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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 6, 2023 10:00am-10:30am AST

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thought around about a months ago. so this it really has been long lived. it been swirling away and made its way to mozambique, flipped his way into as empower based now slid back. and it's now started to face 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. ah. counting the coffee you benz petrol power caused by 2035? is this the end of combustion engine? vehicles aligned profit flying high because the industry keep up with a search and demand plus 2 dawns forgotten crisis. will anyone come to doff was a counter the cost on al jazeera ah
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a month on then the devastation from too powerful earthquakes and turkey in serious deliverance with more than $50000.00 dead. and one and a half 1000000 displays keeping memories alive. the tough task of recovering valuables from the rub. facilities of roads damage. we look at the challenges of getting a a to syrians who need it most. ah, 11 o'clock, this is out 0. live from to her. also coming up, a fire rips through a ringo. refugee camp in bangladesh, 12000 people, now homeless and a wave of organized crime. hits ecuador, as it becomes a major, cocaine trading ho. oh
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i. so it is b, one month since millions of lives were uprooted and destroyed by the 2 powerful earthquakes, shook southern turkey. and northwest syria. the full extent of the catastrophe is now very evidence more than that. 50000 people have died across both countries and millions displays. and many is still searching for their missing relatives from hattie hat. i left earl begins, are coverage. this is what's called a cemetery of the unknown. it's one of the many where those who lost their lives in earthquakes and southern trickier are buried. but their identities were never recorded. like lots of others to bach her has been asked to give a dna test and apply to authorities for any news of her husband. young high law about his we're done with shall knew the we still cannot get any news about him. we cannot reach him from anywhere. we looked at every place we were supposed to even
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to the cemeteries. we just the all the, the house dynamic. i don't know if someone took him to hospital or maybe he lost his memory because we cannot find him anywhere. but alone, in the weeks after the quakes struck, many of the dead were buried without being identified. now their relatives are trying to find them. mariam yielded from hut i is a mother of 3. she saved 2 of her 3 children, but her 7 year old son childish is still missing. when unfold on it, i don't think his dead. i've never felt his deadliness. i believe my son will come back to me safe and sound to file and get it in figure. mariam says she heard from witnesses that her son was pulled out from under deborah's alive air, or the some old lady told me a bull looking like my son was taken by some people, but she didn't know who they were to find a missing person. family members give samples of their dna to the police and wait
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for them to check their records, photos, and dna swab se taken from the dead have been recorded since the 1st day of the disaster. the government hasn't officially said how many people are still missing. many family members are trying to find their loved ones by putting an like leaves in different parts. so it is silly. they're hoping that someone will recognize them so they can be re united again. it would oh al jazeera, what i forget. well huh. how about i joined the slide from the epi central, the 1st quaking kellerman, my rush and hush him at one month on for the long, low road. still ahead. indeed wherever you travel you see distraction of biblical proportions across a leather provinces in southern part of turkey and every day the same constant struggle by the local communities tried to pick up the pieces and bu vaughn. they're struggling with a wide array of challenges. the near to find their loved ones who are buried under
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the rubble pick up some of the valuables in their homes idea cars, bottles of olive oil, whatever the kin salvage from under the rubble, as we're going to see in this report. ah, this is the moment, little a year has been waiting for excavators clear the rubble. she only has a few hours to salvage whatever she can. she has spent most of her life here, and now she has to confront the harsh reality. yoga, i'm here with my family to collect anything that would help me connect with the part so that the memories of the place and the people i met lives on like this was once my house, the authority is keep safe deposit boxes recovered from the rubble. it police stations, owners have to provide detailed lists of their belongings,
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which should match the least find if people are desperate to retrieve whatever they can from the debris, identity, cause furniture, jewelry and money. and sometimes all they want is only the medicine the left behind as they rush to survive the devastation. the reason they're taking risks is the fear. this could be their last chance to recover whatever the can before is for ever gone. right after the earthquakes it 11 provinces in southern turkey, security forces launched a crack down on robbers and rounded up looters. the also managed to retrieve cash and gold bars from destroyed banks and jewelry shops. highly should i, kogler is recovering his brother's belongings. he was raptured along with his family, but 7 other families didn't make it. i that are that all along and
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say, what can you do? you feel completely helpless in the face of calamity. i find a few items are mostly polish of my brother and his children. he has at least a few memories now to keep it him. it's all about keeping memories alive and remembering those who couldn't make it mostly buried in unmarked grace. we were talking about the visible scars that you see on the ground, the mountains of rubble, the distraction, and the devastation of his absolutely no way will be ever able to fasten the sense of emotional scars, those who are now struggling with the shattered lies their loved ones, her desert who disappeared during the earthquake people are now just looking forward to before they know that this is going to be a long journey had there. we moved to containers shelters with
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a promise by the government than that within a year. from now, they would be able to find out if find a permanent shelter that the government says is going to be safer, better and stronger. but what a journey for all those people who woke up one day and just within a 120 seconds, they lost everything. when did such a tough time for all throughout his tragedy, a hatch him. thanks for that. touching the harbor reporting there. okay, my colleague tom mccray spoke to lucy jones, who is a well renowned seismologists and she says it, earthquake building regulations and preparedness had become more important for turkey before this big choir. how would you of rice it took? he is a preparedness for a bigger earthquake like this, obviously, from the major fault line. if one knew that it was going to be prone to, to having allowed us quite. we've seen many earthquakes over the last couple of decades and took here. so how would you write the preparedness for something like
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this? and then how is it stacked up with what you've seen? play out. there are more people dead than i expected beforehand because because of the, the code is very good. the engineers are very good. we why i worked with a lot of turkish engineers, they're very much part of the international community. and that's why i want to see, have we missed something and creating the code or not it turkey in terms of scientific understanding and engineering expertise. it's up there with the, with the rest of the world because they know they have a problem. they've had a lot of really dedicated scientist work into it. and this is where i feel like i don't know how much it's the lack of enforcement of the code and how much the international co really has failed and really hasn't understood what these type of earthquakes could be. because we haven't had a major strike slip, earthquake with modern construction and the modern code since the code is really adopted in the last 20 years. and so the studies are going to be important. and you
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can see the full interview with sized ologist. lucy jones, that is at the 1430 g m t right here on al jazeera. so in rebel controlled parts of northwest and syria, survivors are still waiting for vital aid due to restrictions imposed by president bash. allison government occur as an aide worker and explains what still needs to be done to help those in need on me who i am. a cor, i'm working in the he, my theory and field decisions are northwest or syria. i as this region, which had
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a long period of war for about 20 years at this region is a northwest of syria has a very weak or infrastructure. one of the difficulties that organization had in this region is about border gate. in such a crisis or catastrophe, it should be fixed by the response. i responded immediately the same day even to distribute garbage and blanket and mattresses. for home, they speak with me and even the materials are lately where we we had
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a big project as a whole town which was originally designed for the space people, but we used it for people who with ms. lisa esque week, we responded to 1000 family where the house in this town and the us in supporting as in as much as possible. so what lessons can be learned from other large earthquakes in the pasts? well, in china, 90000 people were killed nearly 15 years ago. entire towns and cities were late to rebuild to withstand drums, katrina, he reports when tri county in china is one province. he show in china southwest looks nothing like it did before a magnitude 8 earthquake struck the town in 2008 who young being remembers,
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calling out from underneath the rubble of his home. he survived that his sister did not nearly 15 years on he's been able to rebuild his life and his business did sell u haul near. i was in boston for a while just i didn't want to work a 3rd between time as soon as her shims out of her work. now i feel at home again today though angel has changed so much from the tongue has advanced by decades, including the quality of buildings or when the earthquake hit on may 12th, 2008 rural towns in the epicenter were completely flattened. millions of people who left homeless local governments were accused of corruption and cutting corners during construction. none of the buildings in this town existed before 2008, except for the school. it's ruined, serve as a reminder of the sheer destruction caused by that earthquake and a memorial to the 10s of thousands who lost their lives. this culture marks the
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exact time the earthquake hit. thousands of schools turned into rubble. many children were in class that afternoon. kit me a motor was one of the 1st foreign engineers to survey the disaster zone. he also worked into kia after the earthquakes there. last month. he says outdated and adequate building regulations were primarily to blame. and many countries sagos same, same stories, associate the order concrete structures, kill people, and ha, no enforcement kill people. and away seems like a learning a same lesson. all will all begin. so that's the, that's us ha, ha, hardware office, 2008. the chinese government updated building codes in this region to include seismic strengthening. he showed, has been rebuilt to be quake proof and now post improved buildings and facilities, as well as a new school all schools and hospitals and went to one county and are reinforced to
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withstand magnitude 9 earthquakes. many of those living in the in show say they will never forget that day, but they have moved forward. jimmy, what is, are you home after experiencing that earthquake? your home and holiday undergoes a complete change. you feel the light one must container? how do we must survive for many in his community. he says much was lost, but in the year since they have also been gains. katrina you out 0. you so town went one county, china and you can watch all special covers to mot one month since the earthquakes and took it in syria out 1st one and just on the 3 out of 10, g m t and the next one. at 1300 g m t well still had parallel generic floods in malaysia forced tens of thousands to take shelter in relief camps. and the u. s. president presses for more votes, rights is the most the $58.00 anniversary due sunday.
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ah, examining the impact of today's headlines. this was probably one of the deadliest disaster seen the story of setting the agenda for tomorrow's discussions. this is the one that's been hitting 50 sharing personal stories or a global audience. can you talk a little bit about what life is like for african limited programs that open your eyes to an alternative view of the world today on now to sierra informed opinion far right extreme is there. it's really and need to be tackled as soon as possible. frank assessments, there was a joke about the and from government it's not in for, nor does it go inside story on al jazeera and by, for a fraud takes on the big issues. this isn't what he's talking about. a systemic issue
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here. black gloves don't really matter. in the police world unflinching questions is war with lawanda, a minute rigorous debate. people who are dying because of lack of medical treatment, challenging conventional wisdom. the fact that people are starting to get angry about this is in itself a sign of progress. join me, mark him on hill for upright. what? al jazeera lou ah ah. again, what g out 0 or one about top stories this out and it's been one months since more than 50000 people were killed in the too powerful earthquakes. it shook us up in turkey and northwest syria. turkey survive is
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a still trying to identify the remains of their relatives. and in syria, many survivors in the rebel controlled northwest to still waiting for vital aid by sharla. such government has put restrictions on a distribution, and some rebels have blocked deliveries from government held. at least 9 police officers had been killed in a suicide bomb attack. in southwestern pakistan, it happened and kept districts in the southwestern province of baluchistan. at least 11 others have been injured. no group has yet claimed responsibility behind the attack. lisco live now to come all haida, who's monitoring this forest from his lam about it. come all. what more do we know at this point? what we know so far is that the attack took place in ball lawn area of that district. and it's about the knowledge drive from the provincial capital of blue, just on with just quite an explosion happened. yeah, a re, canada,
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all the blue just on constabulary product military bought i did were traveling near a bridge, went up ball for closure and dodge store, what the way goes and the number of people reported canned and that particular attack, we are on the door that 13 people are injured, of course, the police investigator, now saying that noting into the nature of the explosion, but this is not the 1st time that the police or the military for the regular regular military force should have been dog. and just on the been a number of a clever and a not read which they have a book to pop robin. no one has claimed responsibility, but you have the doors that many of the seriously wounded have been moved to a military hospital. and the dead girl is likely to rise because of that. right. back with you. it's, we bleed more. thanks very much. need me to melinda. i made you fine. has
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devastated or a single refugee camp in bangladesh. in estimated 12000 people have been left without shelter. the cause is clear and no casualties have been reported. the blades broke out in the bulk. holly camping caught his bizarre in the south east of the country trying to charge the reports from docker. ah, this is not the 1st time destroying i have 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 has again left thousands without roof over their heads. in this 3 comes with the while happened around 100000. if you are leaving and 50 percent of them are children, eunice, to find the part in us. we are on the ground and we are trying to meet that immediate and ad janitta of those dramatize children and their families,
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ah, firefighters and volunteers were able to get the place under control. 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 growing or refugees, a camp this size with so many living and cramped condition makes fires like this. difficult to have, right? yeah. now by our 2, by chance 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 the 2nd i had taken my mother to see the doctor. when it came back, everything was in fire. we couldn't save any of our belongings. ah, hundreds of thousands of ro hang are fled, a military crack down in myanmar that began in 2017 years later,
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it still isn't safe for them to return. while a fired conference conditions in the refugee camps are dangerous, those are living here have nowhere else to go. can reach audrey al, jazeera dot josh in malaysia floods, triggered by days of torrential rains, of displaced tens of thousands of people. at least 4 people have died in the past week, nearly 41000. a sheltering in relief camps in the mornings of more rain universities across afghanistan of reopened after the winter break, but women remained barred from attending by taliban authorities. the university bound is one of several restrictions imposed on women since the taliban seized power in 2021. for ministers and rights groups who condemn the restrictions which the united nations, as called gender based apartheid south korea has announced to plan to compensate victims of forced labor in japan's factories during the 2nd world war. south korea's foreign minister says the former workers will be compensated through public
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foundations funded by private companies, both japan and the u. s. of welcome to move. the decision has been met with protests bilateral ties between washington's regional allies have been strained over 35 years of japan's brutal colonial rule of the korean peninsula. he was president joe biden is pressing to strengthen voting rights. he visited selma and alabama to mark the 58th anniversary of an attack by state troopers on black civil rights protested in the city biden's trip. his aimed at underscoring his commitment to black voters who were decisive in his when the presidency, his efforts to pass voting rights legislation of stalled, in the republican controlled congress that caught her commemoration. not for show selma is a reckoning the right to vote. right, to vote to have your vote, county is the threshold of democracy, liberty. why that anything's possible without you, without that right,
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nothing is possible. and this fundamental right remains under a saw conservative supreme court as good as the voting rights act over the years. since the 2020 election, a wave of states and doesn't, doesn't have an i voting hawes fuel by the big law and the election. the lyres now elected to office to ecuador, where police are struggling to contain a months old wave of organized crime attacks as the country has become the main transportation hub for the multi $1000000000.00 cocaine trade to reunite estates in europe. lesandra around here to report the are from the city of quad q, where the young and the poor are the most affected by the violence. police traffic stops in ecuador, largest city. guayaquil are far from routine these days. armed officers where bulletproof vests and most have their faces covered as they look for drug gang
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members that have been terrifying the city. with them to day they found a possibly legal gun in this s u. v. to rank them is in, in, in january we arrested a 145 people in this neighbourhood alone. we found more than 18 weapons short and large. we want people to feel safe, that travel they way akila, become the epicenter of a turf war among national and international gangs. bombings and killings have become daily occurrences as it's port as turned into the main transport hub for cocaine trafficking, ecuador, geographic position between the world's 2 main cocaine producers, bureau and columbia. the use of us dollar us currency and corruptible state institutions made it ideal for the drug. cartels. edwards and ecuador used to be a safe country in 2017. we had $5.00 homicides per 100000 inhabitants. now it's almost 5 times that. what it shows is that the government didn't take the necessary
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precautions yet. we know cocaine production had moved closer to our borders and nothing was done in the most vulnerable communities to prevent the growth of the gangs. hernando, best years of a human rights organization working in wire kills forest neighborhoods confirms that the social impact of drug trafficking has been devastating better both after the cove at 19 and m mc, we saw organized crime gangs becoming stronger and stronger at a time of high unemployment, they offered a way to survive that. now fear one fiddle, leave your house to denounce. yes. speak up poverty and lack of opportunity have made kids from neighborhoods like this one on the outskirts of guayaquil, an easy prey of criminal organizations, bands and turning them into the cannon fodder of their turf wars. in response, some residents of organized a free football school to try and keep kids away from the lore of using and dealing drugs. but the organizers tells us anonymously for fear of retaliation,
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that is not enough. filming, or they can say, i know we had a recent case of a kid 15 years old who fell for the money he was offered. you know, they think it's the best working get. he ended up killed with 17 shots. i thought the world collapsed. i knew him since he was 8. it makes you feel impotent. he'll allison be at the and jessia why akil. aaron's government has apologized for a wave of suspected poisonings targeting female school girls. the education minister says the cases have been investigated on saturday. a 2nd wave of gas attacks were reported while the 300 girls were taken to hospital hundreds more been admitted since november. people have been protesting over the unexplained incidence as incur 1st, i apologize for what's happening and their parents got worried mom, we were waiting to receive the results of testimony as we totally understand parents concern on you and we seriously follow the issue. we have formed emergency
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committees through it in the education ministry with arms voucher, the former pakistani prime minister, enron carne has been served arrest warrants at his home in these and city of law. so we can't supporters tried to block offices approaching the ho he's been demanding a snack elections, losing a no confidence vote. last april the reform party of a stony as prime minister codger colors sir has secured at 1st place in the parliamentary elections with 32 percent of the vote. tell us as a strong support of ukraine and has worn to the stony it needs to bolster its own security against russia far. right. opposition? conservative people's party. got 16 percent. it wants to limit estonians role in the conflict. all right, that's it for now. me mclaughlin. we got more news coming up here on out as her right after we go to inside story scene huffman. ah
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ah. hello. we are looking at a late taste of winter across a good part of northern europe. the winds coming in from the north, always a cold direction, and we will see some significant snowfall behind these weather systems. as we go on through the next few days, high pressure up to wasn't all magic. this is quite a cloudy area of high pressure that just sinks down into central parson on the floor. the net of that cloud there we go. with that rang rapidly turning to snow, some snow they're coming into scotland as we go on for a monday. we'll see some snow there too, across good part of scandinavia, but even down into where germany and poland were wintry makes us. we go on through the next couple of days now a little more extensive as we go on through our tuesday. those showers just flirting with the north of scotland, a favor to snow? any possible here cause nor the scotland east and pauses cotton. right down east
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coast of england into east anglia. yep. you could see a few sleet or snow flurries coming through here. where to whether we need the rating frauds that will make its way in some way, whether to, to southern parts of france, across the med, not too bad. there will be a few showers into greece at keir over the next few days. joseph, a shower or 2 across the far north of algeria. much of north africa is dry and 5, we have got the usual showers now cropping up around the gulf of guinea. ah, hollywood, glamorous finishing the detracts though seeking fame and fortune. i always told myself that sunday fema, but for some fumbling bedrooms can become a nightmare. i last in the 1st bentley i.

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