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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 6, 2023 7:00pm-7:30pm AST

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a nightmare i had asked in the 1st 10 days of my experience more, i had to consult the site. go dressed for the longest hollywood dreams on al jazeera. whatever has been done before, it can be done even better. as long as a human being is doing it, you can do it, no matter how. possibly it looks, if you toting the effort to put in the lock and you will have to be patient with me . i am the captain exiles and me a so continued kenya and them were so at the assistance which we are the only ice okey team in east in central africa, b as b. i francois progressing pretty well. we had managed to play in some international games. then when kobe gimme the ice rink was closed. and it's the only ice rink in the country. ah,
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one month after the 2 powerful outbreaks have to keep in syria. many are still searching for their missing relatives. are robert bride in turkey, as it looked through rebuild vomiting community shafted by the earthquakes, amongst the ghosts, displaced by war made homeless by these asked quakes. tens of thousands of syrians are in camps waiting for help to arrive the report from internet. ah, hello again. i'm associate hey, this is al jazeera live from doha. also coming up the head of russia's wagner group says, advisors positions around the city of buck went, will collapse if they don't get more ammunition. and at least 9 police officers have been killed and a suicide bomb attack and southwest on pakistan. ah,
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no. it's now been one month since millions of lives were appreciated and destroyed by 2 flat quakes that shook southern to kia and northwest and syria. the full extent of the catastrophe is now quite clear. more than 50000 people have died across both countries and millions are displaced. many are still searching for their missing relatives. from homicide, ellis, are all 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 buck horror has been asked to give a dna test. and apply to authorities for any news of her husband young. hi la. about. we're done. we're showing you that. we still cannot get any news about him.
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we can reach him from anywhere. we look at every place we are supposed to, even to cemeteries. we just the all the, her sonia michel, i don't know if someone took him to hospital or maybe he lost his memory because we cannot find him anywhere. in the weeks after the quakes struck, many of the dead were buried without being identified. now they are relatives are trying to find them. marianne yield us from what i is a mother of 3. she said 2 of her 3 children, but her 7 year old son childish is still missing. when i called on, i don't think his dead. i've never felt he's dead, but i believe my son will come back to me safe and sound and get it in. ma'am says she heard from witnesses that her son was pulled out alive, 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 dnas to the police and wait
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for them to check their records. photos and dna swaps taken from the dead have been recorded since the 1st day of the disaster. the government hasn't. oh, who surely said how many people are still missing? many family members are trying to find their loved ones by putting ads like leave in different parts. so to city, they're hoping that someone will recognize them so they can be re united again. it would oh al jazeera, what i forget all more now with to raise a bow and the recovery efforts they in had tie province. i'm here in the ancient city of untouched. this is the capital of the province of have i and this city has been completely devastated by the earthquake, 14 centuries of history were destroyed on february 6 in this city. if this is home to turkey is old estimate happy v a larger, you can see it right here behind me. it was devastated during the earthquake and rebuilding places such as this one is a major challenge for the government. they're saying that they will rebuild cities
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like this one, but the residential areas, for example, they say that need to be moved towards and closer the mountain side, mostly because the difference on the ground that it would make it much more stable . the government is also promising to talk to architect or urban planners, engineers among other things in order to carry out the rebuilding process. but right now this place is an inhabitable thousands and thousands of people have left this area. they've been troubling with water, with food, with shelter, among many other things. and among those flings, are syrian refugees who had come here escaping the war. thousands of them are leaving intense surrounding this area, but many other say that they were forced to flee. oh, these people have been waiting for days to be allowed inside this temporary refugee camp in a dana in southern tokyo. they were syrian and had been living in this country for
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7 years. but the earthquakes last month left them homeless. so marilyn dailey, says he and his family have no way to go that and had them written on the 2nd grade, destroyed our house, we left the house with children or any of our belongings. so we come to this camp were syrian stayed, i believe there's enough space in the camp, but we've been living on the streets for 14 days now. i know the turkish authorities did not reply to our questions on why these families were not allowed in sight. since the civil war, we started in syria to air docks is an open door policy to which syrians fling the conflict. there now more than 4000000 syrians in the country, many i living in camps where they have shelter, food, health care, and an education. but over time, many turn study to resend the support given to syrian refugees by the turkey state . does widespread need for food, shelter on basic services all around the areas affected by the earthquake in okay, and that has increased the anti refugee sentiment in the country. there are many
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who would like to see the refugees leave. hundreds of people are living in this 10 city in the center of cassandra, m collette a housemaid. alice acted all blue is one and she's angry. she says she's living in a tent with 5 other families among them. a premature baby is deborah june. child like also marian's half dance, but we turks have nothing. we are living outside in terrible conditions. well, syrians have tons, aren't we, human beings to the turkish minister of defense as more than 40000 syrians have returned to their country in the past weeks. many others here are also finding it difficult to survive in a disaster area. and they're considering other options, verify that booster abraham alleys, assyrian journalist, he says he fears the lead up to 2 kias presidential elections in may, could increase hostile sentimental words, syrians in the country, some like special like from their rights like side flight parties,
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considering as like actually more loyal to other parties, which is that make it like very difficult for our syrians and if you are trying like to do like a little survey around between civilians been i think about policy of are like politics like here. they're just like trying to lena law, millions of serious, have come to tokyo to escape the war in their nation. now, they've lost everything they had once again, and have to survive in a country that is not their own. on the earth, quick one months ago have had a huge impact from people's lives wherever you go, their stories of loss. the sorrow, even of revival, the government is asking people not to leave areas like this when i'm promising to rebuild it and to give them homes once again. and when you talk to syrian refugees here, and when you talk to those who have lost it all, the only thing they want to know is when they'll be able to have a home. once again, the government is promising to build almost $400000.00 home in
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a period of one year. people here say they're hoping that the government will be able to deliver all these devastating earthquakes happened just as farmers are looking ahead to the fast approaching agricultural season. this region accounts for more than 20 percent of all of to kids. fami activity raising concerns about food supplies out there is robert pride reports now from high born just 3 days earlier. baby mehmet starts a life made all the harder by the earthquakes. his family, like many small scale turkish farmers who produce just enough to get by, have lost what little they had. so far, it's going to be hard to recover. everything was destroyed. i don't know when we will be back to normal. a few kilometers down the road ness him coach is one of this regions, big farmers, the road leading to his farm, like the buildings that one stood here ripped apart by the shifting ground. nest
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him has just been explaining that the ground where we're standing here is a couple of meters below the ground just here, which in turn is several meters below the ground way out just underneath that bond that. but at one point before the quakes happens, all of this was on the same level. his brother, who is in the farm house at the time, shows the destruction he found when he escaped outside with his family. this farm provided a livelihood finesse seems extended family of 25, but also crops and lives dog and the local markets. what, what happens if you lose their lunch with them? this upgrade didn't only happen here, but in 10 other provinces. if you stop producing food will be dependent upon other countries. in the days and weeks after the earthquake, the focus has been on saving lives and providing for the survivors. but there's a growing awareness of the damage to the agricultural facilities in this important
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bombing region that threatens the longer term supply of food. early morning get the wholesale market the arrival of produce from surrounding farms shows just how abundant this entire area res, together the 11 effected provinces supply around a 5th, the national agricultural output. and in some categories, they dominate with the majority of citrus fruit produced here about 3 quarters of the country's cotton, and nearly all of its pistachio nuts contributing to turkey. exports. farmers already had problems finding enough seasonal workers. but the quakes mean they would have around a 3rd fewer than they need this year, may have syndic telling me, so we'll look for the past 3 years. we have struggled now. many migrants have gone back to syria. we need more workers. although this disasters timing could not have been worse, it seems for the regions farmers coming in winter which adds to the misery of
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homelessness. and right before the spring start of the agricultural calendar that is now seriously disrupted. rob mcbride, al jazeera hatta, all the financial cost of the quakes has hit syria hard. it's estimated that the cost of the damage is about $5100000000.00. now it's roughly about 10 percent of serious g d p. at least 5000000 people have also lost their homes. no, camacho is a journalist and it's live. he describes the severe conditions. many syrian refugees are facing. thousands of people are still living in temporary shelter centers across the northwest in syria, which are installed by n g o is following the us off of that drug, the region. they have been living in the most severe humanitarian situation. we talked to many people in this temporary shelter, a center, as they told us that they lacked the most basic human needs as they don't have
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medical. a voice in this temporary shelter center. neither proper sewage system which will increase the possibility of the spread of call iran disease. however, n g o are still working on providing the increased means of the people in the area as more than 200 was 230000 people were affected by the disaster. these people have lost their houses and home as more than 20000 buildings were either completely destroyed or damaged in habitable way. people in north western syria describe the monday of each month as a curse day, as they have been exposed to 2 catastrophic earthquakes. and the last month and today the more today more to the 6 of march and the area is going through
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a very severe wind storm. they told us that during the, during the night they tend to were almost ripped off from their places due to the severe winds that destroyed their areas. and they are forced and they were forced to live there a tense. and then the v as a dance to prevent them from being a with dogs, are removed by a strong a with the n g o z and humanitarian themes are still calling for international intervention to provide long term solutions for these families. i'd there suffering still hasn't completely subsided. all these as quakes and to care and syria have also stud painful memories for survivors of the magnitude 8 earthquake, which struck when twan county and china back in 2008. doctor charging was lost. his only son who was at school that day. 15 years later though, he has rebuilt his life and now has 2 other children. he offered
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a message of hope for those affected by last month's disaster. was something ha, woodson, arlene body a one time bobby. and he shouldn't henzy to join in soon yellow sonya you high. so if you tell me by an would or to the law for snowball, and she need my that's house on call you so awesome. but if i hadn't asked when somebody is, and she is wasa, i'd be a fondness working father. me him, i obviously damn by then it's ah words just ah, so i'm sure purchased it and i'm kind of half. i'm in with him who you forgot me by now. jotting. wilson,
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being hun, come with. ah, the lingua pony shima. i gather gaudy ma'am. ma'am ma'am, ma'am, ma'am ma'am, ma'am ma'am ma'am. you tune. shin sun, anzac fuller toss nissan. ma'am, ma'am? patch you had to leave with one of us locally. who are you? can you all you do blue get? i mean yet she's i told him what i mean here. our sheila thought she does and i'll send her portrait is a hail. well, don't speak to us hodge, kansas arity up. she 70 uses movie channel and
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you can watch as special coverage mocking one month since those ad quake. santa kia and syria, at $1800.00 gmc, i'm still coming up here on out ezra will have all the rest of the day's news. and a new era of medicine examined the ethical questions of altering human dna. ah hello, we have a lot of warm weather coming in across japan over the next couple of days for having quite nicely here. high pressure just toppling its way further east with so settled and sunny pretty much sums it up. we'll see temperatures in take out around 18 degrees celsius, similar temperature there too for so and for beijing where to where the thick cloud does squeeze its way into central parts of china as he go on through the next few
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days. few sharp showers coming through here, but it is going to be warm, some lively showers to just around the korean peninsula. tokyo at $21.00 celsius, that is a roundabout sir. sort of temperature we'd expect to see late april, so warm spring, sunshine, lovely weather light winds, really woefully very pleasant. i will. the next couple of days are not too pleasant . across southern parts of malaysia still sinks and very heavy rain down toward southern areas of the malay peninsula. not as wet as it has been recently, but the heavy downpours. they are still there. nevertheless, russia showers across sir the philippines, dry and sunny across much of indo china, dr. sadie took was a good part of india, but some shower cloud now becoming a little more widespread across the plains or some heavier downpours. still coming through here over the next couple of days, a few shares was for lanka, one or 2 showers, 2 for pakistan. ah.
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all gallantry mccarthy. you bronze, petrol power caused by 2035. is this the end of combustion engine? vehicles? large profit flying high because the industry keep up with the surgeon demand plus 2 dawns forgotten crisis. will anyone come to doff was a count to the golf on al jazeera ah, both of them told stories from asia and the pacific. on al jazeera lou. ah ha, watching al jazeera, i missed how's your day here and our hall. let's remind you about top stories. it's
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been one month since more than $50000.00 people were killed and too powerful earthquakes. that shook southern to kia and northwestern syria into kia survivors are still trying to identify the remains of their relatives and in syria. many survivors and the rebel controlled northwest are still waiting for vital aid. a shuttle ourselves. government has put restrictions on a distribution. and some rebels have blocked. deliveries from government held aries to or russia's defense minister is visiting areas in ukraine under moscow's control. so showing her towards the port city of maria pole to oversee reconstruction efforts. there. the eastern ukrainian says he has been under russia's control, al, since may, and witnessed a month long siege in the early days of the invasion. while showing her his visit coincides with renewed criticism of his ministry, my, the head rushes,
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wagner mercenary group. if any provision that says that his visors position are on the eastern ukrainian city of buckland could collapse unless ammunition promised by moscow arrived soon. he says the extra military supplies were promised back in february. perversion says he isn't sure of the delays are due to bureaucracy or betrayal. use the seizures she will go. what if wagner, p m c retreats from bottom? look, now the whole front will collapse today. wagner is the glue holding things together . as i've said, on one hand, we're pulling in the whole ukranian army, grinding them up, and destroying them. not letting them focus on other parts of the front line on the other were pushing forward and others have to follow us to save face and reputation . the learning that it can be done, it's important to break the stereotype. can we or can't we? yes, we can. if we can, that means you can 2 lights come on. if we retreat, then will go down in history forever as people who have taken the main steps towards losing the war. or the wagner group has been critical to russia's military
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campaign in ukraine. and fighters have been at the forefront of some of the most hartford battles. and they've also been accused of abuse and human rights violations. and the use of mercenaries and contract is not unique to the war in ukraine a summer than j. it has more from moscow, mercenaries, or fighters. some of the men from this group are accused of robberies, rape and massacres by breast in countries for the wagner group says it's done nothing wrong. they call themselves positions and their battles, concerts, intelligence estimate, say, tens of thousands of wagner mercenaries have been involved in ukraine. russian criminal court bands mercenaries, but private armed security guards are allowed, lead bay of guinea proportion, believe to be close to the kremlin. the groups been involved in combat operations and syria, libya so done, the central african republic and ukraine. easier than the other i board on this is the a more there's a perfectly established command and control system of the wagner private military
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company. everyone has heard. everyone can hire their opinion, all conversations any with the phrase, what other opinion is there, and what else is needed to complete the tasks? if decisions are made, once it's made, all tasks are carried out and no one can back down. the brutal discipline gives elsie's opportunities. that is why the wagner went forward and we'll go forward. did you not see themselves as cannon fodder? in their view, their heroes fighting for their country. walner used sorcerer to lydia. wagner has its own artillery aviation, so they have their own training centers. it's an interesting solution to create the kind of private military company that russia has managed to create. they've learned from the british and the americans are super. but that's not unique for the russia ukraine conflict. and let's say the appeal of private armies means fewer dead soldiers. and these groups are not bound by laws as regular armies. united nation
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studies has hired a security guards. private contractors were performing military duties. the you and working groups as specific judicial actions needed to prosecute private, military and security companies involved in human rights violations. in 2014, the u. s. group black water was found guilty of killing 14 rocky civilians in 2007 in the 3rd continues its presence with different names. the u. e has been accused of hiring mercenaries in german. german x soldiers are being charged with creating a mercenary army to fight for saudi arabia. a hungarian is really private security company. honor is accused of hiring u. s. military personnel to can specific individuals. and there is a long list of guns for a higher international conflicts. according to the u. n. 's working group on the use of mercenaries, fighters that been involved in gross human rights abuses, possible war crimes and crimes against humanity. the un recommends effective accountability measures for mercenaries, mostly related activity, and private security personnel, and unless weld powers stop using proxy armies,
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instead of the ones bound by international law rights abuses will continue on battlefields. summer majority of the 0 moscow. now at least 9 police officers have been killed in a suicide bomb attack. and southwestern pakistan had happened in a catch district of the province of block tristan, several others have also been injured. no group has claimed responsibility for the attack. come on hydra reports not from the summer that according to their due date, there was an annual festival that was taking place and a district down of the b. b of cotton, about 830125 or 30 kilometers from where these people were dead on duty in order to insure the security around that they were traveling back to greater and they came under an area known as the ball lawn bought the healey area with meandering road, according to the board, suicide bomber writing
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a more to bike approach to re near a bridge and detonated the explosives, which led to the killing of george police man. and as your mentor and many more injured red w, just on government and sent a helicopter from quite an order to evacuate. some of the most li wound gauge who had initially been admitted to the local arts producers. and they combine military hospital and no one knows you're taking responsibility, but there's a dag river. there's been an escalation and a number of our di against the police for that security portrait. they were there deadlier dag or not much which carried almost $100.00 policemen. there was an attack in the city of karachi on a senior police official office. and of course now the new job and the ball lawn area of blue, just on around supreme needa says the poisoning of school girls is an unforgivable
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crime. i told the human a has urged author routines to investigate the cases and to severely punished perpetrators. a 2nd wave of attacks was reported on the weekend. stephanie decker reports a parent's worst nightmare. the suspected gas poisoning of school girls has been going on for months and across various parts of baron s o such that like a smell paint seriously. i have very severe numbness in my body. i can't walk it on many described similar symptoms. a strange smell, numbness, their teacher, backing them up. i taught be the students all felt the same symptoms as me. they had coughs, some of them said they eyes burned, and most of them was scared. ah, there have been protests calling for an investigation. it's rare that this kind of footage makes it out to the ron, and it is reached the highest levels around supreme leader is called for those responsible to be held to account my cinema celine. why miss? i got it. this is an important issue. if there really hands involved are people,
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groups are involved in this matter. this is a big, an unforgivable crime and he's a responsible agencies, intelligent services and law enforcement agencies must pursue them because on and the perpetrators must be condemned to severe punishments. it is a serious, an unforgivable crime. there will be no amnesty for them on the augusta. united nations is weighed in holding for a transparent investigation. iran is rejected when it cools foreign meddling. however, president abraham racy is now assigned a working group to investigate stephanie decker hodges 0. now cutting edge gene therapies could become more excessive in the coming years. and that's what scientists and policy makers are discussing at the human genome editing conference and london column. baker reports 5 years ago, humanity quietly crossed into a new era. a scientist walked on stage of the human genome editing conference in hong kong to reveal he'd modified the embryos of twin girls. before they were born,
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he changed jean, known to create resistance to infection by h i v. the scientists in the audience were shocked. and a near unanimous call was made to halt similar attempts, illnesses like sickle cell anemia, cystic fibrosis and huntington's disease are inherited. they start as variations in genes, the codes in human dna that tell bodies how to make cells out of millions of letters of code. just one can be out of place. and in some cases, only one parent needs to have a variant gene to pass a serious and rare condition to their children. new tools are available to edit the human genome. the most efficient so far is crisper. it finds cuts and replaces parts of genes to deliver new genetic code to a target with great accuracy. our vision or dream is that there would be basically a crisp or cure center where physicians would see
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a child there that child's dna would get red and professional geneticists would understand what causes the disease and then they would send that information to the crisper cures group and they would be like a rapid response team. they would just jump on it. today. genetic editing therapies modify immune cells to recognize cancer, correct loss of vision directly in the eye, and seem to have reversed sickle cell anemia by editing the cells in bone marrow. they want to really pay attention as these technologies are being developed, as they're getting closer and closer to market. about how we are considering the populations at hand that have access or don't have access to these technologies. a human embryo contains a few cells that become a whole person. in theory, these could be edited to prevent a rare or serious inherited disease from ever starting. but no studies have shown how an embryonic at.

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