tv News Al Jazeera March 5, 2023 9:00pm-10:01pm AST
9:00 pm
i've been covering all of latin america for most of my career, but no country is alike, and it's my job to shed light on how and why talk to al jazeera, we are school, but should they not be more over science, perhaps, or foundations like yours? we listen when it comes to diversification, we don't do it in order to be gets rid of the rational on those resources. we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the store restock matter on al jazeera. ah ah, hello there, i'm just audio tag. this is the news, our line from our headquarters here in doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. a fun and
9:01 pm
a refugee camp in bangladesh destroys the homes of thousands of ringa who fled the brutalities of me on walls, military and new wave of suspected poisonings. and iranian schools, over 300 gulf has been talkative and outrage on the streets of athens. protest is in greece, demand accountability for a trained collision that left 57 people that the ship has reached the shaw. ah not the is the negotiations and nations from around the world agree on the fest treaty to protect the high seas? not his fault. barcelona. have tightened their grip on the spanish title. rice. they base valencia one mill mill, and boots clear at the top of the tide. mm . a major fire that engulf to ringo refugee canton
9:02 pm
bangladesh has been brought under control. so far, there were no reports of any casualties, but still thousands of people and cox's bazaar had been left without shelter. candied chattering reports now from dhaka. this is not the 1st time this ringo had been forced from their homes years ago. the flat oppression in me unmarked, ah no major fire at cox's bazaar refugee camp in bangladesh as again left thousands without roof over their heads. in this 3 comes with the while happened around 100000. if you use on the bang and 50 percent of them are children, eunice, if on the part in us we are on the ground and we are trying to meet that immediate and i can meet all of the children and their families. ah, firefighters and volunteers were able to get the blaze under control,
9:03 pm
but by then there had been extensive damage aid groups. i've been distributing water and basic necessities, but it's not clear whether those left without homes will find shelter. cox's bizarre is home to more than a 1000000 drawing or refugees. i camp this size with so many living and cramped condition makes fires like this. difficult to avoid doing the dry season. it is quite easy that something catches fire if, if there is a distraction. why? because the materials that we use in the camps are all temporary, meaning that the shelters are built of them to enter poland, which makes it quite easy that something catches fire. and the sped can be also quite fast. considering that is very congested. and every shelter is very tight with each other. ah, hundreds of thousands of ringo fled and military cracked down in myanmar that begun in 2017 years later. it still isn't safe for them to return. while the fire,
9:04 pm
the conditions in the refugee camps are dangerous. those are living here have nowhere else to go on with children. i'll just say the doctor ron's education minister says the government is investigating more apparent poisonings, female students and schools. more than 300 gallon victims of the attacks reported on sunday. hundreds of school girls have already been admitted to hospital over recent months, and people that protested against these unexplained incidents, demanding officers from the government. then it was p class and no one showed up when we went to the hole, we smell something like perfume. so i have very severe numbness in my body. i can't walk at all. the students all felt the same symptoms of me. they had cough, some of them said the eyes burned and most of them were scared. i apologize for what's happening and the parents got very mom we were reading to received the results of tests and we totally understand parents concert series to follow the issue. we have formed emergency committees in the education ministry
9:05 pm
ah, in our building has collapsed in the city of shania and southeastern, to kia. the structure was damaged during last month. earthquakes and had previously been evacuated. her correspondent, raise a bow reports now from the ground forth. ingenuous were here in the center of the city of san notify. this is solving eastern turkey where a fix we building has collapse right here in the center of the city. it had been previously damaged during the earthquakes that happened in february. and now it collapse. it's not clear yet why this building had been cleared. it had been cordoned, mostly because it was one of the building that was going to be demolished in the city around $2500.00 buildings were expecting to be demolished after the earthquake,
9:06 pm
and this one simply collapsed. the government has santini, search and rescue teams. we do know that one person was injured, but it's not clear yet whether people have been trucked underneath the rebels. so hopefully this area had been already been evacuated, but still, the government wants to make sure. and that's why search and rescue teams are here right now. there's hundreds of thousands of buildings that either collapsed or were severely damaged during the earthquakes, and that's why the government is moving forward, trying to demolish them, trying to clear the rival from the center of the city. they have been warning people to stay away from building such as this one because there's been lots of cases where people go inside to pick up some of their belongings. then there is an after shot or another earthquake. the buildings collapsed and people have been trapped inside and many have lost their lives. so there's lots of tension on the ground, lots of anguish because people here in a way reminds them of what happened of the earthquakes that happened one months ago,
9:07 pm
that if i will, i'll just feed. i shall hear her running battle between police and protest as a broken out in central athens, following a fatal train crash that left 57 people dead. demonstrators blame the government for the poor condition of the national rail system. hurry for central outrage of decreases worst of a train crash exploded into violence again on sunday some among the thousands protested in central athens through fire bombs and rocks. police whose tear gas the unrest is broken up around the country since a collision between 2 trains on tuesday, $57.00 people were killed. re workers have been staging, rotating strikes, angry, what they say is under investment and poor safety infrastructure. earlier, the protest is launched. hundreds of black balloons to commemorate the dead
9:08 pm
prosecutors of charged a station master for allowing the passenger train on to the same track as an oncoming freight train. but many in the country blaming under resourced aging rail network. some additional ah, they just stopped looking at the profits and thought looking at the lives of people are children. this must never happen again. we shouldn't be afraid to put our children on our country's metro and trains. but for the mental, despite the continuous warnings of the workers, there was criminal indifference by those responsible to our requests of the safety system. and that is what led to this tragic accident. the scale of this accident has horrified the country. on sunday, the prime minister apologized and said a long delayed remote signaling system would have made the disaster in practice impossible. about a few kilometers north along the track. people gathered to remember those killed 5 days on from this tragedy across the country. the grief and anger remain rule.
9:09 pm
hurry for sit al jazeera, whole thousands of supporters of june is, is opposition, coalition of defied a protest by man. we're back on the streets of the capital tunis and they broke through a police barrier and had been in the cities main street. they're demanding the release of political prisoners trade unionists and journalists present case i had your records dissolved parliament back in 2021. then elections in december boycotted by the opposition, who accused him of a power. graham was not the current situation as bed. why did the president say that everything is available, but in reality there is nothing i'm telling you that there is nothing available in the markets. i'm not lying, i'm not just talking about sugar or cooking oil, but i talk about everything we live in fear. when car side gives a speech, i'm afraid. do you know why he does not reassure us and his speeches frightening and he's divided us into 2 parts. first of all means new. see is a political analyst and he says,
9:10 pm
the protest movement against president guy's side is growing. the brute, those today by the national preservation front, was banned by the governor unit. and they define the illegal band because you don't need another addition. you 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 been to the process and the national position from managed to do it. anyway. yesterday the union union protest was the 1st because the, for the 1st time, new jeans will be the leader of the union delivered a strong message calling for the, the freedom of for political opponents. that have been that i've been arrested by, by justice in the, in the last the last few weeks. and he called for the return of the, of the democratic system engineers. so really, there is multiple forms of opponents to fire that are now for this thing. and
9:11 pm
this weekend they showed that they will be, they will be there. and no matter what the press or press refresher or no matter how, how, how side tries to tries to bend them from the street. the minute through frontier will obviously, has obviously said that this protest was illegal because the governor of bandit, though they will take action against the national provision front. that's the, that's the main issue here. political, the, the political space in geneva is no longer safe for any of those. it will have consequences on the people that the people that organize it. 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. while speaking of demonstrations,
9:12 pm
israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has one of the people that protesting against his government are crossing the line. thousands had been holding weekly demonstrations against his plans to reduce the power of the judiciary or quotesoft to salute the extreme and dangerous group. the most that is leading these eggs simply wants to burn the club down. it wants to bring close to the country. it wants to temple that democratic elections, of millions of citizens who voted just a few months ago. it was to overthrow the government and bring about a constitutional crisis with intention that this will lead to 60 elections. are still plenty more had this news hour, including the it is unacceptable. if you are l. beck, by processes and decisions that, that made far beyond your boards the, you and chief slammed the global financial system that benefits rich nations while leaving poor countries kind china sets one of the lowest growth targets and decades
9:13 pm
. but hikes military spending at the opening session of parliament and, and sport. another record for perry centureman, superstar striker football action coming up with mexico's president is now increasingly relying on the military to police the streets as violent crime. net is on the rise. but many fear that the involvement of the armed forces won't make things worse. manual rapid reports now from mexico city . so don't let you go over the past few years, mexico's president, and that is manuel. nope. is over at other, it has greatly expanded the role of the countries armed forces that occurs in my garage to look for them from building airports, hospitals and railways to securing borders. mexico's military has been handed control over dozens of public works that were previously managed by civilian agencies. no gun was never in the contemporary history of mexico has the military
9:14 pm
have access to dis, amounts of resources and civil functions. releford, also, most recently, mexico's armed forces were assigned to monitor air traffic and even given control of an airline, and now with violence enforced disappearances in the country at record highs, mexico's armed forces are taking a leading role in policing the countries while many criticize growing militarization in mexico, president loaf is over. that insists the armed forces are the only ones capable of curbing violence. it's the same attitude. mexican presidents have held since the start of the so called war on drugs in 2006. but human rights advocates see the piece of militarization under the current government has grown exponentially. looking at almost mitchell and we've been military state for a long time. and i think we're entering more diggers route, which is militarism. militarism is a next faith. he didn't realize that he's not always the issues that are being
9:15 pm
candid over to the military, but that they are being given political control allowed to be fundamental doors in the day to day government decisions. and the most dangerous thing is a political participation. they could eventually be given many security experts say that after a decade and a half of boosting military spending to curb violence in mexico, the effect has been the opposite. arguing that more military has instead lead to more abuse, citing deadly incidents like the recent killing of 5 unarmed civilians in level level at the hands of security forces. on february 26. it's an assertion that president lopez over board and family denies. i want to contract with a look to see the contrary to how things used to be. there are no human rights abuses, the police and military corporations do not torture all massacre, nor do they forcibly disappear. people, president love is over what is often criticized for having an autocratic st. his
9:16 pm
recent electoral reform, as seen by many as an attack on democratic institution. ality was but it's the president's affinity for the military. that's raising the most concerns over the future. democratic stability of the country. man with apple al, jazeera mexico city, ah and soldiers returning from the frontlines and east and ukraine needed treatment for their physical winds. the world health organization says doctors must prioritize their mental health to huddle him. you'd reports not from keith. no, 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 a hood. so it happened on ukraine's independence. spade. oh,
9:17 pm
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 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, 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
9:18 pm
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. 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 could be. i forget about my life. i forget, forgot to live. i am psychotherapy, the psychotherapist for a year and them i came back because i had this opportunity and. busy i was like, wow, what a what a mess. to distortion 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. yeah, no sir, cause like i think about it every day as
9:19 pm
a result. but after i saw what my relatives went through, i can't, i can't give them more pain. that sure it was harder for them than he was for me or not, and i will make my dreams come true. are you? i want to become world champion, mixed martial arts, and i am going for it. 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 on the visible and invisible injuries on its people. at abilene, i mean al jazeera keith, the world's 2nd biggest economy, china has set a modest growth target of around 5 percent. that is one of its lowest in years. katrina, you reports now from beijing. 2 2 2 2 a buoyant tradition of china's national anthem opened its annual parliamentary session in de jing, but outgoing premier lee could chunk the assessment of the country's economic
9:20 pm
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. he announced a more modest goal for growth in 2023. the main projected target for devotion this year are as follows, g, d, b growth of a wrong 5 person around 12000000, new urban jobs survey, urban unemployment rate of a wrong 5.5 person boosting income and consumer spending, our major priorities. there will also be a 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, the, some embargoes by the united states. and they're, they're also very,
9:21 pm
very keen on reducing costs across the board. they want a chinese manufacturing to be lean mean at the lower end of the spectrum. i 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. want a self ruled island claimed by they ging, she didn't things as peaceful the unification is preferred, although he has not ruled out the use of force. baiting is also troubled by the continuing war. ukraine engines on the korean peninsula and the re arming of japan, although it denies targeting any 3rd party or junior should agenda. china's military modernization does not pose a threat to any country far, but rather is a positive force from attaining regional stability and woke up. and yet this is lee could chung's loss, recitation of the annual communist party were report as premier
9:22 pm
a role he held for 10 years premier. the coach knows that his reform minded approach to managing china's economy. he will be replaced by new chunk loyal supporter, even pain with limited international experience. analysts say this will likely be to step back in the liberalization of the economy and more power being concentrated in the top rank of the communist party. katrina, you al jazeera, they can now united nations conference on the world's least developed countries is happening here and how it takes place once every 10 years. there are currently $46.00 l diseases, then known most of them are all africa and they're defined as having an average national income of around a $1000.00 per pass. them debt is a huge problem and they are also more vulnerable to climate change and diseases such as covered 19. the list of such countries is reviewed every 3 years by the un . only 6 though have progressed above l. d. c. spaces in the last 30 years. this
9:23 pm
meeting and how will focus on 6 areas, including how's eradicate poverty and hans trade and tackle climate change. least developed countries are being stranded, meets the rising, sty, the crises, and certainty, climate scales and deep global injustice. they are unable to keep pace with lightning speed. technological change systems are steps from elson, dedication to social protection, infrastructure, and job creation. an employment is rising, especially among young people and women are being pushed to the sidelines that matter. miss williamson, alameda thomas delica rewards. there is a common global responsibility to confront the challenges of food security, climate change, the energy crisis, and the dead chrisy job finding solutions is a collective and important responsibility among all countries. there is
9:24 pm
a moral obligation encumbered upon the rich and developed countries to contribute more to assist the least developed countries would get up to overcome the global challenges that we are now dealing with. this is a responsibility, a not a favor, either one on yemen as one of the want at least developed nations. millions of people there face poverty, famine and malnutrition. and after 8 years of civil war, the u. n says most are in desperate need of aid. marvels report has some distressing images. said were 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 on them. anna, like hundreds of other humans, silva and her family live in a high dish cap. it's located in the hud,
9:25 pm
the government rates in northern yemen, and shelters. those have been forced from their homes by conflict. but life here is tough. families are crowded inside these tiny shelters made of sticks and storm. water 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 to get? 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 don't we 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 night. this woman says it is difficult to give children. he has a lead. i'm again been in elementary school, we are poor,
9:26 pm
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 a more to containers, 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, a usa newman, she didn't populate. 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 over, that's tragic was a camps like this one us spread across yemen. 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 bite? you're on march from the north and to the capitol center. the elected government
9:27 pm
was forced into exile and an alliance of our panties launched and air bombardments campaign. theresa told the house to the government, but the conflict has stopped. it caused the death of hundreds of thousands of siblings and foster 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 level, and 400000 of them are suffering from severe malnutrition, homicide, and disney. oh, richard rogan is again the representative for the un to out feed program. he says it's vital that has organizations where continues that any the world food program has been in yemen for, you know, over 4 decades. but it's grown into sort of the largest humanitarian response that the world food program has ever mounted over the last 8 years since the
9:28 pm
conflict started. so today we're feeding 20000000 out of 31000000 people in the country for 13 and a half 1000000 of that is sort of life saving assistance. and in 6 and a half 1000000 with school feeding resilience work and nutrition interventions. so year in year out, the largest program that we've had over the last 8 years. the great thing about having this sort of conference on least developed countries is that it gives us an opportunity to talk about these issues and hopefully frank and honest way that's important than yemen is a, is a very particular case. i mean, we were on the brink of famine in yemen, you know, throughout this conflict last year, when we started off the year there were a 161000 people who were in the phase, the apc phase 5 level of sort of the famine categories so people who are about to die potentially of famine. so at the end of 2022 that went down to 0. so, you know, that's, that's big progress in terms of beating back famine. now the question is,
9:29 pm
you know, how do you move to the next phase, which is developed? how do you get out of the humanitarian emergency life phasing phase and begin to transition to sort of building livelihoods, building resilience. and i think that's where we are in yemen. today i'll still ahead here on out as there we go on the hunt for does the delicacy in a rog and explore its importance to traditions on the local economy and thought to an english triple as big as rivals needs and the premier league. and he will be here with the action laughter. ah hello, we've got some unsettled weather in the forecast, a part of the middle east, northern parts of the region. we'll see bands of cloud, andrade,
9:30 pm
little bit of snow to just around the mountains towards the black seat was says, we will see one or 2 shower into northern parts of saudi arabia. quite a keen wind here. 32 celsius in q weights are very much on the a warm side. warm enough here in dow as well, getting up to 33 on tuesday route 5 degrees above the average. the warmth is e's now for a cairo, for monday temperatures around $24.00 celsius, wrote 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. them fright freddie is back in town. it has reformed in the mozambique channel. this storm was 1st. i went to identify a route about a month ago. so this, it really has been long lived. it been swirling away. it made its way to mozambique, flipped his way into as in bow based now slid back and it's now started to face some very heavy rain. back into that southwestern corner of madagascar,
9:31 pm
there will be further flooding here. plenty of fir war, moist air in the system here. driving that rain further north. ah, the, from the al jazeera london broadcast and test to people in full for conversation. we were 1st generation of black people and we had to really find our way with no hope and no limitation. the world is a much smaller place. we do better to get away with these regional boundaries, film direct. thank you. in the me, singer songwriter in you think about racism making certainly have is making us invisible here. be unscripted on out today or at the latest news as it breaks. joe biden, arriving here, bled, getting more weapons, more defense finance with detailed coverage, more than a decade of civil war,
9:32 pm
has killed or displeased many serious millions of buffalo patricky are looking for safety from around the world, limiting their powers to require amendment to the constitution. i'm the electron look what would increase the number of governments just to have to wait longer. hold on, lou. ah, hello. they are watching al jazeera. i'm this talk to you, hey here, and let's remind you about top stories. a major fire that engulfed a rethink, a refugee camp from bangladesh, has been brought under control. no immediate casualties were reported in the battle of calia camp in caucasus. bazaar around education minister says the government is investigating more apparent poisonings of female students and schools. there. more
9:33 pm
than 300 girls were victims of new suspected attacks reported on sunday. thousands of supporters of chinese opposition coalition have defied the protest band and have been back on the streets of the capital tunis. they're demanding the release of political prisoners trade unionists and journalists. while after 15 years of talks, the u. n. has agreed a historic treaty to protect the wilds high seas. the waters are currently beyond the control of nations and not subject to any laws. victoria gate and be reports. lead you said gentlemen, the ship has reached the shore celebrations at the un. after 50 years of negotiations with ambassador, the ocean denounces a do. you in 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
9:34 pm
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, a 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 had a really big win. only one percent of the world 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 that. well, it provides an opportunity for us to better manage and, and regulated environments, how collectivity in the newly ha, ha ha, that falls beyond national jurisdiction,
9:35 pm
the high seas. this has implications for all of us all around the treaty will now be studied by louis and translated into the un 6 official languages before being formally adopted. victoria gay to be al jazeera when it's not bring in. will mccallum from london? he's the co executive director of greenpeace. u. k. well, i know you're celebrating this after more than what a decade of talks. this is obviously a sense, live, very complex issue. but let me start by asking what took so long? well, lots of things took so long one. the 1st thing is getting a 193 countries to agree on anything is always going to take quite a long time. but the pandemic got in the way these talks were due to conclude in march 2020. and so for the last 3 years, i think some of us have felt like we've been treading water. and that's why last night was so exciting because it allows us to put this process behind this and
9:36 pm
start looking at the future, what governments now need to do, what the government can now do that this treaty allows them to do is to put large areas of the ocean off limits to human activity to actually start putting ocean health on the top of their priority. less will, i understand there was some disagreement about how to deal in particular with marine genetic resources and how they would be shared between rich and poor countries. can you talk us through that and if that dynamic which we've seen and so many other climate talks, if that's still a problem. well, we haven't seen the final test until it gets translated, but we do know that that huge round of applause that we had the end to us signal away through had been found that what we will hopefully see is that the marine genetic resources. so that's, say the genetic sequence of a deep sea sponge on the sea bed that could become the next aspirin, if used right, by a pharmaceutical company. that the benefits of anything that is found in this vast area which belongs to all of us. the high seas will be shed equitably between
9:37 pm
countries. that's what we were asked for. that's what countries from across the global south or asking for. and that's what we believe that they've, they've won. and that's huge. will say this is also a treaty, right? so it's then legally binding, but it's still yet to enter into force. and even if or when it does, how do you even begin to and for something like this? well, the treaty provides the mechanism for countries to come together on a regular basis and actually hold each other accountable. so there will be a conference of the parties, a comp, like the climate will be a high seas comp. countries will come together and they'll be able to discuss issues such as enforcement for something like a marine protected area. the proposal for that area will have its own monitoring and enforcement plan attached to it. so there are lots of different bits that will need to be enforced and it will still require political will to be in force. but we've seen a huge move from across, well, more than 5000000 people calling on governments to bring this treat in force. and
9:38 pm
we hope that that movement not move us to the next phase. calling i'm going to enforce this treating on this i understand, lays the framework for that big pledge that we had to protect 30 percent of the world's oceans by 2030. now, without being a down or, or, or taking away from the multilateralism that we've seen here. what about the of the 70 percent? the other 70 percent has to be properly minor. so we have to see a fishing limit set in line with scientific advice. we hope this july to see countries at sea say we don't want deep sea mining to take place out there on the high seas, and we have to see organizations like the or intentional maritime organization really take its environmental responsibilities much more seriously. so the remaining 70 percent is by no means problem solved, but that 30 percent so protecting at least 30 percent of the ocean is what fine to say is needed to really restore bio diversity on in the ocean to really keep the oceans healthy for future generations. and the decision last night is going to help
9:39 pm
make that possible, but well, one of the biggest threats that scientists also say that really create systems faces, ocean warming rise, and we're already seeing the outcomes of marine heat waves over the last few years . that surely requires climate change to be addressed more broadly. well beyond the scope of this deal. absolutely. we need drastic action on climate very, very quick. so we need to have our emissions by 2030 to really probably tackle climate change. what this treaty does by helping protect areas is help make the ocean more resilient to the impacts of climate change. so a marine protected area will lead to more fish will lead to bigger fish, to fat, to fish who then reproduce more, swim outside the boundaries, and ultimately lead to more life in the ocean, which helps all of us, all the communities across the world who depend on the ocean, for their livelihood, for their food, be far more resilient to the impacts of climate change. but you're right, we need action back on lands for climate change as well. well, mccallum, they're the co executive director of greenpeace. u k. thanks so much for joining us
9:40 pm
out there. well, well, let you get back to they celebrate. thank you very much. ho. meanwhile, thousands of fishermen have been told to stay on land as philippine coast guards race to contain an oil spill there. the slit comes from a tanka that sank while carrying fuel and has already reached several coastal towns bottom below reports. now the bell arrows in her family have hardly been able to sleep for nearly a week. i live in the coast of paula in one of several towns where oil from a sucking tinker has washed ashore. muscles look how come he sat on the smell makes us want to vomit. our heads hurt and we've also been coughing. it's been especially hard and my 15 year old child on tuesday, a ship carrying 800000 leaders of unrefined oil, suffered the engine trouble and sunk off. mean doro, in the central philippines, the spill has reached a neighboring island and could drift even farther. if it isn't contained the waters
9:41 pm
around here, as i'm the most was seen 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, 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 in that belong. 1 am in cellar. we don't know how he will 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 5 mcglenn is woke. i may, after we clean up, they'll come again. especially when the waves are high. we clean non stop. they come non stop. the government has promised to provide aid. but those who are being
9:42 pm
affected say, 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 possible. barnes, below al jazeera or in dublin, doro, the philippines. well in denisia is building a new capital city to replace to carter. the government says the city will create more opportunities, but indigenous community saving forced off their land. jessica washington reports from east clermont then. the public people have lived in to pocket east cali mountain for hundreds of years, but life is changing here as indonesia build its new capital city, new centera, and this village is now marked as part of the development. i think i don't have any a but goal with all that younger, they act like we don't exist. like we're not human. they should have talked to us 1st before we accept the new capital. but don't dismiss our rights. they want to build something new by destroying what is already here. bombardment, they had only until done certain i lived in
9:43 pm
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 builds an intake reservoir for a dam to serve the new capital. no law. this is the impact of the development behind me. but we never had to buy things like ward or water or vegetables before, but now we live miserable lives advocacy groups estimate around 20000 indigenous people will be affected. officials say 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 their claims verified. indigenous people told us their land was passed down from their ancestors until recently, they'd never had to prove ownership. the prostate chief insist their needs are being considered. i certainly have to respect, hold the indigenous people, the local wisdom, the weird darrow living working, also learning that you'll be part of our development process. that is why we are
9:44 pm
have some inclusive forum, for example, to anchor of a lot of dialogue with all the stakeholders in this area so that there will be part of our different path in the future. the government is emphasizing initiatives like workshops, teaching digital skills and modern farming techniques. 3 similar whitey and her neighbors who migrated to east cali mountain in the seventy's. say the project is making life in the pocket better than i like about 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 off up on the. but indigenous community leaders he booked in, says life was easier before the new capital location was announced. guardian baggy through riot, been 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 than your capital is haunting us and haunting the future. much as authorities scale up
9:45 pm
construction in coming weeks. this community is increasingly losing hope. jessica washington, out to sera in east cali mountain on the island of borneo and iraq part deserts rain bring something rare and delicious. does that travels and their server thing and some of the most remote areas are correspond on what went up the why had went on a travel hunt there in some our it's 7 a. m, he'll in iraq, his southern city of his mauer time for rashid and his friends as cow at the vast desert looking for something green and delicious trough hills. the marches sought after delicacy is a fungal plant that usually grows under ground during the rainy season. but i wanna get it done, it usually grows $5.00 to $15.00 centimeters beneath the surface. we trace it by indicators such as the telltale grace and cracks on the soil. it's fun for us
9:46 pm
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 scene alley and his family set up their tent around grassy fields for months. besides taking care of their sheep and camels, they also make a living by selling the desert. truffles, who are neither washington, idaho, on them. we have inherited the love of tracking and collecting truffle from our ancestors. 3 years, we spend 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,
9:47 pm
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 truffle. in this, it is grocery market. traders take pride in their produce. iraq produces to main types of truffle, a light, one, and darker one. each piece of these can weigh between 30 and 200 grams and wind 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 are all my some restaurants in smart serve it
9:48 pm
as it meets of institute. desert truffles are high in plant protein, similar to tofal and are a favourite with begins and vegetarians, but they need to be washed to properly deserved to truffles. have no roots. so if they're not collected on time, they'll be food for insects. but for those who rely on these real delicacies, they provide a much needed income, even if it means having to spend long days in the iraqi desert bowed up dwight elder 0 in smaller, southern iraq. while still ahead here announces era and sport ferrari have a frustrating, i've been raised as the new for me to one season gets under way and it will be here with that story worker goes a
9:49 pm
we are all bristles, even people far away are so helping with the environment problems in the amazon because they are consumers. i teach kids about what our options are facing today. i've been working in earnest, trying to find ways to get this language to get what do we do as to why and what are you going to do to keep out of the sort of language that keeps the red blood women. right. say that they have one, several back over in their fight, cory, why they've gotten america. and those pulled up things that were texting women. we made the challenge in the region. i will not being thrown like i want to sleep. we don't have read them in study. these are about 2 weeks now. i say 3 day journey to a show club. you wish them your grade. someone destroys our country. someone needs to rebuild.
9:50 pm
lou ah, how that will bikini foster is capital o r g? a degree has held that the closing ceremony of the prestigious pan african film and television festival as africa is movie industry is going to a revival. nicholas hot takes a look at 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
9:51 pm
a series of emulation. the film is this year's winner of the main prize of the pan african film and television festival held in breaking of foxes capital walk. a duke of the jury recognized a powerful films that offered a settled critique of chinese. his 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 neo colonialism and its denial, this film director is the window of the response has been prize. he says the festival is a chance to put on the big screen, the head in realities of african society through fiction. day dream is 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,
9:52 pm
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. i put in this film inspired me to death, things i wouldn't do. it gave me the courage to fight for what i really wanted to put the last 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. well, it is now times a sport,
9:53 pm
an andy. what an extraordinary result. lots and lots of goals come in everyone's way. hey, manchester united outside hopes of winning the english premier league title a look to be over erickson hucks team. suffering a humiliating defeat against liverpool, united, beaten 7 nil around the fail, the result of liverpool. we hope you can take some best seasons. such food cutting for the school in the opener is stripe pawn at the nunez double behind the scenes advantage early in the 2nd half as united with this crumbled 100 solid setting up get close to his 2nd and 3rd fell himself, making it for a little full and the weights, the biggest ever, when are the, you know, i gotta change every time we knew that was nunez, heading home, number 5, follow the 2nd goal. coming up here, made him liverpool highest goes school in the family era. and her best to mean
9:54 pm
a complete united environment is it's finish the mil liverpool, it's facing the table back in series contention for finishing consultation next year's insurance and both 100. so it's amerigroup on the spanish title, right? they beat valencia. we'll need to move 10 points clear that. so they're presenting for rafino school. the only goal of this game is had a coming in 60 minutes, and he was talking points to come there. and sorry, i missed the penalty football. so in the 2nd hope it was more than half and i was still to fight. both the defender round around was sent off, but it seemed held on the when 2nd in the table around which we could close the gap later this sunday, they play around by pace had another landmark in his p. s. g career. he's just become the clubs, record goal score a little messy. open the scoring in natalie game against know, with p. s g,
9:55 pm
establishing and early to new lead. the non got himself back in the game, striking twice to go in level. a thought goes from dynamic herrera and coming up an injury times trying to remember that failed. the wind for the league lead is for the final school. it was a $200.00 and 1st goal school. yes, you know, i'm extra step is when the opening race is the follow. one sees in the raining world champion, leading from the starting bar. right. not such good news to his for your arrival. sharla. claire, who had retired from the rifle engine, trouble, stop, and never serious. he challenged at the front and his rebel. see my soldier person, the 2nd he's on will champions finance? so he impressed in his 1st price after launching the 41 year old. on the 3rd with california from there we go about just picking out for the highest because you never really know what's going to happen later on in the race. so we just wanted to make sure that we had the right tires and a good condition as well. so yeah, i was very happy to to find it. so when here are 23 races during the,
9:56 pm
during the year, this will be the longest season, an f one history we've been talking to f one, right. to flip duncan about the contest. the come is 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, counselor again last year because it's a cobit restrictions in china, which i have since i'm changed, but it says, yep, $23.00 races will have a race in las vegas which be the pronouncement round of the season, which i think everyone in the sport looking for it. and hopefully that will still be going on by then the 5. so every on, on the left mega strip, that would be a fantastic thing for formal one. i mean, absolute super and then also race backing capsule this year wasn't last year. it looks due on the season before. so yeah, there's a different kind of that this year starting over here in bahrain,
9:57 pm
and then on to saudi arabia next week, say 23 races in the monks cramming and i'm in, but it should be any phase. and hopefully, i'll sterling tennis for alex demon has won the biggest title of his career so far . the mental recovery from being set down against americans told me pulled when the mexican open. the victories moved back and saw the work of 20. and i had one of the biggest events of indian wells starting on wednesday like everything. and like i said, i just want to keep pushing, keep getting the most out on my cell phone. no, no play on the label tennis every day, but till the end of the a whole lot of hot in this little body of mine and i enjoy competing very happy with it. and south trees. jin young car was retained her lpga women's world championship cycle before world number one, closing the final day with
9:58 pm
a during the power on 69 to win by a couple of shots and singapore. the 27 year old becoming the 1st player to successfully defend this type. okay. based on your sports is looking for. thanks so much sandy. well, that's it for me and associates, hey, here, and doha, had you f as in mary, i am in london. love much more news for you shortly. ah, mm. gone with blue ah, green al jazeera. when ever you
9:59 pm
talk to al jazeera, we ask, but should they not be more oversize perhaps, of foundations like yours? we listen when it comes to diversification. we don't do it in order to be gets rid of the rational energy sources. we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the store restock matter on al jazeera this was the wrong to teach children away from their parents and heard them into a school against their will. there was no mother, no father figures. they put it in a big playroom and we certainly looked after ourselves. i don't remember the children's names, but i'll never forget that christ. canada's dark secret on ouch is era. sears for miles? is it on the go and me tonight out is there is only a mobile app,
10:00 pm
is that this is where we dissect online to find it out is there is a mobile app available in your favorite app. still just set for it and tapped out a new app from al jazeera new at you think it it with . ready a huge 5 has through a cam forehand refugees in bangladesh, making that thousands of people homeless again. ah hello, i'm sorry. i'm to my z and london.
13 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=430549808)