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

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this was wrong to teach children away from their parents and hurt them into a school against their will. there was no mother, no father figures. they put us in a big playroom and we certainly looked after ourselves. i don't remember the children's names, but i'll never forget the christ. canada's dark secret on al jazeera. ah ah. hello, i'm more matheson and this is the news. our life from doha, coming up with like 60 minutes a far is brought under control, are to ripping through a cramped camp for india. refugees in southern bangladesh,
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but thousands are less homeless again as they salvage what they can of their belongings. and friday's cape support isn't in isn't, is opposition. coalition demand the release of political prisoners, and an end to president crusades, cracked on the ship has reached the shore. ah, after using the gucci asians, nations from around the world. agree on the 1st international treaty to protect the high seas and on for a small have all the latest sport as we count down to the opening race of the new formula, one season match for sap and we'll start from po, position for the bar ingram. pre, if he aims for a 3rd world title and ah, a major father in golf talking
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a refugee camp in bangladesh has been brought under control. no immediate casualties were reported that the battle of holly camp and the cox's bazaar district emergency services rushed to the camp. and they were assisted by local volunteers. but the blaze has left a thousands of displaced or here. refugees sheltering in bangladesh without a roof over their heads. more than a 1000000 of them escaped, a brutal military track down and neighboring me and more. and they'd been unable to return under charters, lifeless in dhaka tundra. just bring us up to date. first of all, what's the latest on this what so far, would we know to our contact in the camera? cox of bazaar follow colored fire department office, is that at least so what they some estimated 2000 hops have been got major burned basically. each has about town 5 to 4 people living and as a family, that could mean a number of people displays of quite a quite a lot and many of the population in the can. but liz,
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half of them are children and woman, so the devastation is not the 1st time we have since march last year, at least $50000.00 people were displacing a similar fire in a camp in the nearby campbell of police. so the s, the damage and the casualty could be increased. we don't know, they're still searching and rescuing for people, but there's no report of casualty by the police on the fire department as of yet in time for obviously we're just into the 1st few hours of this going on. i haven't got any idea how it might have begun. typically in the fire, i'm in the liquid bag cylinder guests that use for cooking that the agency provide each family with one cylinder gas which they use for cooking some time they exploit in this in the camps some time the fire spread from a cooking stove to the nearby hard and then it spreads all over. but there has been
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the plot several hang on themselves, accusing that many of these fires started by inter gang rivalry. r c would between rival political groups even now there's a rumor in the camp. as i spoke to some of our context that this could have been a arson or a sabotage. so it's never really investigated exactly how it started. most cases, it's cylinders, blasters that started with a gas cylinder, but many cases these are arson. but we cannot independently come from this thing because they investigates and normally doesn't come to a conclusive evidence. what really started this fine time. just as you're talking to us, we're looking at some of the pictures of the camp and some of the that the destruction as well. it seems very dense. it seems as though a lot of these houses, temporary shelters and tense is or are very close together. do we have any idea just how many people might have been affected by this? again, i do appreciate we're just into the 1st few hours of this. yes,
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i mean when you consider 1200000 people living and barely 17 square kilometer area . if you take the wider area, maybe patty do square kilometer, that's more than the population of washington, d, t and many large cities in europe or america leading in such a densely packed area. most of these hot so made out of bamboo and toppling so they get very fuzzy, highly inflammable. they've been, boom trails and it's because they're so close proximity. many of these hops are located on hilltops where the fire, we get trucks cannot go. even though things have improved, that volunteer firefighter units with c 3 will scooter to do emergency work in cases like this, but at the very challenging environment, and evade densely packed area with a very limited facilities that filled hospitals and clinics are not enough inadequate for 1200000 people, there's some hospitals nearby in the town, takes a while for this injured victim to go there and specialize barn unit to take care of them. so it's
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a very challenging environment for healthcare professional as well as for the fire began in a situation like this. tanveer for now. thank you very much indeed. have your charge re alive for us in doc our as a truly my sheet is the field office chief with unicef, cox's bizarre, he's joining us live from there. a very good to have you with us. we appreciate you're very busy at the moment. so thank you. very much indeed for your time tanveer was explaining to us the, the limitations that can be placed on agencies trying to get a help and assistance to people in the camps like this can you describe to us what you and your teams are seeing at the moment thank you and nice to be with you just to give you some background. there are more than a few days and 3 today, around 230 in the afternoon, a fire to start that income 11 and very quickly it is spread to the neighboring camp, which is 9. and then in this 3 comes with the fire happen around 100000 if you use
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on leaving and 50 percent of them are children in the situation as quickly while being still the numbers are coming and we have limited information. they want to reduce our trying their best that to bring the fire under the control unit on the part and us we are on the ground and we are trying to meet that immediate and i just need the children and their families that we are. we are very, extremely concerned about the children and families because the previous incidents last year showed us this fire to spreads very quickly. and before the children and families and kind of came, there are only be in the, in the so far. fortunately, there is no reports of the cavities, but we have reports that at least 20 to learning center. so one of the visions on that one information feedbacks on down on the bottom. unicef has applied to the
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emergency medical team that to work over nice already dark here. and the teams are on the ground. my, it's not on the ground and they are just sending us the report. so these teams will pass overnight in that. com to provide the b c, medical support for the children and families. can you describe to me, i mean, how difficult it is going to be in order to be able to find a shelter for these people. and the longer term, of course, you were talking about $22.00 learning centers being at least some of those buildings that have been destroyed, longer term. this is going to have a very significant impact on the people in the camp. and of course, the 50 percent children that you're talking about. absolutely. so all these facilities, whether it is not a learning center or a medical center, they have longer impacts there. and we don't support the international community. these services cannot be stored very quickly. so we are very well, but
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a saudi our hearts out with this. go ahead, get you into that. and with the families that once again, they are becoming homeless and they are shut down on burn the immediate need of all these children and families to have showed their water food and a place you just pass overnight there. and of course then the need for me to teach and try to production is just coming. and in the coming days that all these numbers and figures would come out and we will measure the actual act of this fire and to see how can we possibly be restore the services. asking us on our correspondence, have your charger was explaining to us that obviously because we are only in the 1st few hours after the fire has started and subsequently has been brought under control. we're still not clear how this fire started, but there are rumors that this may have been, at least in part, a result of some inter gang rivalry that has been going on. how concerned are you
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that this given that, that they the strength of feeling there is going to be about this fire? how concerned are you that this could escalate and we could see violence in the camps? at this stage we don't have any information about the source of the fire, how this fire is started. we are trying to respond to the immediate need of the children and their families. so given that he, when the support of the government authorities enforcing got to reduce the causes when we found on, if they had to be any investigation. and then to let us know how the situation evolves. but definitely units of concern from the gender. as i told my g, thank you very much indeed for being with us at what is clearly a very busy time for you and your teams. thanks to your visors of evil, a protesting outside the greek parliament as anger and grief over the nation's worst rail disaster that killed 57 people. in tuesday,
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students, rail workers and public sector employees are taking part in those rallies. police have used tear gas to push back some protesters demonstrate as of blaming the government for the poor condition of greece's rail system. well, humans say a fatal accident was inevitable. dozens of supporters of chinese use opposition coalition have defied a protest band and on the streets of the capital tunis, they've broken through a police barrier. and that in the city's main street, demanding the release of political prisoners trade unionists and journalists, president hi say to dissolved parliament in 2021 elections in december. were boycotted by the opposition. who accused him of a power grab let's bring in, i mean, snoo, see he's a political analyst, he's joining us live now from stroudsburg. thank you very much indeed for being with us. what's different about these protests given that we've seen protests over several weeks before? was 1st brought that those today by the national foundation front was banned by the
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governors unit. and they define the illegal ban because you don't need another addition to brought that you need to declare the protests and the location of the process. but you don't need an authorization from the government. now, the government of june, it's banned. today's protest then the national position from managed to do it. anyway. yesterday's union unions protest was the 1st because for the 1st time you're going to be the leader on the union deliver the strong message calling for the freedom of for political opponents that have been, as i've been arrested by, by justice in the, in the last the in the last few weeks, and he called for the return of the democratic system engineers. so really, there is multiple forms of opponents to fire that are now protesting and this week. and they showed that they will be,
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they will be there no much what the press are better, a pressure lower and no matter how, how, how side tries to try to bend them from the street. if the nature of the process is changing, as you seem to be saying, how do you think the government is going to respond? well, the minutes through frontier will obviously, has obviously said that this protest was illegal because the governor of june is bended. so they will take action against the national privation front. that's the, that's the main issue here. political, the, the political space in geneva is no longer safe for any open. so we'll have consequences on the people that the people that organize that. however, i think that they, they, they don't, they don't true. they know that they are prepared to that and they, they, they've been added for the last few weeks. so they, they, they are not really afraid of prison.
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i mean, so say thank you very much indeed. your time for joining us from strossberg. thank you. thank you. don't want to head on the news are including the long road to recovery. thousands of you training civilians and soldiers who lost lenders in the war. a struggling with physical and mental wounds. it is an acceptable if you are l backed by processes and decisions are made far beyond your board the u . n. she slams the global financial system. the benefits rich nation from the, the poor countries behind in sports p. s g come through a tough test that they close in and the french league stifled football election coming up in sport. ah, after 15 years of talks to you and has agreed to
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a historic treaty to protect the world's high seas, these waters which are currently beyond the control of nations and the on subject to laws. victoria gave me reports. ladies and gentlemen, the ship has reached the shore celebrations at the un. after 50 years of negotiation with ambassador the ocean denounces a deal. the un high seas treaty will designate 30 percent of the world's oceans as protected areas by 2030 fishing and shipping lanes will be restricted and move funding provided for marine conservation. this is the treaty. no one knew was really going to land. and last night it did, and that's a testament to really, really hard work. i very dedicated individuals over an unprecedented session is final one that went over 48 hours. so that's why i just want to celebrate enders. sure, there's hard work ahead and unclear pat. there'll be speed bumps but so we've just
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had a really big win. only one percent of the wealth international waters is currently protected. most marine life is threatened by climate change over fishing and shipping activist describe this agreement as a breakthrough and design that in a divided world. protecting nature can triumph over geo politics. this is an enormously important outcome for, for the well, it provides an opportunity for us to better manage and, and raise your lay environmentally harmful activities in the, for nearly half of that falls, the, our national jurisdiction, the high seas. this has implications for all of us all around. the treaty will now be studied by lewis and translated into the un 6 official languages before being formally adopted. victoria gate and b algae, they're going to bring in charles clover, his executive director at blue marine foundation. he's joining us from london. very
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good to have you with us on al jazeera, we saw there in victoria's package or arena league of singapore, the conference president. clearly very emotional, having managed to reach this point and get this treaty agreed. why is it so important? well, well done, rena lee and the other negotiators because they've come up with a humdinger of a treaty. it's not perfect. nothing that is agreed by consensus, by all the world's nations ever is perfect. but it's in a, it's a huge milestone in ocean protection before. now, there was no means no legal mechanism for protecting biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction as it's cold. and out there in the high seas are some extremely important places like the sa gaster see like the last city in the atlantic, like the wall. this ridge also in the atlantic, like
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a firm old dome in the pacific, which is a hot spot for sharks, wales turtles, all of which were unprotected, and without any kind of protection to. i'm now they will in time have this protection, but we've got to do some work. this is the passing of a milestone. it's still got to be ratified this treaty. and that will take some time. but i'm very keen that we just get on with the, the significant areas in the seas that you're talking about of. clearly not just materialized overnight. they've been there for many years. people have understood the importance of these areas for many years. and yet it's taken 15 years to get this kind of agreement wise have taken so long where all sorts of nutty bits in any treaty of this kind does what you do about potential discoveries that are worth money. like marine genetic resources. these
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have been traditionals stumbling points and other un treaties like they're, they're conventional biological diversity to even longer with that. to go on these things out. and actually they've learned a lot from those other treaties say they've got the right in this one. so we can just get on with that that the difficult bits have been done. or we could, we could use this treaty from now to start selecting important areas and getting protected in the areas are going to be covered by this. tracy by 2030 are significantly larger than the areas that had been previously protected. how do you police something like this? because i can't imagine that governments are going to be falling over themselves to start funding more coast guard boats and crews to be able to monitor the areas that are not covered. that's a very good question. i'm and it's been already resolved by where the,
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by the british blue belt and by other places where they use satellite ah, monitoring and port state control. so you don't need these coast guard boat, so your, you only need them in the most extreme circumstances. you have to put boats out there in the high seas all the time. it's going to cost a fortune. but satellite technology is such that you can tell where boats going. you can tell what they're doing when they get there. and you can tell which ports the landing into, and if the landing something that shouldn't be landing, you can tell that quite easily too. so satellites and port, state control, give you a great deal more enforcement capability than people actually understand exists at present. it's all there, it's being used now. charles clovers, executive director at blue marine foundation, and we appreciate you being with us and i'll just, you know, thank you very much indeed. thank you guys. as a freshman of intel to stay on land as philippine coast guards,
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race to contain an oil spill is that comes from a tanka that same quote, carrying fuel. and it's we've several coastal towns, manami low reports. snellville arrows in her family have hardly been able to sleep for nearly a week. you live in the coast of paula, in one of several towns where oil from a southern tinker has washed ashore. that's all. so how come he sat on the smell mixers want to vomit? our heads hurt and we've also been coughing. it's been especially harder. my 15 year old child on tuesday, a ship carrying $800000.00 leaders of unrefined oil supper, the engine trouble and sunk off men. doro, in the central philippines, the spill has reached a neighboring island and could drift even farther. if it isn't contained, the water is around here are some of the most christine in the philippines. a number of areas are marine protected, which means even facing is it allowed. but at the moment, as you can see,
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water along this course is black. 53 year old manuel, i said better has been a fisherman almost all his life. but all he can do now is look out to the sea. fishing has been band indefinitely, and it's already taking a toll and his livelihood. and that belong landon's era. we don't know how we would be able to make and smith and especially because we have children who go to school, all they can do now is help coast guards clean up the beaches. so they might be able to get to see quicker. but they say the pollution is getting worse by the day . melinda spoke. i may, after we clean up, they'll come again, especially when the weaves are high. we clean non stop, they come non stop. the government has promised to provide aid, but those who are being affected see was they appreciate any help that could tie them over. what they really want is to have their way of life back. as soon as
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possible. wind below al jazeera or in the admin, dora the philippines, the world, the 2nd biggest economy, china has set a modest growth target of around 5 percent. that's one of his lowest in years. tony, you reports from vision. 2 2 2 a buoyant tradition of china's national anthem opens its annual parliamentary session in beijing, but outgoing premier lee could chung the assessment of the country's economic performance with samba in comparison, he said the pandemic and challenges in the international environment had caused china to fall short of its previous g d, p target of 5.5 percent hitting only 3 percent go that he announced a more modest goal for growth in 2023. the main projected target for development this year are as follows. g d, b growth of a wrong 5 percent around 12000000, new urban jobs survey, urban unemployment rate of around 5.5 person boosting income and consumers spending
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our major priorities. there will also be renewed focus on innovation and technological self reliance, beijing's response to what it says are escalating attempts by the united states and its allies to suppress chinese funds there. pressing hard on technology, basically to fill the void that has been created by, ah, you know, these embargoes by the united states. and in there, they're also very, very keen on reducing costs across the board. they want a chinese manufacturing to be lean mean at the lower end of the spectrum. they believe that this is the key. competitiveness is the key to maintaining the markets . china will also boost its military preparedness and increase its defense budget by 7.2 percent. the communist party is concerned by increasing tensions around tie one, a self ruled island claimed by they ging, she didn't things as peaceful the unification is preferred. although he has not rolled out the use of force beating his also troubled by the continuing roar,
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ukraine. tensions on the korean peninsula and the re arming of japan, although it denies targeting any 3rd party groom or junior should assume. therefore, china's military modernization does not pose a threat to any country far, but rather is a positive force d for maintaining regional stability. and whoa, pct jay, and yet of this leakage chunks, last recitation of the annual communist party were report as premier role he held for 10 years from yearly curtain was known for his reform minded approach to managing china's economy. he'll be replaced by his chung loyal support, a student king with limited international experience. analysts say this will likely lead to a step back in the liberalization of the economy and more palate being concentrated in the top ranks of the communist policy. between you al jazeera nathan
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soldiers returning from the front lines in eastern ukraine in treatment for their physical wounds. but the world health organization says doctors need to prioritize their mental health to harder are the hamid reports from cave. it's a daily struggle giving his every effort to get back on his feet. it's been 8 months since alexander sustained the cervical spine. injury in an air strike in the southern region of south of it happened on ukraine's independence. beg oh, that's only true. i was at a military hospital to check my eyes when it came under attack with cluster bombs, the school, 3 pieces of sharpening, fluent 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 hardy. oh yeah. now i'm trying to walk with crutches with an untold number of ukrainian soldiers have
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been seriously wounded in combat. loss of lim 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, keep therapist say, demand 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 that psychologist say that mental health needs to be given equal attention. veteran heart provide support for active soldiers through a network of mental health workers like our tim who also fought in the eastern dumbass region. i was shocked. i was working with his guys after a year i become this guy. and oh, and i was so surprised how easy it couldn't be. i forget about my life. i forget,
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forgot that i am psychotherapy psychotherapist for a year and them i came back because i had this opportunity and i was like wow, water. what a mess to distortion roman cool is neat. 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. you know what of so cause now 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 it in more pain. that issue. he was harder for them than he was for me, which i will make my dreams come true. so you, i want to become world champion in mixed martial arts and i am going for ether. about 70 percent of soldiers returned to active service after treatment. once the hostilities end ukraine will have to deal with the long term impact of war under
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visible and invisible injuries on its people. adapted hamid algiers. iraqi. it's time for the weather. here's everton. hello, we've got some unsettle weather in the forecast or parts of the middle east, northern parts of the region. we'll see bands of cloud, andrade, little bit of snow to just around the mountains towards the black seat was of course is we will see one or 2 showers into northern parts of saudi may be quite a keen wind here. 32 celsius in q 8, sir, very much on the a warm side. warm enough here in doha as well, getting up to 33 on tuesday route 5 degrees above the average. the warmth is ease. now for a cairo, for monday, temperatures around $24.00 celsius. so well down racing values are into the low thirty's, recently few shouting to northern parts of africa, up towards northern algeria and a few showers just around the coastal fringes of west africa. let's get down towards our tropical cycling. i'm afraid freddy is back in town. it has reformed in
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the mozambique channel. this storm was 1st, i rented, identified a round about a month ago. so this, it really has been long lived. it been swirling away and made its way to mozambique, flipped its way into as in barbara now slid back and it's now started to feed some very heavy rain. back into that southwestern corner of madagascar, there will be further flooding here. plenty of fir, warm moist air in the system here. driving that rain further north still hadn't i'll just say that we're going to go in a honda for a dozen delicacy in southern iraq to find out how important it is for tradition and the economy. and i'm jessica washington, near the eastern coast of the island of corneo were indonesia is scaling up construction of its new capital city. i'm in florida. 3 titles. it has many weeks for this player transaction later on in the show. ah.
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in the blink of the night, many lives when 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 way, it's severe shortages of humanitarian aid. the full report, syria, the continuing tragedy on al jazeera, the latest news, as it breaks, still biding, arriving here bled june more our weapons read more defense, financial support with detailed coverage, more than a decade of civil war, has killed or displeased many serious millions of bethel church, you're looking for safety from around the world, limiting their powers require amendments to the constitution. i'm going to look for on more what with increasing number of governance electric. neither of us will have
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to wait longer. hold on. lou. ah, you want to go to 0 reminder of our top stories. this are a major father in golf or hanging refugee camp in bangladesh has been brought under control. no immediate casualties were reported at the bottom of holly camp or in the hawks is bizarre districts. but the place has left thousands of people without shelter. and thousands of supporters of chinese is opposition. coalition have defied a protest band and are on the streets of the capital to this that demanding the release of political prisoners trade unionists and journalists. the u. m. has agreed a historic treaty to protect marine life,
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its gonna designate 30 percent of the world's oceans as protected zones by 2030 activists or calling it a monumental when when it rings and breaking he's going to care a building has collapse in the city of san the of the city's mayor says it's understood that our people under the rubble rescue teams have been deployed. officials say the building was damaged in twin earthquakes. almost a month ago, water, electricity, and gas were cut to the blog, and people were advised to stay away. we're going to bring him more on that story as we get it are united nations conference and the world's least developed countries is happening in doha. did place once every 10 years that i currently $46.00 l d c's is they'll know most of them are in africa, are defined as having an average national income of around a $1000.00 per person. debt is a big problem and the vulnerable to climate change and diseases such as covered 19
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. the list of such countries is reviewed every 3 years by the un, only 6 or progressed above l. d. c. status. in the last 30 years. the meeting in door heart will focus on 6 areas, including how to eradicate poverty, enhanced trade, and tackled climate change. least developed countries are being stranded amidst the rising di the crazes and said that the climate scales and the global injustice. they are unable to keep base with lightning speed, thick logical change systems, as threats from elson, navigation to social production, infrastructure and job creation. and employment is rising, especially among young people. and women are being pushed through the sidelines that matter miss williams and alameda, till metallica, p moines. there is a common global responsibility to confront the challenges of food security, climate change, the energy crisis, and the debt chrisy. job finding solutions is
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a collective and important responsibility among all countries. there is a moral obligation encumbered upon the rich and developed countries to contribute more to assist the least developed countries of europe to overcome the global challenges that we are now dealing with. this is a responsibility and not a favor. why should allen, sorry, as the spokesman of cut us ministry of foreign affairs. and he says his nations committed to leave negotiations, which will help nations come out of poverty. as i think they do a little said today, it provides a practical guide for the world on how to support development in these countries. it is now our duty for the next 10 years to help facilitate docs that on this and to see that their international community made the dividend, as i said, into international development through the 3rd mechanism, the around table that will take place between now and thursday. there at, at the track the indio track and the a youth dragon, their private sector clack will all help in making sure that the ambitions of their
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plan of action or materialized in the next in yemen is one of the world's least developed nations. millions of people are facing poverty, famine, and malnutrition. after 8 years of civil war, the u. n says most are in desperate need of aid. hom involves reports are some distressing images. so ways only 6 kilograms, even though she's 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 like hundreds of other humans, silva and her family live in a high dish cap. it's located in the hud, the governor, it in northern, yemen, and shelters. those have been forced from their homes by conflict. but
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life here is tough. families are crowded inside these tiny shelters made of sticks and water is hard to get. and there was no sanitation people are forced to search through our bish dumps to find food and anything that'll help them survive. and that's what i mean. what am i la? 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 eat in the morning? we will not have dinner. if we have dinner, we will not have lunch level be fled our region, and we are here. our condition is very bad and we have nothing. and that's an eye. this woman says it is difficult to give to children need. i'm again been in elementary school. we are poor, so if a child get sick, we do not find him to require treatment or any other thing. the stores of the organizations are full of much as in water containers,
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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 ation. didn't. every family in this camp is suffering from extreme poverty while they go out searching for 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. no. so no water containers, we have some worn out blankets, the 2 years old. ok, that's tragic wednesday. camps like this one are spread across human. it's one of the poorest countries in the world. and the civil war has made people's lives worse. 8 years ago. who's the malicious back by march from the north and to the capitol center. the government was forced to provide and an alliance of out of countries launched an air bombardment, campaign tourist told the house to the government. but the conflict hasn't stopped
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. 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 united in crisis. it says 2300000 children under the age of 5. don't tough, you know food level and 400000 of them are suffering from city malnutrition. mom had fun on says you can't o'conny aaliyah's. johnny is a senior researcher, the sonata center for strategic studies. he thinks resolving conferences, the 1st step towards ending property in countries such as yemen. countries such as yemen that are either on the verge of collapse. they need more frequent attention to help them or return to my ability. i think than to measure community should make the effort to apply enough pressure on the parties that are either fighting or
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supporting the various fighting on groups to stop the war. and then that may be the condition of the people will improve. generally, people are living on below subsistence level and you know, saturdays will not get paid for the past few years for the past 7 years since the 2016. and that people are managing it because of the strong and sort of data t within the many society, but this cannot last for long according to the you and the losses. the economic losses from this war is a now over a $100000000000.00. and that the economy is now stretched to the limit. indonesia is building a new capital to replace jakarta. the government says the city on the island, borneo will create more opportunities, but indigenous communities. so they're being forced off the land. jessica
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washington reports from boyle. the public people have lived in tobacco east cali mountain for hundreds of years, but life is changing here as indonesia build its new capital city, new center. and this village is now marked as part of the development. i think that'll give anybody call with that young up. they act like we don't exist. like we're not human. they should have talked to us 1st. we accept the new capital, but don't dismiss our rights. they want to build something new by destroying what is already here, mom, back on the other india. i'm certain i lived in a house that once belonged to her great, great grandparents. now she wakes to the sound of heavy machinery in her back yard, as workers build an intake reservoir for a dam to serve the new capital. no, no, this is the impact of the development behind me. but we never had to buy things like wood or water or vegetables before. but now we live miserable lives advocacy groups estimate around 20000 indigenous people will be affected. officials say
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those affected by the new capital project will be compensated fairly, but many indigenous people in east county, montana don't have land certificates, making it difficult for them to have the claims that verified indigenous people told us their land was passed down from their ancestors until recently, they'd never had to prove ownership. the project chief insist their needs are being considered assumed we have to respect, hold the indigenous people, the local wisdom, the weird, the dollar living working, also learning. that should be part of our development process. that is why we are have some inclusive forum, for example, trying to have a lot of dialogue with all the stakeholders in this area so that they will be part of our different path in the future. it doesn't meant is emphasizing initiatives like workshops, teaching digital skills and modern farming techniques. threesome,
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la whitey and her neighbors migrated to his sculley mountain in the seventy's say the project is making life insur pocket better. now sal agatha, me, let's be great for that will be part of the new capital before the new capital plan . we never got any attention because our village is far from town and no one knows it last month. but indigenous community leaders he booked in, says life was easier before the new capital location was announced. guardy land, bagget room, right? and then on his yard, they say it's for, for all a donation, but which ones we don't want to be relocated from our sisters land. the new capital is haunting us and haunting the future. much as authority scale up construction in coming weeks. this community is increasingly losing hope. jessica washington, out as era in east cali mountain on the island of borneo. stella had an al jazeera o in sport, also full of a dramatic comeback whose name and to win the 1st league title for nearly 20 years
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hope election coming up ah, in the laboratory of the dead fish pharmacy in paris medicines being prepared. in this case, it's the common antibiotic. amoxicillin fiona here says, since people stopped wearing mosques, they are catching more infections again. so the demand for simple medication is higher and the major pharmaceutical companies can not. the problem is not just affecting simple pain killers and antibiotics across the continents. the european medicines agency says currently 13 key drugs are in short supply. the shortage of medicine applies across europe at the spoon and pharmacy stones are increasingly having to find alternative drugs to those doctors are prescribed in order to help their patients. i'm basically we have a lot more work to do to supply the population with medicine. so far we have still somehow found the solution for people,
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but we often have to improvise. so sometimes we relief and not the active ingredient will strongly prescribed and theme have to adjust the dosage. lou ah, in iraq's porch deserts rain bring something rare and delicious deserts truffles under suffering. and some of the most remote areas borrowed out that will head went on a truffle hunt in some ala it 7 a. m. he'll in iraq, his southern city of his mauer time for rush it and his friends to scow at the vast desert looking for something green and delicious trough hills. the much
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sought after delicacy is a fungal plant that usually grows under ground during the rainy season. oh no, not yet. and then it usually grows $5.00 to $15.00 centimeters beneath the surface . we trace it by indicators such as the tell tale grace and cracks on the soil. it's fun for us because besides making money out of it, we also end up spending good time with our families and have a picnic atmosphere every year between february and march truffle hunters, from smell. i camp out in the desert to dig out as much of it as they can. nomadic shepherds, oh no exception. how seen allen? his family set up their tent around grassy fields for monks? besides taking care of their sheep and camels? they also make a living by selling the desert. truffles who are now there was another on them. we
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have inherited the love of tracking and collecting truffle from our ancestors. 3 years, we spent most of our life with our sheep and camels in the desert. but we wait for the truffle season every year to collect it and sell it and eat it. it's a blessing from god. this is the truffle. hop in the desert heat. it is piled sorted, packed, and sent to the city. but since they depend on heavy rain to grow some seasons, we will see little to no truffles. the sir sha process can be risky. there are wild animals here, including wolves, and unexploded ordnance beneath the surface can sometimes be mistaken for travel. in this it is grocery market. traders take pride in their produce. iraq produces to main types of travel, a light one, and darker one. each piece of these can weigh between 30 and 200 grams and
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one kilogram can cost up to $50.00 depending on size, taste, and quality. the costly here, not only because of a lack of supply but also because of their flavor and our omar. some restaurants in small, what sort of it as a meat substitute desert truffles are high in plant protein similar to toefl and our favorite with begins and vegetarians, but they need to be washed to properly deserved to truffle to have new routes. so if they're not collected on time, they'll be food for insects. but for those who rely on these read delicacies, they provide a much needed income. even if it means having to spend long days in the iraqi desert, mount up to wide algebra in smola,
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southern iraq. you know, some of the sporting is farrah. thank you so much rob formula one world champion mattress. tap in as in paul position for the 1st race of the new season, which begins shortly for shopping and his regular teammates, sergio perez locked out the front of the grid at the barring grand prix. the ferrari douro of charles the claire and carlo saints will occupy the 2nd row. fernando alonzo impress for his new team aston martin spaniard will start in a 5th place. it's been a bit of a tough star to the weekend yesterday. and today, not really finding my rhythm, but luckily qualifying, i think we managed to put the best pieces together and of course very happy to to be on pool. and also your football team coming up, you know, of loss here. and again, having such a strong car would check with her up there as well. yes, it's amazing and i'm looking forward to tomorrow. i think we wanted to fight football, which was a good surprise to be honest because i did not expect that after testing. and after
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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. well, this season will be the longest and formula one history we've been speaking to the press associations, philip, but don't care about what race fans can look forward to. 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 in, in china. got cancelled again last year because it's a coven restrictions in china, which have since i'm changed. it says, yep, $23.00 races will have rates in las vegas, which be the pronouncement round of the season, which i think everyone in this for looking for it to and hopefully the temperature part will still be going on by then the 5. so every on, on the last mega strip. so that'll be a fantastic thing for formula one. i mean, absolute super and also going to race,
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backing capsule this year wasn't last year with you on the season before. so yeah, there's a different kind of this year starting on see here in bahrain, and then on to saudi arabia next week. so $23.00 races in 9 months, the crime to man, but it should be entertaining phase and hopefully football now and paris sanction man are now 11 points clear at the top, the french league. they beat not at home, but it was far from easy. lena massey opened the scoring with p. s g, establishing an early tune, a lead, but not a got themselves back in the game, striking twice to go level at the break. pierce, she weren't to be denied, though. goals from daniel pereira and an injury. time strike from killian and bob a sealed to points for to the final score all the arsenal stage. a stunning, come back to stay in control, the premier league title race rece nelson scored their winner against form that the
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in the 97th a minute or with where i had after just 9 seconds. this effort from sam, a billing was the 2nd quickest goal in league history are small, were to down by the time thomas party got as a team on the score sheet. ben wight leveled the match an assembly if minute, man nelson scored the late late winter. the 32 wind means arsenal are 5 points clear of manchester city with 12 games left a season. hello. you lose sight of where you are. i started to run. i didn't really know what i was run into and brennan, so one of our kid here next to this 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 live england international cell phone and score the opener from manchester city. and there to know when over new castle,
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newcastle did have chances to get something from this matching. the 2nd half hold from bernardo silva made the game of faith for the reigning champions. watch at newcastle are 5th at just outside the channels you want vacation. as far as the buyer munich are back on top of the german brenda's league of a t one went over the effort beach stood guard, moved them above rossi, a dork man. the 2 teams are only separated by john jones has been crowned the new. you have c heavyweight champion, the american fighter who sent multiple drum bands were out his career needed just over 2 minutes to take down his opponent, cyril gan of france to win the title. the victory extends the 35 year olds, unbeaten street. the 92 matches in this way means a lot. it means a lie. ah, i'm humbled by it. and it just goes to show that no matter what happens in life,
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if you just contain his drive, but one foot in front of the other, the sky's the limit in this world really can be yours to now week after winning the cats are opened. daniel medford davis claimed the dubai tennis a championship, the well number 7 beat his russian patrick at childhood friend andre rube lab in straight sets. 6262 in just over an hour. it is his method as a 3rd title in 3 weeks. he's now 114 matches in a row since his 3rd round exit at the australian open barrel this day. yeah. is amazing because the start of the year was i was not perfect awe in fan is when you know, when tournaments you're always, dalton on no matter what happens on practice. so saw was often a lot and no, it just feels a better. i was really happy with this 3 weeks. i'm looking forward to looking forward to the next. once. the milwaukee bucks is 16 game winning streak and the n b a has and did. they were beaten by philadelphia 76 years, who trailed with under 2 minutes left in the game. james hardon who top scored for
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the sixers with 38 points, had a 3 pointer and went on to lead philadelphia 21332100 30. when milwaukee had the longest of winning street in the leases have been exxon's had 18th street victories last and south koreans jin young co has retained her lpga women's world championship title. former will number one golfer close the final day on sunday with a 369 when the titled by 2 shots co a was in tears even before she clenched the victory in singapore. the 27 year old has become the 1st player to defend her world championship title. okay, and that is all you support for now back t rock fire. thank you very much indeed. by kenneth fossils capital or google has held the closing sun. many of the prestigious pan african film and television festivals as africa's movie industry is going through a revival because hoc looks at the winners of the coveted golden stallion.
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article. is it dark tunisian thriller? it follows to police officers when from the old regime of the other from after the revolution, both searching for the reasons behind a series of immolation. the film is this year's winner of the main prize of the pan african film and television festival held in brookings, passes. capital walker duke. the jury recognized a powerful film that offered a settled critique of tenicia 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, faso, 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 reality,
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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, 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 wanted to
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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. i'm going to be back in a couple of minutes, was more on all the stories to stay with me if you can on more prophecy to buy ah ah. every 3 days, a woman is killed in italy, the murder of women and unprecedented levels of domestic violence have shocked easily to the call. the violence is more violent,
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violent men are younger. why does it keep happening and what can be done to stop it? this is not the price i want my daughter and all the daughters prepaid. that's not the country i want to witness. famous studio for me is very simply the question of power on ouch is era bollywood? a glamorous industry that attracts though seeking fame and fortune. i always told myself that some day i'll be famous ah, but for some fumbling bedrooms can become a nightmare. i had asked in the 1st benefit of my experience in morgan, i had to consult with i'd go dressed for the logos, hollywood dreams on al jazeera, smiling through the coals. tamara and her colleagues at the school for people's with special needs, wants a pe royce that meets the rising cost of living and keeps people in the profession
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. ways teachers are making sure bad jamal, and so i don't what is clearly a sizable demonstration to mary lumber and wave of industrial action taking in various parts of the economy. coating on the government for pay arises that meets inflation. if there's no movement on pay, we likely to be seeing more protests look just from people like tomorrow, but work is in other key professions who enjoy growth support from the public. lou and i was praying damage building collapses in the turkish city of san your firm. officials say people are believed to be trapped under the robber. ah, i don't know about.

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