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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 6, 2023 3:00am-3:31am AST

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a behavior we can monitor them and report their vocal photos and behavior. we're able to how they're adapting for their new environment when they make science dolphins sanctuary on al jazeera. but it hasn't been done before. can be done even better, as long as a human being is doing it. you can do it, no matter how you possibly it looks. it's you to put in the effort to put in the lock and you also have to be patient with me. i am the captain, then me a so continued kenya and then more so with the assistance which we the on the ice hockey team in east, in central africa. we as the ice francois progressing pretty well, he had managed to play in some international games. then when koby kimmy, the extreme was closed. and it's the only i think in the country. ah,
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a major fire destroys thousands of shelters in a row and get a refugee camp in bangladesh. ah, i'm carry johnston, you're watching elders. they're also coming up to, ron says it's investigating more apparent poisoning of female students in schools around the country. outrage on the streets of athens protested in greece, demand accountability for trade, collision that left 57 people dead. plus the party of the stadium pro ukraine, prime minister takes 1st place in elections. ah, a major fire has engulfed the ring gear refugee camp in bangladesh and estimated 12000 people have been left without shelter. the cause is not yet clear,
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no casualties have been reported with a blaze broke out in the battle cali camp in cox's bazaar in the southeast of the country and their child re reports from de camp. this is not the 1st time this growing. i have been forced from their homes years ago, the fled oppression in me, unmarked. ah no. a major fire at cox's bazaar, a refugee camp in bangladesh has again left thousands without roof over their heads . in these 3 comes with your while hopping around 100000. if you use on leaving and 50 percent of them are children unicef on the port and as we are on the ground . and we are trying to meet that immediate and ad janitta of those dramatize children and the andes, firefighters and volunteers were able to get the blaze under control. but by then there had been extensive damage. aid groups have been distributing water and basic
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necessities, but it's not clear whether those left without homes will find shelter. cox's bizarre is home to more than a 1000000 ra hang, or refugees. i camp this size with so many living and cramped condition makes fires like this. difficult to avoid. yeah, now i have to buy something. i have 7 children. when the fire broke out, i couldn't find all of them on. i went to search for the others but couldn't find them all when i, when i returned home, i had all my belongings were burnt, but i have nothing left. my alert on via i had taken my mother to see the doctor. when it came back, the thing was in fire. we couldn't save any of our belongings. ah, hundreds of thousands of ro hang off, let a military crack down in me and mark that began in 2017 years later. it still isn't safe for them to return. while the fire conforms conditions in the refugee camps are dangerous. those are living here,
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have nowhere else to go from rich audrey. i'll just sit out talk josh, but gina to the ports. here is the you and hcr communications officer. in cox's bazaar, she explains what the organization has done to control fires in ringo camps. we've taken several of them. the 1st thing is that we've trained thousands of bringing refugees to respond to fires and this is a lot of training that has gone into and today we saw them in action. we saw safety . do any volunteers from across the camp? go to camp 11, where the fire started and respond to the fire and because they were there, there managed to evacuate the people we've managed to evacuate health facilities. they managed to considering the fire with the support then of the local fire brigade that then came in to support them, but they were the 1st on the ground. and another thing we did recently, we created 3 wheeler fire fighting vehicles. and this is super important,
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like little the hope that allow us to reach the difficult congested area. and this has been provided by you and hcr with our partner and 16 of the vehicle were able to deploy quickly to the camp to mitigate the fire. we're talking about one 3rd of this particular population who lost their homes and they again, all their belongings. everything in the fires. so it's an additional trauma. what we're doing right now is we've deployed 90 community health workers. these are also refugees who have been trained to provide 1st aid, but also for psycho social support aids. and if somebody needs for or they're then referred to by psychologist and different types of services to deal with this mental trauma. that means again, everything they own around education minister has apologized wondering, a waiver suspected poisonings in schools targeting female students. he says neary says the government is investigating the cases
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a 2nd wave of gas attacks in schools. that's more than 300 girls hospitalized on saturday. hundreds more have been admitted to hospital since november. people have been protesting over the unexplained incidents as in care. thus i apologize for what's happening and their parents got worried mom, what we were waiting to receive the results of tests, the one that is a totally understand parents concern on you. and we seriously follow the issue. we have formed emergency committees through it in the education ministry with arms right. when. meanwhile, students recovering in the hospital describe what happened. then garage really was p e class, but no one showed up when we went to the whole. we smelled something like perfume. melissa, my stomach burned and i was blacking out. i taught the students all felt the same symptoms as me. they had coffee. some of them said their eyes burned and most of them were scared, sat and has, ah, m. a building has collapsed in the city of shania for in the south eastern
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turkey. the structure was damaged during last month's earthquakes and had been evacuated rescue teams having working at the scene. teresa bow reports from jennifer were here in the center of the city of saint louis. this is a southern eastern turkey where a 63 buildings have collapse right here in the center of the city. it had been previously damaged during the earthquakes that happened in february. and now it collapsed. 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. and this one simply collapsed. the government has sent in search and rescue teams. we do know that one person was injured, but it's not clear yet whether people have been trapped underneath the rebels to
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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, doing 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 and 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 to remind them of what happened of the earthquakes that happened one months ago. that is how your feet are facts. here. there's been fighting between police and protested and central athens following a fatal train crash that left 57 people dead,
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demonstrated by the government for the poor condition of the national rail system. hurry, faucet reports outrage after greece's worst of a train crash exploded into violence again on sunday sun among the 1000 protested in central athens through fire bombs and rocks. police use tear gas. the unrest is broken out around the country since a collision between 2 trains. on tuesday, 57 people were killed. rail work as have been staging, rotating strikes, angry at what they say is under investment and poor safety infrastructure. earlier, the protest is launched. hundreds of black balloons to commemorate the dead. prosecutors have charged a station master for allowing the passenger train on the same track as an oncoming freight train that many in the country blaming under resourced aging rail network. some additional ah,
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they just stopped looking at the profits and start 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 business men, 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. hurry for sit al jazeera. the reform party of estonia is prime minister. color has secured 1st place the parliamentary elections with 32 percent of the vote. class is a strong supporter of ukraine and walnut stony. it needs to bolster its own
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security against russia. far right of position, the conservative people's party got 16 percent. it wants to limit stone as well in the conflict we have to. a do a major record is regarding a green physician for example, but we also have to invest in our security. our aggressive neighbor has not vanished and will not vanish. so we have to work with that. ah, soldiers returning from the front lines in easton, ukraine continue to need treatment for their physical wounds. but the world health organization says doctors must prioritize them mental health as well. or to outdoor hamid reports from keith. no, it's a daily struggle. giving his every effort to get back on his feet. oh, it's been 8 months since alexander sustained us cervical spine injury in an air
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strike in the southern region of a hood. so it happened on ukraine's independence bay. 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 shrapnel flew into my back. it is hard. when i came here i could only move my toes to do that. i needed to push myself so hard core. yeah. now i'm trying to walk with crutches with 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, keep therapist say, demand for prosthetics is very high. creating
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a mold is the 1st step into making a prosthetics, and then the patient will have to go through rehabilitation. but psychologists 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. you know, and i was so surprised how easy it couldn't be. i forget about my life. i forget, 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 should associated roman colace 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 is glad that he survived. he is now fighting the urge to return to the combat
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zone yellow, but of course, like i think about it every day. it's a little but after i saw what my relatives went through, i can't, i can't give them more pain. that sure he was harder for them than he was for me. when i change, i will make my dreams come true to you. i want to become world champion and mixed martial arts, and i am going 40 thunder. 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 visible and invisible injuries. on its people, adapted hamid al jazeera keith into his ear. thousands of opposition supports as have defied unofficial protest bad after some of their leaders were arrested with demonstrators broke through a police barrier in the capital tunis. let him on and at present k site steps down,
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protest to say the president has reduced their freedoms and caused widespread economic problems. why not? yeah, i, i know you, our current situation is bad. why does the president say that everything is available? but in reality, there's nothing i'm telling you there is nothing available in the markets, not just sugar or cooking oil, but everything. we live in fear. when chi psi gives a speech, i'm afraid, do you know why he does not reassure us? and his speeches are frightening, and he divides us a lot of homelessness and we haven't experienced this kind of situation before as i lived through the period of bookkeeper and been a li doctor. this situation is unprecedented in terms of freedom's cider. and he see is a former member of to, this is parliament. she believes the protest movement in the country is growing. what we can say is new in intern is in terms of opposition to the president is actually the popularity of the movements today is the 2nd day of demonstration i
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yesterday was also a very, very big and an intense day of protesting. you know that they will be iris, you know, that the demonstration today is actually been at bands and beaten by the governor authorities in chinese. you are calling for economy. we are calling for a social we forms are calling for inflation to be controlled by the state. they are also very concrete. i would say demands coming from the streets today still to come on al jazeera u. s. president joins, rights activists in alabama tomorrow. the $58.00 anniversary of bloody sunday on fishermen in the philippines describe how an oil spill is damaging their livelihoods. ah.
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in the blink of an eye, many lives when lost thousands of people buried alive and more left homeless. were shocked by the number of sites we were shocked by the number of pick them. al jazeera goes to the most afflicted region in syria. here in northwest syria to see those affected by the way, amid severe shortages of humanitarian aid, the full report syria, the continuing tragedy on al jazeera march on a just you get a station and its aftermath. we have more on our continuing coverage of the earthquakes disaster in turkey and syria. rigorous debate unflinching questions up front smoking the montero cuts through the headlines to challenge conventional wisdom 20 years on from the start of the iraq war. we examined how the past 2 decades have shaped the country and the major challenges confronting future generations documentary that inspire witness brings world issues into focus through
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compelling human story. i made widespread industrial action and the cost of living crisis. the u. k. government seeks a way to turn around it's faltering economy march on a jazeera lou . ah, for hello you watching else is here. amanda of a top store is now a major fire, has engulfed to ro hangin refugee captain bangladesh broke out in the bun county camp in cox's bazaar in the south east of the country and estimated 12000 people have been left without shelter. ron's education minister has apologized following a wave of suspected poisonings, and schools targeting female students re says the government is investigating the
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cases. second wave of gas attacks in schools resulted more than 300 girls hospitalized on saturday. thousands of opposition supporters of defy the protest. paddington is it up to some of the leaders were rested, demonstrated in the capital to sunday morning. i think i cite steps down. he was present, joe biden is in selma, alabama to mount the 58 anniversary. the state troopers attack on civil rights protest is in the city. he walked across the edmond patches bridge wit marches were attacked with clubs and tear gas in $900.00. $65.00 biden's trip is aimed at on the scoring his commitment to black voters is also campaigning. for voting rights legislation and the store in the republican controlled congress. i come here, come admiration. not for show. show me a is a reckoning the right to vote. right to vote to have your bo county is the
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threshold of democracy, liberty. why that anything's possible. without it, without that right, nothing is possible. and this fundamental right remains under assault. conservative supreme court has got at the voting rights act over the years since the 2020 election, a wave of state. and doesn't, doesn't have an i voting hawes fuel by the big law and the electric deniers now elected to office when she returns she has more from washington d. c. on the present by the speech when he was a candid up biden during the primary is actually for the democratic primaries in 2020, he gave a speech on this day in summer, alabama, pledging to pass that legislation, which he failed to do. even though the democrats control congress and this wasn't just a matter of not getting the republican vote for, sorry,
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he didn't get the democratic but nathan and his own party to become a filibuster, potentially. so was he does the norm say that even those civil rights leaders like the reverend al sharpton, who very much in the tank with bite and express their disappointment, the biden didn't do enough to push that legislation through about shopped and saying he's disappointed in bite because of that, you can bet there's a lot of disappointment, let alone the why to the why the civil rights community and so on. having said that, their generation of african american lady still thought to be in with, with biden, whereby it has more of a problem days with a younger generation of civil rights leaders and activists. one exactly thrilled by a range of vitamins policies on poverty and other things. but specifically, how biden's pivoted from the black lives matter movement. dude, which was talking about fundamental reforms in the way black communities now or communities are policed by, has gone tough on crime again. and so let's talk about refunding the police planning ever more money on a, on a, on a police force and institution which is widely seen and systemically races the
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philippines, thousands of fishermen have been told to stay on land as coast guards, race to contain a huge oil spill when a slick from a tanker with which several coastal towns for the island of oriental monroe particular 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 min 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, as um, the most was seen in the philippines. a number of areas are marine protected,
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which means even missing is it allowed. but at the moment, as you can see, water along this course is black. 53 year old manuel as a 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 well, what i mean? so if we don't know how we would be able to make and smith, and especially because we have children who got a scam or 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. bad 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 affected say, was they appreciate any help that could tie them over what they really want is to
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have their way of life back as soon as possible. barnes below al jazeera oriental min, dora the philippines. after 15 years of talks, united nations, as finally agreed on historic treaty to protect the world's high seas, the waters are currently beyond the control of nations and not subject any laws that oregon 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,
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really hard work. i very dedicated individuals over an unprecedented session is by no 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 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 j politics. this is an enormously important outcome follow up with. well, it provides an opportunity for us to better manage and, and regulate environmentally how collectivity in the, for nearly our planet that falls, the, our national jurisdiction and 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
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official languages before being formally adopted, victoria gay to be al jazeera, the pan african film, and t v festival has been celebrate in the continents movie industry. burkina faso, capital walker, due to a cinema across africa, going through a revival because hawk looks at the winners of the golden started the ash cow is a dark tunisian thriller. it follows 2 police officers when from the old regime 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 frances 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
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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 burkina faso or a musical from cameroon. looking at neo colonialism and its denial. this film director is the winner of the response, had been prize. he says the festival is a chance to put on the big screen, the head in realities of african society through fiction. dream is to do that film that goes beyond culture or be beyond your own cultural on facebook, having given us an opportunity to showcase its 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
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is for african films to be distributed into what is a promising industry. it's predicted to bring a $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'm happy to do this. if this film inspired me to death things i wouldn't do. it gave me the courage to fight for what i really want. but 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, that's it for me. carrie johnston for now. the news will continue here on out to say are off the inside story. i'll remind you can keep up to date with all the news and features on our website. i'm just here a dot com these type of ah
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ah, hello, it remains very warm across good, passive china. the korean peninsula walks now pushed, gets way into japan as well. i pressure in char, so it is settled and sunny embry spring like as we go through the next couple of days. and so 16 celsius in solar. 19. therefore basing id 13 in tokyo. hang on in there. the rank lays out of the way and we'll get temperatures up to around 18 degrees tuesday. so 64 in fahrenheit, warm, dry sunshine continuing across. so central and southern parts of china, which was west, you may well see a little bit of wet weather creeping through here for the south is a lot of wet weather and that continues to pilots. weights was southern parts of the korean peninsula column put down to war. singapore solomon's, overreaching his. still seeing fir, the heavy rain. this is where we have seen a flooding recently,
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and that ne monsoon continues to drive those big down poles in across a similar richer region as we go through the next few days. just wanted to shout to into west will anchor, but nothing too much further nor much of in there will be dry. the heat continues up towards the northwest karachi, temperatures around $37.00 celsius, just noticed one or 2 shouts creeping through here over the next few days. and watch out for those thundering showers for northern india with a journey of discovery, and one now manian mans exploration of his religious heritage. how has the back touching faith survived for 700 years despite a volatile history of oppression? alger 0 world tells the story of a religion that has over 7000000 followers.

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