the species that might give us new drugs, new sort of pharmaceutical comp, how's that? the benefits from that need to be shared across you monitoring? so actually what you need is a lot of countries in the world to agree that not only are we going to sustainably manage unexplored this 50 a mission, but we also need the mechanisms to share that out. as you can imagine, involving country is all around the world that's been in our conversation. and i think the areas that are going to be protected by 2030 are significantly bigger than the ones that had previously been protected. how do you police something like this? because i would imagine that countries are not going to be willing to place more investment in terms of coast guards and marine protection, and yet they are hiring to cover far significant areas. well, once again, i think this is where this principle of sharing in terms of how steam results is
1:06 pm
really important. we, we already have the issue that some of the writing protected areas. ease even with the national boundaries are huge. and sometimes in countries that all the research that needed to support by all the enforcement. so i honestly think that there's going to be the need to be some, sharon, for example, countries with mobile scientific or enforcement capacity could then help the countries that don't have an in return of goals. you get to learn more about the science. so yeah, it's a real challenge and we've got the heart of the matter ready because if we don't have this in force and if we don't have management and then what you'll end up with is a lot of science is referred to as the pipe box syndrome. where you call something every protected area, but it's not actually protected. so yes, here's the impulse, an issue. my process policy, liter, plymouth, marine laboratory sir,
1:07 pm
we appreciate you being with us at all to 0. thank you very much indeed. thank you very exciting day and thank you for having lake ah, the world's 2nd biggest economy. china has set a modest growth target of around 5 percent. that's one of as low as 10 years. economic recovery following the pandemic top, the agenda of the opening session of parliament. beijing also announced a increase in military spending of 7.2 percent. and that comes as tensions are rising with western powers, especially the u. s. balance of delegates gathered in beijing to formalized president. she's in things unprecedented 3rd term and office and changes to his government. bounty fire at present many difficulties and challenges still confront us uncertainties in the external environment. on the rise, global inflation remains high. the foundation was stable, growth, domestic lead needs to be consolidated, and insufficient demand remains a pronounced problem continue as live for us now in beijing, katrina,
1:08 pm
the china obviously reining in expectations of growth. what's driving that? hey, that's why it. so china announced a g d p. target of 5 percent, which was on the low end of expectations. and that means that we're not going to see any addresses stimulus measures this year. that rather beijing is going to focus on stabilizing the slowing economy and premier leakage. john gave a rather samba assessment of china's economic performance. last year. the target was 5.5 percent g, d and paging significantly. miss not. it only achieved 3 percent officially and leakage on said that that was largely due to difficulties around the pandemic, as well as a difficult international environment with you referred to as choppy waters. and the net result was rather grim. we sole suffering investment, increased unemployment, as well as consumer spending taking a major hit. so some policies that are addressing those problems that are will be
1:09 pm
unrolled over the next few months. include a policy is designed to boost confidence. the beijing also announced that working towards $12000000.00 new jobs this year, as well as boosting innovation, research and technological self reliance. now this is premier league chung's last a recitation of the communist work party report. this year he's going to have a new successor. taking the reins going forward and he said that there will be challenges in the global economy shooting inflation as well as what he said was an escalation in attempt to suppress chinese funds, which is referring to u. s. lead sanctions on chinese phones specifically that produce semiconductors. and katrina stick with me for a 2nd because they are going chinese premier also spoke up against ty, ones, independence, and that was later rebuffed by officials in taipei. oh, we should implement all parties overall policy for the new era on resolving tie. one question at here to the one china principal and the 1992 consensus and take
1:10 pm
resident steps to oppose taiwan independence and promote re unification. we should promote the peaceful development of cross strict relations and advanced the process of china's peaceful re unification. and the reference to taiwan, obviously, tying in was china increasing its defense spending plans. that's right, china also announced its military budget. it's going to increase defense spending by 7.2 percent. now that's the increase in itself is not surprising. what is, is that it's not head to this time to the g d p increase. it's actually our pacing this g d p target. and what that does indicate is that aging is nervous about its geopolitical and security situation, specifically around tensions rising a with taiwan. now taiwan is a self ruled island. it's allied with the united states, but they jing sees it as robe chinese territory,
1:11 pm
although lee could chunk mentioned today on sunday that thinking is working towards a peaceful unification with ty pe, she didn't think has mentioned time and time again that the use of force is not going to be moved out, and china is also concerned beyond what it considers, problems in its own backyard about the ongoing geopolitical situation. intentions. for example, in a ukraine the continued slicing in the wall there. it's also a considering the tensions in the frame peninsula as well as the re elements of japan. and because of all those reasons, china is increasing its military spending as well as today. we heard that there will be a renewed focus on boosting military preparedness for china's people's liberation army over the next year. was could, are you talking to us from beijing? could you thank you very much and be a thousands of supporters of trin is his opposition coalition? have defied a protest bond on or on the streets of the capital tunis. they've broken through a police barrier on that in the cities main street for the money,
1:12 pm
the release of political prisoners trade unionists and journalists, president of hi site resolved parliamentary 2021. the elections of december were boycotted by the opposition, who accused him of a paragraph. we're going to bring in the side o niecy. she's a former member of tennessee as part of it. very good to have you were this mom on all 0. what's different about these protest compared to the ones that we've seen before? thank you very much. um, what we can say is new in his, in terms of opposition to the president is actually to the popularity of the movements. today is the 2nd day of demonstration. i yesterday was also a very, very big and, and an intense day of protesting. i'm the president. i sighed and i do what we called to the engineers at the new dictatorship which is being established. oh, today again. ready we are actually, and when i was up surprised by ash them, the popularity didn't you kind of an average citizens or who are i'm city for
1:13 pm
testing and, and facing also the, the threats and their oppression. a link, it's th business didn't to go out on the streets and to freedoms, april or also to police as you said, a what is called present nearest because today just isn't in india is actually being um, deformed and i'm being and definitely you find the president i fight against these up and, and in that think triangles, i mentioned before that the protest that we're seeing today, and apparently the crowds have broken through a police barrier and there are no on the main streets of tunis. i want to ask you about the response of the police and the military over the last few weeks to these protests, because one would imagine in other countries. but when you had crowds of this size, that there would be a military. and for these cracked on what does that tell you about b position that the police in the military are taking with regard to these protests
1:14 pm
i want to remain very cautious towards does not forget the fact that the police in the military are being used by the president, you know, to satisfy his own author retired projects. the military is, are closing the parliament since almost 2 years now. and the police has killed and this is facts, protectors at bridges. i demonstrations in tennis and i'm thinking about especially at the yen in january, 2020 church. so we are very by ashes to what we know that they will be our eyes. we know that the demonstration, today's. ready actually being bonds and even by the governor, authorities in tennis. but in the same time, i very helpful to the fact that the police activity learned from the revolution the military land on their commission. and what is important is to, you know, people's rights and peoples also and desires for
1:15 pm
a world of flu. kind of a, you know, system and, and to respect people, it is not a little bit different. it does help. quinton, off to you, i to big bill and scribbled with us. i really invite everybody to listen to the sense and slogans today. they are actually people calling for their what christie a despite these, the time being and fashion. and despite all the a trials again and at that at a very difficult time to do that is going through and also, and this is important, this is not an elitist, are kind of the frustration you are calling for economy. we are calling for a social reforms are calling for inflation to be controlled by the states. they are also very concrete. i would say demands a coming from the streets, today's not. and i, it's very important to say in and it is illustration for people who are just
1:16 pm
booking. there are typically a democracy today also, we are hearing people are condemning fascism in west zim, evidently is very, very sick. i'm still clinic in africa. the president had a very harsh moores at against black and me grants. in today's internet, which billy country will be changed. which what i'm telling you when comes had thousands of and none to miss you walkers and today this, whether it, which is into the night or you. well, just that a way of defense against the difficulties to me, days going through. because the presidents don't want to address it door, just a big factor she channel and but let me forgive me for interrupting you. but i do want to ask you one thing very briefly and there is, it has to be acknowledged, of course, that the president still has a significant amount of supports within chin is you all are concerned are you bad? and his supporters are not being influenced by the opposition protests that are happening. and in fact,
1:17 pm
we may end up seeing clashes on the streets between the supporters of the president and those of the opposition. i think it's, you know, it's in a, in a, in a situation when you have a very gym. i kind of a crisis and people are basically fighting for their daily existence, intense off at social ed and economy as it's very actually easy reads. ms. information isn't formation and rumors lies and to, you know, again kind of money plates this. my says, and this is not something which is corporate to, to this. yeah. and it's actually happening in, in his. yeah. in, in the way, just to speak about this sir. at last day, the fact that she misses a launch party of a big opinion got convinced by the president that black me grants into these are taking the chops of generations. i did it. those who are responsible and behind the economy prices in his yeah. also say,
1:18 pm
and you are definitely writing that to his discourse and his, you know, i do, she's actually was spreads also and martin isn't. and what is happening is that in the all the way there is a resistance to that. there is people, there is political parties, civil side organizations union as be settled for yesterday and who are resisting to that and, and praying over the counter is this site on this are we appreciate you being with us and i'll just here to thank you very much indeed, thank you. stay morehead on the news r, including i'm the only candidate who can make this promise. i will prevent and very easily, world war 3, very easy. former us president donald trump deers up for a heated republican primary race head of the 2024 presidential election. i'm in sports, be se, come certain is a tough task as the close in the french league title football. luncheon coming up
1:19 pm
with the united nations conference in the was least developed countries is happening in doha takes place once every 10 years that are currently $46.00 l diseases. and all most of them are in africa. here, they're defined as having an average national income of around a $1000.00 per person. debt is a big problem, and they are vulnerable to climate change and diseases such as coven 19. but let's have countries as reviewed every 3 years by the un, only 6 of progress above l. d. c state. as in the last 30 years, the meeting in doha is going to focus on 6 areas, including how to eradicate poverty, enhanced trade, and tackle climate change. stephanie deka is joining us live now from the conference or what is being discussed. stephanie
1:20 pm
please, you mentioned there when about sustainability about investing in these as you mentioned what the u. n is called least developed countries, how to help them move forward looking spanning from education, from environment and business opportunities to job opportunities. and that was opened earlier today by, by the mayor of katara. also, we heard from a joining the dash, there's actually general at the united nations. and this is what they had to say. least developed countries are being stranded amidst the rising, died of crisis and said that the climate scales and the global injustice they are unable to keep pace with lightning speed. technological change systems are stretch from elson education to social protection, infrastructure, and job creation. and employment is rising, especially among young people. and women are being pushed through the sidelines
1:21 pm
said musk williamson, alamita and was telecom fee watch. there is a common global responsibility to confront the challenges of food security, climate change, the energy crisis, and the debt crisis. the judge funding solutions is a collective and important responsibility among all countries. there is a moral obligation incumbent upon the friction developed countries to contribute more to assist the least developed countries will get help to overcome the global challenges that we are now dealing with. this is a responsibility, a not a favor to this conference. i will take place all week. you basically have delegations here of the l. d. c's around $46.00 countries. not all of them here, but most of them are here. you also have delegations, heads of state of the more developed world, if you will. there will be a plenary session, which is where you have the heads of state top leaders discussing what can be done . and then you'll have 5 sessions with, you know,
1:22 pm
end jose with also youth. you have representatives of the youth of some of those l, v. c z, or where they will be putting their concerns forward about how these things need to be addressed. how people opportunities need to be given. of course, you know, we're here in a conference center in doha encounter. and the question really is whatever gets decided here, the money that gets, gets pledged and carter has pledged around 60000000 u. s. dollars to help that. how that trickles down and gets implemented on the ground to really achieve real change. i was talking to one delegation member and she was actually saying to me, well you know, the l d c on exactly happy where the terminology and also there is something that the un terms as graduate take if they do sustain certain hit certain levels. you mentioned they're one of them having an income of var just over a $1000.00 a day of their general population. so a lot of challenges ahead of course, discussion is important. ideas are important and that is something that will be happening here throughout the week. but again, the big question is, can that achieve real sustainable change on the ground when it comes to those
1:23 pm
countries and 70 dondo? hi, stephanie, thank you. argument is one of the world's least developed nations. millions of people are facing poverty, family malnutrition, and insecurity. after 8 years of civil war, the u. n says most are in desperate need of aid. hom involves report as some distressing images. cilla ways only 6 kilograms, even though she is 9 years old. she lives in yemen and is a victim of war. and nasa, donnelly, she has malnutrition. the doctor said that she must stay in the hospital for 3 months to be treated. but we could not because we do not have the necessary expenses to buy milk and biscuits because we have nothing anal. like hundreds of other humans, silver and her family live in al hadash camp. it's located in the hedge, a governor it in northern, yemen, and shelters. those have been forced from their homes by conflict. but
1:24 pm
life here is tough. families are crowded inside these tiny shelters made of sticks and strong. what is hard to get? and there was no sanitation. people are forced to search through rubbish dumps to find food and anything that'll help them survive. and that's what i mean. what am i the again, i am looking for prostate cancer cell. i have a child who does not go to school. he and i go to work like this. my husband is disabled at home. why does the eat in the morning? we will not have dinner. if we have dinner, we will not have lunch that'll be fled our region and we are here. our condition is very bad and we have nothing. and that's nice. this woman says it is difficult to give to children. he has a lead. i'm again been in london got to school, we are poor. so if a child get sick, we do not find the required treatment or any other thing. the stores of the organisations are full of much as in water containers,
1:25 pm
but we can't find containers to put water in. we suffer from both the sun and the cold living in rags of topple. and as you can see, i used to animate she didn't. every family in this campus suffering from extreme poverty while they go out searching the anything they might come across or for a neighbor who might have some food to share and other camps, the organizations distribute stuff. but here they give me the food and also, you know, water containers, we have some worn out blankets, the 2 years old. that's tragic wednesday day camps like this one, a spread across human. it's one of the poorest countries in the world. and the civil war has made people's lives worse. 80 years ago, 40 militias, back by march from the north and to the capital santa. the government was forced to provide and an alliance of our panties launched an air bombardment campaign to
1:26 pm
restore the house to the government. but the conflict hasn't stopped. 7 it's caused the death of hundreds of thousands of civilians and forced millions to flee their homes. the united nations describes it as the world's worst humanitarian crisis. it says 2300000 children under the age of 5. don't have enough food to labor, and 400000 of them are suffering from severe malnutrition. mom at one at 0. though danielle, your guy is a senior researcher at the santa center for strategic studies. he's in our mind and he's with us life. so thank you very much. indeed for being with us on al jazeera, our correspondence estefan decker, whose at the conference in doha, was making the point that it is the trickle down of the funding. that is absolutely important in all of this. what difference will the proposals made at the conference here in doha actually have on the lives of people in yemen. for example. unfortunately, a man is not in
1:27 pm
a position to benefit from my foreign assistance at this time because it is the by, it's a dollars divided among a district. there i'm groups and these aren't groups are going to take whatever comes to earth or help the people, the attributes for themselves. what emphasis should there be there for and on that when it comes to conferences like this, because from what a you, i understand you're saying is that it's all very well promising the cash. but if you can't actually deliver the cash to the people who actually need it, then it's kind of point, pointless, making the promise. and the 1st place. is there anything that a donor countries can do to try to circumvent the on groups in yemen, for example, to make sure that the money does actually get to the people who need it? well, that's not, that's at different dia, an improvement than the lives of people. but it actually perpetuates the situation of over dependency and, and dead deprivation that i think then to my community should make an effort to
1:28 pm
apply enough pressure on the parties that are either fighting or supporting the various fighting on groups to stop the war. and then mad may be their condition of the people will improve that since they 8 years of conflict that yemen had seen that was in the public high because as our corresponded mohammed valve was making was the point he was making was that of course the conflict is still continuing and what kind of conditions are people facing in yemen at the moment? when generally people are living on mass below subsistence level. and you know, saturdays will not get paid for the past few years for the past 7 years. instead of 2016 and debbie will our bab managing it because of the strong and sort of that at the within the
1:29 pm
a many society. but this cannot last for long according to the u. n. and the losses, the economic losses from this war is, are now over a $100000000000.00. and that the economy is now says to the limit. i'm just very briefly, sorry. the conference happens once every 10 years, but as, as the people have yemen, know very well, a lot can change in 10 years. should there be at least an emphasis on changing the regularity of the conference so that it happens maybe once every 3 years. so there stand, there is a better chance of that the, the problems that yemen is facing, for example, don't get as embedded as they come. they are i think there should be 2 types of conferences, one that goes on as advocates every 10 years to deal with stable total countries and they've developed countries. and but countries such as yemen
1:30 pm
that are either on the verge of collapse, they need a more frequent attention to help them or return to buy ability auto honey, on your jani. we appreciate your being with the sonata 0. so thank you very much indeed for your time. you're welcome. still hadn't al jazeera iran agrees to reconnect surveillance cameras at its nuclear sites and increase inspections. and in sports, it's 3 titles in as many weeks. but this play a tennis action later on in the show, ah hello parts of northern europe will get their coldest weather of the year so far we have got coolers, just tucking in from the out to you see the sparkling of shower cloud. those will be snow showers. there's a line here, there's cold fronts,
1:31 pm
to the north that that is where we have the cold, rare in place. and it will sink further south, which as we go on through the next few days, say really feeling rather ra in, want to spot say, but the next few days, the snow initially come again across norway. and there sweden to potter scandinavia . think some of that snowy weather beaten sea has already started to push its way in through northern germany, easing down towards poland, and it will continue to sink further southwards. as we go on through monday. fabulous snow. they're coming to northern parts of scott from the northeast of england as well elsewhere. we will see some snow showers there into southern parts of charity by the state, rush of rain, showers into central parts of the met. therefore italy and the balcony. not too bad across east side of here by which was west. we will see some showers there for spain, and portugal may be some longer spells of bright for portugal as we go $13.00, monday, come tuesday. there's that snow ready setting in good part of aisd in england, seeing some significant snowfall could cause some disruption, some snow that to into denmark by that stage along with the baltic states and
1:32 pm
a little bit of snow for germany. ah, county state control information law school is one of them. they, if he can to, while name has read about recognition technology. how does the narrative improve public opinion better? no walker asked, how is this a can generally from leaf waving the story, the video spread like wildfire, they denied the platform or in your brain. the listening close dissects the media. we don't cover the news. we cover the way the news is covered. in the blink of an eye, many lives were lost. thousands of people buried alive and more left homeless. you were shocked by the number of sites. we were shocked by the number of victims al jazeera goes to the most afflicted region in syria. here in northwest syria to see those affected by the earthquake m, it's severe shortages, humanitarian aid,
1:33 pm
the full report, syria, the continuing tragedy on al jazeera hulu . ah, we want to know, does it reminded our top stories of this out of the urines agree to historic 20 to protect marine life it's going to designate 30 percent of the world's oceans is protected zones by 2030 activists. so calling it a monumental windy vases of support. as soon as his opposition coalition have defied a protest bank on the streets of the capital to this is broken through a police barrier under the city's main street, demanding the release of political prisoners trade unionists and journalists,
1:34 pm
president high se dissolved parliament in 2021 the world's 2nd biggest economy, china has set a modest growth target of around 5 percent to one of its lowest in years. economic recovery following the pandemic top, the agenda of the opening session of parliament, or david muns, a political economist, and is the founder of man, chinese joining us live from beijing. thank you very much indeed for being with us . what's your assessment of the statements that we've been hearing, particularly in regard to the economy? first of all that been coming out of this meeting pretty encouraging. china is 5 percent growth. my sam relatively modest to previous years. i'm weights here next year, sir. i see it, but actually that's gross over a very large economy. and i think that the impact will be profound in terms of a post code recovery process, it will be one of the engine recovery globally. so some,
1:35 pm
some ranges and countries piece will benefit huge from the growth this year in china. a lot of china's growth over the last few years, which has exceeded expectations and on several occasions has been done to foreign investment. no, one of the big issues which hasn't been addressed is china's global image, which has been taken up a bit of a hit over the last couple of years or so. how does china encourage foreign investors to return? it's a big challenge. ah, china really has not had such a negative image going really since a 1989 a china also is faced with almost a relentless position, particularly in the english language media globally. demonizing. every move it makes looking at any development is being negative, or in some cases, false. so it's a very difficult position. i think china could help itself more by react english to
1:36 pm
the situation and stop doing what it is doing, which is in that sense, state media. it always ends with stories that make america look bad. they're often true stories, but the way they juxtaposed it to kind of mutual propaganda. so that's what is happening between particularly washington and beijing. why he is very difficult for foreign companies to consider expanding here and investing here. nonetheless, many coming and is more visa situations improve and flats increase. i think they'll be a substantial return for business to china, but it could be better. this conference was essentially a rubber stamp of president changing things and unprecedented 3rd term much the politics had already been done in previous months, which is why we've seen the focus on economy. but there is a political element to the, the setting of the 5 percent growth rate, isn't it? because it is something that is pretty much achievable within that 3rd time of
1:37 pm
president. she's in pain. he is going to get the benefit of being able to deliver that. his name is he is and it's actually good that he said 5 percent because it says here the high target local officials would have striven to meet and make engaged and things that were going to hit g p figures but not be of direct economic value to an area and one thing in the last 10 years that's been particularly characteristic of sheet and things. economic management is allow for more realistic growth and less investment and infrastructure which isn't needed or with travel or pumping up of production figures to, to performance in factories. it still happens, but it happens a lot less. so i think the political issues that exist was she didn't bring
1:38 pm
extending to that it is, it's not unprecedented, but in recent decades it is i'm present. so there was a concern that there are a few voices talking to him. there is consent to the lack of consensus will create tension in other parts of the political system. so one can take to use. the 1st view is that he gets stronger and stronger because more and more loyal people around him. and he can eliminate opposition. the other is that he becomes more who, because of that a succession plan. he's not a single lead all the small or greater country. this is one 5th of humanity and the force of the people and the power of the party is greater than any individual. again, i'm really interested to get your expertise in this david long. thank you very much
1:39 pm
indeed for being with us. ah, soldiers returning from the front lines in eastern ukraine are needing treatment for their physical wounds, but the world health organization says doctors need to prioritize the mental health to what are the honeys reports from keith. it's a daily struggle giving his every effort to get back on his feet. it's been 8 months since alexander sustained a cervical spine injury in an air strike in the southern region of south of it happened on ukraine's independence day. oh, that's only true. i was at a military hospital to check my eyes when it came under attack with cluster bumps the school, 3 pieces of shrapnel flint to my back. it is hard. when i came here i can only move my toes to do that. i needed to push myself so hard core. yeah. now i'm trying to
1:40 pm
walk with crutches and i'm a an untold number of ukrainian soldiers have been seriously wounded in combat. loss of limb is one of the main injuries also among civilians. the exact numbers classified by the ministry of defense, but one estimate says it's happened to over 10000 ukrainians, mostly soldiers at the without limits rehabilitation center and keep therapist say, the man for prosthetics is very high. creating a mold is the 1st step into making a prosthetics, and then the patient will have to go through rehabilitation. but psychologist, say that mental health needs to be given equal attention. letter in how provide support for active soldiers through a network of mental health workers like our tim who also fought in the eastern dumbass region. it is. i was shocked. i was working with you guys. after
1:41 pm
a year i become this guy. you know, and i was so surprised how easy it could be. i forget about my life. i forget, forgot to live. i am psychotherapy psychotherapist for a year. and then i came back because i had this opportunity and i was like, wow, water. what a mess should associated roman colace. nick has put his career as a professional athlete and pulls him when he enrolled in the as of battalion. he lost spite of his right leg, but his glad that he survived. he is now fighting the urge to return to the combat zone yellow, but of course, like i think about it every day. it's of the zone. but after i saw what my relatives went through, i can't, i can't give them more pain. that sure he was harder for them than he was for me or not and i will make my dreams come true. show you. i want to become world champion and mixed martial arts and i am going 40 from yeah. about 70 percent of soldiers
1:42 pm
returned to active service after treatment. once the hostilities end ukraine will have to deal with the long term impact of war under visible and invisible injuries on its people. adapted hamid algiers. iraqi. let me bring you some breaking news out of greece. thousands of people are protesting outside parliament, those anger and grief nations worst, real disaster that kills 57 people. students, rail workers and public sector employees are taking part in the rallies. police, as you can hear, are using tear gas to push. some of the protest has back away from the parliament building. you can see some of the security forces. are there wearing of white helmets as they're moving people carrying those banners further back down the street? for me you as president, donald trump is pitch to conservative leaders. why he should be the republicans choice or the white house. he spoke for 2 hours at the annual conservative
1:43 pm
political action conference in the united states trans gearing up for a heated republican primary race ahead of the 2024 election allo fisher reports from oxen hill, maryland. oh, some coloma political liability, a leader with a fragile ego, but donald trump again proved he remains the dominant figure in the u. s. republican movement at the conservative political action conference just outside washington. he drew the biggest load it was that through z as the crowd. thank you very much and i'm thrilled to be back at sea back with thousands of great andrew american patriots. unless what you're going to again, for the white house in 2024. he is the man to beat for the republican presidential nomination, and in the halls of the conference. many delegates admitted they won't be swayed by other interesting options. why think there's one guy that you know, can get things done. we, he's proven it and i think we need it back in august. and i think the people,
1:44 pm
you know, see that if this is any representation of what people are thinking, he's got to have a very nice time in 2024. you think you'll quite easily win the nomination? definitely one the nomination. as long as the field stays big, the smaller the field goes. i think it will be harder for him to win. but if he's one of 10, or one with 35 percent of the vote from the, from the primaries that go into the general election from the former president, it was a familiar message. america is feeling, he alone can fix it. there's only one president in history or is ever taken on the entire corrupt establishment in washington. and when we went in 2024, we will do it again. even stronger, faster, and better because he's promised to bill 10. you frontier cities offer a bonus to americans to have children, but a lot of what he says on trade and immigration is recycled from his last presidential run. oh, a former president spoke on the day he'd released video with january 6th prisoners singing the u. s. national anthem supporters awaiting trial or
1:45 pm
convicted of offences after the u. s. capital was stormed 2 years ago. i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america. all trump is still the favorite here among the grass roots. and in many of the poles to be the republican presidential nominee, the question is, is that enough to stop others? we think they can be president, jumping into the race. i'll fisher, i'll just eat up at the c pack conference in maryland. so adding all the 0 is $4.00 to come back and say look to in their 1st league. type of for me, 20 years football action coming out. ah, of the 85 years broadcasting to the our world. a last goodbye from the bbc's arabic
1:46 pm
radio service, news read a mock would o masala be, has been the station signature, voice for 30 years. fittingly, when i read the final bulletin, bbc cost cutting is led to nearly $400.00 job losses of the bbc's wealth service. the number of foreign language radio channels being brought to close. one full must offer. i spoke to this week, hold the decision to end the service, a gift to dictate us. you lost millions of business euros. escalate ability, yours various wrong soft for the radio service ends with the 5000000 listeners a week. some of them particularly devoted up to la abdel rockman says without it, there's no point in keeping his radio harder. i've been listening to it more than 30 years. precious on the bbc's finances have been mounting, requiring ever hotter choices to many inside and outside the organization. this has been a saturday lou
1:47 pm
ah, looking at fossils capital. why google has held the closing ceremony of the prestigious pan african film and television festival? as africans movie industry is going through a revival. nicholas hark looks of the winners of the coveted golden stallion. ash cow, is it dark tunisian thriller? it follows 2 police officers went from the old regime the other from after the revolution, both searching for the reasons behind a series of emulation. the film is this year's winner of the main prize at the pan african film and television festival held in beacon of francis capital walker. duke of the jury recognized a powerful films that offered
1:48 pm
a settled critique of genius struggle after the arab spring. over $170.00 films and 11 categories were in competition among them, a moroccan movie, exploring the shame of same sex love, a drama treating survivors of rape in brooklyn, fossil, or a musical from cameroon. looking at new colonialism and its denial. this film director is the winner of the men have been prize. he says the festival is the chance to put on the big screen, the head in realities of african society, through fiction, directors dream it to do that film that goes beyond culture or be beyond your own cultural and facebook having given us an opportunity to showcase this film yet many got to be seen by many more people. different cultures, cinemas, in africa, were shutting down because of a lack of state funding. but private investment in a growing middle class is changing that theaters in africa are reopening,
1:49 pm
but they rarely showcase films made by african directors. and so the challenge is for african films to be distributed into what is a promising industry. it's predicted to bring it $20000000000.00 in revenue. but more than the income african cinema is an opportunity to plunge into a world of creative narratives, too often overlooked my printer to see this if this film inspired me to death things i wouldn't do. it gave me the courage to fight for what i really want them to put up at the festival ames to showcase filmmakers from africa that resonates not to a global audience. african story beyond africa. nicholas hawk al jazeera de car, senegal. as time for the sport his far, rob, thank you so much formula, one world champion mattress shop and is in position for the 1st race of the new season for stopping in his red bowl teammate sergio pro. walked out the front of
1:50 pm
the grade at the bahrain grand prix. for our do, i will charge claire and carlo st. we'll occupy the 2nd row. fernando, along so impressed for his new t math and martin the spanish will start in place. it's been a bit of stuff starts in weekend yesterday and today not really finding my rhythm, but luckily qualifying, i think we, we managed to put the best pieces together and of course very happy to to be in pool and also put all team coming off of last year and again, having such a strong car would check with their their as well. yes, it's amazing and i'm looking forward to tomorrow. i think we want to fight football, which was a good surprise to be honest because i did not expect that after testing and after the free practices that were a little bit difficult, we managed to find that base for, for the quite up which was great. however, we need to keep in mind that in the race run, we seem to be a little bit on the backward compared to to read both. joining us now from bahrain
1:51 pm
is the press associations f one correspondence philip duncan, philip match for staff, and is in proposition as expected in bahrain. do you think he has any serious challenges this season? will at type say probably not the mattress and red bull that will be quite clear that he's on the front row. and he's a co position is as you say, and he was, he was quite comfortable, insecure, and just have his head of his teammates balance to stop and is the guy that won 7. picking up the $22.00 races last year, the up city right to winning that 2nd most hampton ship. so obviously he's a poor man coming in the season. but his performance yesterday and qualifying a little bit ominous, particularly given the medical use the excel in the right. not so much type of one not qualify. so yeah, i mean expecting to win today and then it's upset the others to try and race yvonne bring the challenge to them for the rest of the season to make it an exciting
1:52 pm
season. but as it stands just happens yields some favorites. when that social what about mercedes? what happened to mercedes is lose hamilton and for another difficult season, do you think think so, i mean up the signs coming out of mercedes here this weekend. as we all know that had a pretty bad season last year. well, it's terrible season really for then thompson didn't win, which was the 1st time in a career that failed to win one race in the season. obviously they're hoping to turn a corner over the wind 7 and rock up here in bar. right. and be consistent as, but it just isn't going to be that way. i mean, there was sixpence back in qualifying, which is the same gap as to the from last year. so that suggests they haven't made any, any ground really on the leaders. and in fact, as you mentioned, brand alonzo, and yes to martin a hiv and then so. so was that seem principal said he spoke last night saying that, you know, it comes to the decision really that they're going to ditch discard and,
1:53 pm
and try and work in a new one, which is a pretty remarkable thing to say before. we've even had a race. so yes, certainly troubling times lewis thompson and mercedes, which is a bit of a shame again because you saw that great chairmanship passed between him and max's happened back in 2021. and i think, well, the neutral fans or the fanciful were wanted sports up to see that re much. but we're not going to get that this year. and who knows where they will actually ever get it again. i want to talk to you about the, the f one season in general, the f one calendar looks a little different compared to last season and tell us about some of the changes we can expect to see the season. yeah, it says never, ever expanding calendar the full one season, we'll have $23.00 races this year, which is a record we're supposed to have 20 for the race next month and in china. got cancelled again last year because it's a cobit restrictions in china,
1:54 pm
which i have since i'm changed, but it says, yep, 23. right. since we have a race in las vegas, which be the pronouncement round of the season, which i think everybody in the school is looking forward to. and hopefully that's how much it will still be going on by then the 5 sort of rates on, on the last vegas strip. so that will be a fantastic thing for formal one. i mean, actually look super and also very back in capsule. this year. there was one last year with you on the season before. so yeah, it's a different kind of this year starting over here and bahrain, and then on to saudi arabia next week. so $23.00 races in 9 months. the cramming and them in, but it should be entertaining season hopefully. yeah, hopefully. okay. phillip duncan, thank you once again for your time. talk to you soon. thanks. football now and paris censure man are now 11 points clear at the top of the french league, but not to at home. but it was a far from easy lena massey opened a scoring with p. s g, establishing an early to no lead,
1:55 pm
but not got themselves back in the game striking twice to go level at the break. he has, she weren't to be denied, though. goals from daniella pereira, an injury, time strike from killing him. bob, a seal. the points for to the final score with all this arsenal stage, the standing come back to stay in control, the premier league tuttle race rece nelson scored their winner against borne the fin, the 97th minutes borne with. we're ahead after just 9 seconds. this effort from a sam billing was his 2nd. quickest school in league history arsenal were to down by the time thomas parties got his team on the score sheet. ben wight leveled the match and somebody's minute. and then nelson scored the late late a winner. the 3 to win means are smaller or 5 points clear of manchester city, the 12 games left and sees you lose sight of where you are. i started to run. i didn't really know what i was
1:56 pm
run into and brennan, so one of our kids here next to my age, you do security. but say, just look in the phases of everybody in the staff to play is our supporters with that is mars that joy in their eyes. he just, he just read to him to leave england international cell phone and scored the opener for manchester city in their tune. over and over new capitol, newcastle did have chances to get something from this match for the 2nd half of all from bernard was silva made the gang fate for the reigning champions. we hope at newcastle, our 5th, just outside the channels. the qualifications john jones has been crowned the new u. f. c. heavyweight champion. american fighter who has served multiple drawn vans were out his career lead a just over 2 minutes to take down his opponent, cyril gown of france to win the title. victory sends the 35 year old unbeaten street to night 2 matches in a row. this way means
1:57 pm
a lot and it means a lie. i am humbled by it. and it just goes to show that now, no matter what happens in life, if you just continue to strive, put one foot in front of the other, then sky's the limit in this world really can be your oyster a week after winning the cattle open. daniel met the dev has claimed the dubai tennis championship. well, number 70, his russian compatriots who child that friend entre, rebuttal, straits that 66 to you in just over an hour. this is matt with admiral 3rd title a 3 weeks now. 114 matches in a row 3 since his a 3rd assist ally, you know, they are on this stage. really? yeah. is amazing because the start of the year was i was not perfect ah, in tennis, when you know, when tournaments you're always, dalton, no matter what happens on practice. so all resolved in a lot and now it just feels
1:58 pm
a bit better. i was really happy with this 3 weeks. i'm looking forward looking forward to the next once. okay. and that is all useful for now. back to the rob. far. thank you very much and ethan so he, romans, over here in a couple of minutes, were more on all these stories on the website. i was in the top of your boxes, but for now ah, mm hm. ah al jazeera,
1:59 pm
when ever you oh, to al jazeera, we ask, but should they not be more oversight? perhaps our foundations, like yours. we listen when it comes to diversification, we don't do it in order to beat gets wrinkled, the rational energy source. we meet with global news makers and talk about the store, restock matter. on al jazeera, too often of con, astonish, 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, archived spanning for decades, reveals the forgotten truths of the country's modern history. the forbidden real part to the communist revolution on a j 0. when the news breaks, families still how oh, and they say they won't leave without getting their relatives out of the robbery.
2:00 pm
when people need to be heard. and the story told my dad and water every way we are left without anything to keep us room with exclusive interviews and in depth reports on the shelving doors. here a precious saw the same specimen. al jazeera has teens on the ground to bring you more award. winning documentaries and live nice. ah thousands of people are escaping of fi that's engulf durango refugee camp in bangladesh. ah. club. so romney what.

28 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on