tv News Al Jazeera March 7, 2023 12:00am-1:00am AST
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ah hello, i'm learned taylor, this is the engineer news. i live from london coming up. iran says more than 5000 girls have been poisoned in more than 230 schools since november. supreme leader has called it an unforgivable crime. i'm the dash says it's investigating the cause of the latest major fire in a ring, a refugee camp, which has left thousands of families with no shelter. one month after 2 powerful earthquakes shattered millions of lives into kia and syria. we hear from a syrian man displaced by war, who lost all but his 4 year old daughter. and the head of russia's wagner group says his fighters position around the ukranian city of blackwood could collapse if ammunition promised by moscow doesn't arrive soon. and in sport,
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chelsea's manager says he's enjoying the pressure of the champions league, graham potter as the chance to revive his team season with a win against brochure dog. ah, iran supreme leader, ayatollah ali. how many says the poisoning of school girls in his country is unforgivable, and should be punished by death if deliberate. and iranian appears now provided more information on the attacks. he says more than 5000 female students have been poisoned since november. mohammed hassan as fairy who is a member of the fact finding committee on the poisonings, also told parliament more than 230 schools have been targeted in the attacks. and the attacks have been widespread taking place in 25 of iran's 31 provinces. stephanie decker report,
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apparently the worst nightmare. the suspected gas poisoning of school girls has been going on for months and across various parts of iran. this is, i felt like i smell paint. i have a severe numbness in my body. i can walk it on. many describe similar symptoms, a strange smell, numbness, their teacher backing them up, will be the students all felt the same symptoms as me, they had cough. some of them said they are burned, and most of them were scared. i, there been protest calling for an investigation. it's rare that this kind of footage makes it out of the ron and it is reached, the highest levels around supreme leader is called for those responsible to be held to account my cell, my cell. my name is i get a, this is an important issue. there really hands involved and people groups are involved in this matter. this is a big and unforgivable crime. and he's responsible agencies, intelligence services, and law enforcement agencies must pursue them. and the perpetrators must be condemned to severe punishment, devotion it is a serious,
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an unforgivable crime. there will be no amnesty for them and you guys that united nations is laden calling for a transparent investigation. iran has rejected what it calls for meddling. however, president abraham racy is now assigned a working group to investigate stephanie decker, which is 0. the white house says it's very concerned and an investigation into the poisonings could fall under the mandate of the united nations. the continued poisoning of school girls across across iran is, is unconscionable. there must be a credible, independent investigation accountability for those responsible if these poisonings are related to participation in protest. then it is well within mandate of the un independent, international fact finding mission on iran to investigate the possibility that girls in iran are being possibly poisoned. simply for trying to get an education is,
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is saying is shameful. and it's unacceptable. and our thoughts remain with the victims and their families. a bank that as she authorize she is investigating the cause of a massive fire in ringo refugee campaign. cox's bizarre, it destroyed more than 2000 homes, learning facilities, and religious centers, and left more than 12000 ringo who fled a violent crack down in mid mall without any shelter. chandry has more from a locally in cox's, but the, her, a big flap to bangladesh, looking for safety after facing military correct on in me and, but this is what she's dealing with now, or make shift home at this refugee campaign. cox's bizarre, went up in flames. on sunday, picking up in the we have experienced a similar tragedy in bama. now my home here is gone and i lost everything. we barely managed to get house life from the fire. people who live here say fire incidents are becoming increasingly frequent in the camp. they belong to me on mars
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minority muslim ringer community who have faced years or persecution back home. there are many rowing of volunteers who are not trained by the un and other agencies to deal with such an emergency. when this dia, volunteers like me, used many scooters equipped with water tanks and tried to douse the fire today be range food a motor for those who are displaced by the fire incident. i think many of the families who lost their makeshift homes are not living under the open sky. but until they get it, i just ran with my children. everything is destroyed, we lost everything, we hat. i'll get some i will put a man on the commissioner in charge of the refugee camp says the government will, how those who have been affected. we had taken some decision regarding debility channels. the people who are last here shelters as to at night actually no one was under the open sky. that was an shoot. we provided her foot
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o dry foot in a initially later on this hot men, according to a report by the time of the ship ministry of defense. there have been more than 200 fires in the refugee camps since january 2021. most of them were accidents, but at least 60 were caused by arson or sabotage. the fire has flung the spotlight back on the struggles the chalmers and tragedies faced on daily basis by everyone here. despite all the odds, many are trying to rebuild their shelters and the same area. this fire, as a reminder of the many challenges facing the ro hanger, effigies there, caught between the increasingly dangerous situation in bangladesh and a new political reality off a homeland now led by the same military hunter responsible for the crackdown that forced them to flee in the 1st place john v chaudhry al jazeera, cox's bazaar bangladesh coming up on the news are from london,
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africa university's reopened. after their winter break, with women still banned. un says the taliban is treatment of women and girls is tantamount to gender apartheid. thus, the rules inside george's parliament approaches side as politicians discuss a russian spot built to labor, some organizations foreign agents and sport players who brought protest to tennis court on the day of her biggest career when ah, in exactly a month since 2 major earthquakes hit 70 kia and northwest syria killing more than $51000.00 people, and flattening in time neighborhoods. the human and financial costs are extraordinary. and to keep the government says, 173000 buildings collapsed or was severely damaged. that's left between one and
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a half 1000000 and 1900000 people needing shelter. the world bank estimates the damage bill to be more than $34000000000.00, which is around 4 percent of the turkish g. d. p. in syria. more than 10000 buildings were destroyed or severely damaged, displacing at least 105000 households. well, there's some estimates are significantly higher. the world bank says the damage bill, their titles about $5000000000.00, some 10 percent of serious gdp. quick survivors spend days near their destroy houses in hope of collecting personal possessions. despite the risks, they say, the search isn't just about valuables. but finding precious reminders of last homes and loved ones, i shall borrow more from karen marsh. ah, this is the moment, little a year has been waiting for excavators clear the rubble. she only has
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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. young, i'm here with my family to collect anything that would help me connect the path so that the memories of the place and the people i met lives on. 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, which should match the lease findings. people are desperate to retrieve whatever they can from the debris, identity cards, 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 forever gone. right after the earthquakes it 11 provinces in southern turkey,
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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, kugler 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 they 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. hush my bottle as the 0. got them on my lunch. a psychological damage from the
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quakes is something survivors will have to endure for the rest of their lives. nora dula is a psychiatrist with med global. she's just coming to done about the kinds of trauma, earthquake victims face. after going through such an ordeal. there is multiple different traumas that were coming across the victims of the earthquake. there's a trauma of losing, losing your home. there's a trauma of losing people that you're, you're, you love your family members friends and particularly that's what we've seen in disaster zones and earthquakes. but in syria when we cross over to syria, in particular, we see different types of trauma trauma, people who have already went through about 12 years of trauma from barrel bombs and from, from just being displaced and being refugees in their own countries. in order to continue with any medical operation, the stability is important, right? so when you're in an environment where this repeated earthquakes,
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whether it's fighting a war, going on, surely that impacts the sustainability of treatment. absolutely, but i think the most important thing is to strengthen your relationships with people on the ground, the people that are doing this work every day. and so if you give people the resources, if you give them the proper training, and if you help with their confidence and just being able to understand the materials and help others, then you've done your job as a, as a n g o. and we've seen cases that look like multiple actors are being traumatized when someone is pulled out of the rubble alive. they've suffered a terrible trauma that then you see the family members have been traumatized and maybe even the caregivers have been told tight. how do you, how do you deal with all of that? i think in syria, we were able to go around the hospital and see different patients that have had multiple traumas has one of the patients that we saw and saying he was
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a child who was under the rubble for about 44 hours. he unfortunately lost his entire family except for his father. his father happened to be somewhere that was far away from, from the disaster zone. and he lost a part of his legs and a part of the entire time that we were seeing him. the only thing that he would ask us for was his dad and to be able to, to just talk to him and talk to his family and see what we can do to kind of intervene to give them that, that support that they need. and we hope in the future that they're able to, that they're able to overcome this and that we can help other children that are there in the hospital is every one who needs therapy, who needs help getting it? i don't, i don't think that there is ever going in the a model where every single person that needs something can get it. but we can do our best to train as many people as possible so that they can train the others. that can further help. amnesty international says both the syrian government and
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rebel forces have blocked more than a 100 trucks carrying vital humanitarian aid from entering parts of a leper province. well, this has people in war torn at northwest syria struggled to come to terms with a massive impact of the disaster. no, come wash as this report from italy, province. people here in the opposition held north where syria have lived through 12 years of war. but many se last month's earthquakes have left them facing their greatest loss of will was for his entire family was killed and had been, had been put on some outside of that day. and i was at the bay crew and the earthquakes hit the area. i immediately rushed to my house. i was shocked by the seed of my destroyed house and all my family died under the rubble my 6 children and my wife didn't homie memorial. i looked at the him. he wonders if he can ever recover. bad ma saturdays!
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do i am now staying in this tent with my, my parents i, they all that i have left after i lost my family, the old, my only hope this life normal. now i have lost everything and i have no hope of the future. but the officials estimate most of the more than $20000.00 damage buildings are uninhabitable. thousands of people are now living in shelters adding to those already forced from their homes by the war. while i are he, i'm and i nick deal. we are living in continuous fear and suffering, but we can't go back to our houses because they are severely damaged by the earthquake. we've been living here for a month and we don't know how long we will be forced to stay here. let me, let me show arrianna many here say more lives could have been saved if the international community had responded faster, but could be filed more than the stuff on the 2nd come and demilia apple mother. the civil defense teams have been responding since the 1st hours of the disaster.
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we faced many challenges and difficulties such as the lack of enough heavy extraction, tools, and vehicles. and now more than 40000 families were displaced by the catastrophe. we went through many emotional situations and we still hear the voices of the women and children who are trapped under the rubble, although a month has passed since then. after facing here is a war and neglect the 6th of february. we will always be remembered by those, so survived the earthquakes, then our faith, more trauma, and little hope of ever achieving a normal life. no commercial jahira and lead. many of those left homeless in syria had already been displaced by more than a decade of civil war manager. and his family had just rebuilt their lives in it live and his wife mother and 2 young songs were killed in the earthquake. only he and his 4 year old daughter survives ah, ah ah,
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i o teens so hung her head you must be kinetic. i had you on the will of a sudden pain on my side. no. i didn't sweat. she was off from me on one of them has it has an eye, this sort of the federal sentence and the anomaly from the most not limited with those too much data have probably heard will come show me what i
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owe a lot. and i actually had a, it was in my father on the lot on a lot of my gym, the not in the above us. and i get off at home have gotten but the 100 and if you stuff in an economy shipment that a lot to ship it and the message is about a 100 on the stuff in any media. again, michelle of the upper i mark left on the 2nd item. it's doug, my telephone is locked in for nothing. i know what i was writing, bought all the funding, but nothing new from move
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gave me and it wouldn't fill in all the money and i know the whole not submit those to the what the law has been her, the violence between palestinians and israelis, settlers in the occupied westbank town of who ira israel settlers entered the palestinian town chanting and singing while celebrating the jewish holiday of pu rim alliston eons in the area say it was a provocation and reportedly responded by throwing rocks. one palestinian family was reportedly attacked and their child tear gassed. just over a week ago, settlers carried out at least 300 sacks in who are and other west bank villages
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targeting palestinians. ah rushes defense ministers visiting areas in ukraine under russian control. on monday, sagen sure go toward the port city of mario pole, to oversee reconstruction efforts. they've devastated ukrainian city has been under russia's control since may, following a months long siege, which always visit coincides with renewed criticism of his ministry by the head of russia's wagner masonry group. if guinea propulsion says is fighters position around the eastern ukrainian city of wood could collapse unless i munition and other supplies promised by russia arrived soon. he added that he isn't sure if the delays are due to bureaucracy or betrayal. he also said his representative had been denied access to the headquarters of russia's military operation in ukraine.
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provision has been critical of russia's military tactics in recent weeks. you'll be 6 years, she will go one. if wagner pmc retreats from bar would now the whole front will collapse. to de 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 and mark elliot is an honorary professor, the school of live on it could east european studies at university college. london is also the also putins was from chechnya to ukraine. jones not from broad stairs and can't hear you. ok, thanks very much indeed for being with us. so the 1st time that the head to the wagner group has as acute criminal withholding ammunition. but how significant is this public spot between wagner and the russian army?
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well, insignificant, not in the sense of the fact that wagner, oprah goshen are about to turn against the criminal or anything like that. but it is significant in that it really shows one of the many crucial weaknesses of the russian forces, which is the future. have a system in which he governs through dividing role. he creates a whole variety of different competing agencies and individuals and plays them off against each other. now that works in civil politics, it's really not working on the battlefield. where you have the regular army, you have wagner, you have the national guard, you have a whole variety of forces which are all competing against each other to prove to put in there the useful ones. and that's often a very, very debilitating force. so this is what we're seeing at the moment is because you engaged in a very bitter political fight with the ministry of defense. and how critical is his is operation, particularly in bad mood. to me is it decisive? if they don't get the mission they need, or if i just saw they, you know,
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they want to, to show up the russians. well, i think that we have to realize the degree, the main role has already happened. i mean, back in may be so remote or so ago in particular, the absolute, he was doing the heavy lifting, particularly it was throwing huge numbers of mercenaries, but it had recruited from the russian labor camp system. scarcely trained being just thrown in as cannon fodder is to exhaust and grind down the ukrainians. now they look very likely the back is going to full. what's happening is the regular minute trees basically trying to push bob out so that it gets to claim the credit for actually taking taking the city. so yes, well the played a significant role. but at the moment actually propulsion very volume and the scale . if his criticisms are precisely because he realizes that he's been politically outmaneuvered at an aside from the, the kind of the, the sort of things he's saying publicly and how, how,
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how significant that is. there's been some suggestion they could be he because you know, and a career of might be potential cooney is what would you make of that idea? honestly, i think we can rule this out. i mean, could go jan chechen leader could deer off. they obviously think they do have their own armed forces, but not unless, you know, we are talking about tens of thousands of men at most. i mean, wagner, at the moment, he's maybe 30000 strong. the defense ministries forces around 860000 that the national guard there, all kinds of other agencies, the fight in the mastery, there's someone like to go. she has no real political base in moscow. he doesn't have a close relationship with contin. it's very much he has to do what is necessary today in order to get the criminal site. so i mean, i think it is the criminal wanted him arrested. they go to arrest him tomorrow, and some credentials you know, like would, would be put in his place now. so, i mean, i don't think we need to suspect the likelihood of any clues at the moment. but the very fact that there are,
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there is such discussion says something i think about the disarray in russian politics at the moment. and claims to united against against ukraine and in favor of coaching. in practice, there is a lot of discussion, a lot of backbiting going on, and just briefly to pretend to be moved to the events that we've had to ukraine. so let's keep saying that i was top commanded about the mood and they pledged to defend it. why both sides so determined to, to win in this particular place. this is interesting thing from the russians point of view, it's much more straightforward to put it bluntly, putin wanted a wing. he had to concede once he don't need any regional capital, he'd actually captured her on back the end of last year. and he desperately wants a trial, a victory. and he demanding the generals, provided ukrainian seem to actually got sucked into this 1st by what was a useful way for them to basically cause attrition or losses to the russians, forced them to stay below casualties. now, although the ukrainian himself seen got stolen and are actually taking heavy losses
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themselves losses, they frankly can't afford to take more rush as a population more than 3 times ukraine's. so i think that to a degree, this is just giving him a grudge match which actually works to moscow's advantage. not kelly. oh, thank you very much indeed. thank you. fight broken out in george's parliament. ah, politicians were discussing a proposed law which targets non government organizations and media outlets to receive more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad. law, which is very similar to legislation passed in russia, would require them to register as agents of foreign influence. many believe this would damage georgia's chances of joining the european union. there were also large protests outside parliament against proposed law. ha. couple was salgado in boston, georgia society absolutely deserved to know which organizations are being financed
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from which source and how that money is being spent. so we are talking about accountability and transparency. there are no restrictions whatsoever placed on people by this law. oh gosh. well, lisa, we see as a disaster, court georgia, because this is how it has started in russia. and this is where our government is leading us to. these law is a serious mtv move to georgia's european theater. exiled bella, russian opposition leaders for atlanta, chicken us kaya has been sentenced to 15 years in prison. chicken oscar was trying to end up censure by a band russian court. i've been gone into exile after running for the presidency it against alexander lucas shanker. in 2020 election was followed by mass protests of the opposition accused luca shanker of electoral fraud,
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something he denied taken us kaya called her conviction, and sentence, an act of vengeance for the better russian authorities. a husband has been in prison since he announced his intention to run for the presidency 3 years ago. what's more still to come this hour more than a 100 unaccompanied children are found in an abandoned shock in mexico? rewriting the future, editing our dna comes under discussion at a major meeting of world scientists and sport when a basketballs biggest stars is back in action as his team make a push for the playoffs. ah ah, hell i, they, wintry weather now setting improperly across northern parts. if you see the cloud diving in across, gotten there be some sniff where significant snow over the high ground or area lie
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. pressure drawing that cold at down from the arctic speclink of snow showers just talking in behind that summer winter. whether to just affecting that eastern side or being that it does, of course, make its way down across the low countries, northern piles of germany. this weather system extending all the way across it to that western side of russia. she had asked no just drifts across denmark, sweden, i, which was the baltics as we go on through tuesday, just 5 celsius in london. that is not march like at all as we go through tuesday afternoon is little mild of air into our paris. some rain coming through here, costello countries that sinks a little farther east, which as we go on through wednesday, paris actually warming up to around 14 degrees. lots of cloud and rain equals a good part to france. when need the rightness, they bad thing already fall celsius. they're in london. so i do expect to see some wintry flowers and i think it'll be settling as such. but so certainly on the cold side over the next couple of days west or whether to just down towards the or south west of europe fought dry across
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a good part of the mediterranean la. she settled and sunny here, temperatures easing asa cross northern parts of africa, cairo a 22 ah 2 often of canister is portrayed through the prism of war. but there were many of van astound thanks to the brave individuals who risk their lives to protect it from destruction. an extraordinary film archives spun for decades, reviews the forgotten truth of the country's modern history. the forbidden real part to the communist revolution on a jessina. examining the impact of today's headlines. this was probably one of the deadliest disasters in the history of setting the agenda for tomorrow's discussions. this is the one that's been hitting 50 sharing personal stories for
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a global audience. can you talk a little bit about what life is like for african eliminate programs that open your eyes to an alternative view of the world today. which is dara lou ah, from one of the top stories, yoga 0. iran, the supreme leader, ayatollah ali. how many says the poisoning of school girls in his country is an unforgivable crime which should be punished by death if deliberate meridian m. p says more than 5000 students have been poisoned since november. the bangladesh authorities are investigating the cause of the latest major fire in a ring,
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a refugee camp in cox's bazaar of 2000 holmes were destroyed. and it's exactly a month since 2 major earthquakes. hit southern to a kia and northwest syria, killing 151000 people, and flattening in time. neighborhoods to key is opposition. alliance is named kamala kennedy to renew the head of the republican peoples party as its joint candidate to run against president richard. tie up, add to one in may's election. after splintering on friday for its choice of candidate. the 6 party coalition was united behind 74 year old killers. gerald. he's been the leader of the main opposition party, the c h 3 since 2010. and his last 3 elections to add a one poll, suggest it will be a tight presidential race where the cost of living crisis, rampant inflation, and years of economic turmoil eroding support for ada $111.00. we bought it as the heads of the political party to make up the national alliance. we have
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agreed on the road map, the transition to destruct good parliamentary system, didn't no more cynical sooner has more from ankara. they have been some disagreements among the opposition, whites and members, especially after friday. the 2nd largest part to leader men election are threatened to pull out from the alliance as, as she was suggesting that the candidates should be either is stumble, miracle's mom, older or encore, a mere monastery of ice because according to the public balls and those 2 measures had a bigger chance to win against president ridge update on. finally, we see that the main opposition leader has succeeded reuniting. and those parties again, they have announced his presidential candidacy today. and he pledge that all other 5 members opposition, member parties leaders will also become vice president,
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including if someone made i can move along and on kind of made love to realize at least 9 police officers have been killed in a suicide bomb attack. in southwestern pakistan, it happened in the catch district of bo, she's don province. several others were injured in one of the deadliest attacks on security forces. in recent monks authorities say the bomber was riding a motorcycle and rammed into a police truck. i saw the pakistani taliban and other separatist groups are active in that area. and stage frequent attacks. universities in afghanistan have reopened after the winter break, but the taliban authorities are still barring women from attending. foreign ministers and rights groups have condemned the restrictions which united nations is called gender, apartheid victoria getting the report another set back for the women of afghanistan. this is oliver. it's the start of a new university term, but only men are allowed to attend. many here at cobble university urging the
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authorities to reconsider from charla donovan. i am hopeful that the elders and the officials of the islamic emirates of afghanistan will allow our sisters to continue their studies. because it's there is la mic right. it came on madison missouri now that we don't have female students, one part of our society is prospering, while the other ones left behind is a female students are allowed, our society will improve hunger precedes the taliban government band women from higher education 3 months ago after accusing female students of ignoring a strict dress code and a requirement to be accompanied by a male relative to and from campus. this being wide spread international condemnation of the band, but no sign of a change in that decision. there's an element of all of this coming from the taliban insistence to try and distinguish themselves from the previous regime in afghanistan. try and show their constituents to this of autism fighters in
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particular. ah, that they are not like the previous government since it returned to power in 2021. the taliban has also banned girls under 18 from going to school prohibited women from working for 8 organizations and banned women from parks. jim's and public baths writes groups. you support african women say it's had a devastating impact on afghan society state where these women are now in afghanistan, i just hope they're safe. and if they're outside the winds, and it's just not the way the world should be in this day and age should never in the way the world should be. and i don't understand. i don't understand the thinking behind it. i just don't. after the taliban took power enough, ganawe's down it promised women fundamental rights 18 months, so it's systematically excluding them from public life. victoria gate and b al jazeera nice in the u. s. city of atlanta, of arrested 35 people after
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a protest against a new police training facility, turned violent officials described part of the demonstration as a coordinated attack after march of cocktails and bricks were thrown at police. but just as cool facility comp city as they could cause environmental damage and worsen relations between police and communities of color. but just as plan of further week of action against the site. 100 unaccompanied miners. most of them from guatemala, had been found inside an abandoned trailer. in the mexican state of vera cruz, the authorities say more than $240.00 adults from guatemala honduras, salvador and ecuador were also found in the truck. the trader had fans and ventilation ports cut into the roof, and migrants will color coded wristbands toward end for them as the clients of smugglers. since the beginning of last year, there's been a significant increase in the number of people from central america trying to cross into mexico get more or less from that money revenue in mexico city. so my know
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what do we know about that more we know, but that's what appears to be a case of humans smuggling on a large scale. that's the operative term. they're lower and on a large scale because we don't always see these large numbers, 343 migrants stuffed into the back of a trick of a freight truck. that's very, that's a very big number. the last, the latest information that we're receiving from mexico's national immigration institute confirms that number 343 migrants, 103 of them reportedly to be on a company miners, the freight truck, the freight truck was found abandoned in the mexican state of beta cruise with cruise is one of mexico's eastern states. it's also a popular route for migrants from southern mexico, from central america, migrants from south america that are making the way through mexico trying to reach the united states. stuffing migrants in the back of freight trucks, unfortunately is also fairly common, not only in their crews, but in different parts of mexico. it's one of the principal ways that human
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smugglers are finding ways to secretly hide people inside of vehicles and, and move them across mexico. into the united states, you know, lauren, as soon as we heard this story, i think the news lines coming out of vera cruz immediately made us here at the mexico, al jazeera bureau. think of another story that we cover just last year in june in san antonio. texas, across the border in the united states were 53 migrants were found dead in the back of a freight truck having died of exposure of extreme heat as fixation. and fortunately, even though this cases eerily similar to what happened in, in san antonio, where the driver of that truck fled the seed, all $343.00 of the migrants in this case were found unharmed. as far as we know, everyone was alive. no one was harmed in that partly has to do with something that you explained there in your introduction, which is the fact that there was a ventilation system sort of pointing to a level of sophistication of these human smugglers. one other thing that we should,
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that we should note is those color coded wristbands. sort of gives you an idea of the type of, of, of tactics that they employ these, these humans smuggling networks. oftentimes they're very sophisticated, they're very large criminal groups. often they're associated with cartels that have found that it is that they can make more money smuggling human beings that they, than they can smuggling drugs into the united states. and again, we don't always see these large numbers, 343 migrant stuff to the back of a truck. that is a lot of people but, but we do see this happening is we do see incidents like these playing out almost every month just last month. a month that a 14 migrants were killed when a truck fell into a canal, the migrants died of the back of that truck drowned february 19th. in the mexican state of war, haka 15 migrants killed during a road accident involving a bus filled with migrants there. and again, unfortunately, these are instances that are likely to continue to occur because every year, tens of thousands of migrants from southern mexico,
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from central and south america are placing their lives in the hands of human smugglers. because more often than not, they do make their way into the united states. we don't always hear about these cases of large scale human smuggling, because most of the time people make it, it's only when these large accidents are these large numbers of people are found by authorities. do we hear about this on the news? and ultimately at the end of the day, we know that human smugglers know that it is big business to move people illegally across mexico into the united states every year or upper. thank you very much. indeed. police in ecuador struggling to contain a months long wave of organized crime. the country has become a transport hub for the multi $1000000000.00 cocaine trade to the united states and europe. and it's under m p a t reports in the city of kil, where those worst hit by the violence of a young and the pool police traffic stops in ecuador, largest city way a keel are far from routine these days. armed officers where bullet, profess,
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and most have their face is covered as they look for drug gang members that have been terrifying the city record. today, they found a possibly legal gun in this s u. v. was missing. in january, we arrested 145 people in this neighborhood alone. we found more than 18 weapons short and large. we want people to feel safe. i travel this way. keel has become the epicenter of a turf war among national and international gangs. bombings and killings have become daily occurrences as it sport as turned into the main transport hub. for cocaine trafficking echoed those geographic position between the world's 2 main, cocaine producers, peru, and columbia. the use of us dollar us currency and corrupted. both state institutions made it ideal for the drug cartels. at wowza, ecuador used to be a safe country in 2017. we had $5.00 homicides per 100000 inhabitants. now it's
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almost 5 times that what it shows is that the government didn't take the necessary 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 busty, as 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 cobra 19 and a mc we saw organized crime gangs becoming stronger and stronger at a time of high unemployment they offered a way to survive. now fear one fiddle leave your house to denounce, 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 grants on turning damage to the cannon fodder of their turf wars. in response, some residents of organized the free football school to try and keep kids away from the lore of using and dealing drugs. but the organisers fails us anonymously for
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fear of retaliation. that is not enough. donia, they can say, i know we had a recent case of a kid 15 years old, who felt for the money he was offered. you know, they think it's the best they can 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. allison gonna be at the, and jesse why ecu cutting edge gene therapies could become more accessible in the coming years. the practice has been discussed by scientists and policy makers of the human genome editing conference in london journal reports. victoria grey isn't used to the limelight a mom from mississippi. she's now the star attraction that the human genome editing summit in london. here to describe the treatment that's changed her life. i think it is a great thing who doesn't want a good quality of life,
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where you don't have to suffer because my disease i being who i was just going head into the, into her pain and hospital stays. it was a life they feel wasn't work leading. victoria has been cured of debilitating sickle cell disease by an experimental gene editing treatment. her story represents a major advance with implications for millions born with the red blood disease each year. inherited diseases like sickle cell, cystic fibrosis and huntington's, begin as variations in genes, the codes in human dna that tell the body how to make cells. new tools like the so called crisper system confined cut and replace faulty parts of genes to deliver a corrected genetic code. senior research is like fyodor or enough for see a world in which crisper is able to provide a rapid cure for the genetic mutations that encounters the next horizon. the next,
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the break for, for us as a community, is to take that amazing technology and make it available, manufactured at such scale for the 10s of millions around the world who have a mutation that needs to be crisper. today, it is a goal that raises important ethical concerns with one of the greatest concerns is that we're really moving into what many people would call potentially not yet, but soon. a soft eugenics in which it's not just what do you want? have a baby, it's what kind of baby do you want to have and you know, the potential for enhancement is there to be clear. no one is if somebody is talking about eugenics. in fact, when a chinese scientist announced, and it's very 4 or 5 years ago that he'd onto the genetic makeup of embryos in a lab. and then brought them to turn it around. cement was met with shock and outrage. i felt like i have nothing to lose out the end, but very precise editing of genetic code to treat and cure read diseases is making
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its way from the experimental to the practical will be at currently at enormous cost. the next great challenge is to make it accessible and affordable walk. journal al jazeera london. still, i had this news, our cultural icon and the philippines most popular form of transport. say, why have jeep the drivers going on week long strike? and his sport, chaotic scenes hit the season, opening indie car series race in florida. ah ah, with
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drivers and operations of the philippines most popular made of charles bought orange strike jeep needs of small many buses known as the king of the road. the government wants to modernize them. the drivers say the cost is to hi, on or below reports gwinnett, et cetera. motors workshop in manila, gps taking form. but it's a custom unit for private client. it's been years since one of the oldest and biggest manufacturers of the famous philippine public transport has assembled one for commuters. there's been no demand since the government rolled up plans to scrap cheap nice. the gps are wrong. it's been around for about probably 60 or 70 years, and they're trying to change the face of the metropolis by figuring it out and putting up the more learned your delivery. you said i was garage is a museum of sorts of the philippine gibney from the brightly colored sixty's
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version. so the artsy eighty's model, even the original american willis from the 2nd world war. but transportation officials had said, a majority of jeep needs are no longer road worthy, and had been pushing for these many buses instead to replace them. on monday jeep me, drivers and operators began a week long strike to protest against to plant. they say they simply cannot afford the price. mcgayden obama, but how much is 1? $47000.00, then units for those mean the buses would cost more than $470000.00. or did we get that amount? just hours into the strike. however, the government changed his plan in we will not base out that he should not getting this anymore, but they will be subject to modifications. so they can confirm the national standards. manufacturers say it's not going to be easy. we don't know where to get
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the euro for engines or the electric power train that is not concrete detail under program. that's. that's a thought it will be a hard time for everyone to abide the modernization program. and then there's the question of the cost land transportation bureau estimates. it will be half the value of a new mini bus. that's around $23000.00. them out, many drivers in operators don't have. but for now, the g, the remains he of the road aren't below al jazeera manila is only one spot. thank you so much lornel chelsea's manager in se, se is enjoying the pressure of the european champions league. graham potter has the chance to revive his team season with a win against prussia dormant shall see. yeah. did actually be leads in a premier league on saturday, only their 2nd victory and 11 games. he's facing additional scrutiny because the club a spent more than $600000000.00 on new players in the us cup of transfer. wind ice
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. the position we renew should always welcome the pressure because it means una in a, in a fantastic situation, which is to compete for the last night at the chambers. lee, it's so wonderful. competition funds are um, of course, always entitle for them to where they're views and, and, and they've been suffering like the rest of us have in terms of what the results were hot. but i thought they were sexual. we had and the support we have the weekend was fantastic. well dormant r v form. same in european football. having won all their matches in 2023 german side. have a wonderful advantage heading into the 2nd leg of this last 16 tie in london. we are home and beings, we can play always or best football and but, but you can answer that. we are therefore, each other that we fight as a team and b a team and i think we deserve to nourish bastard rick, sir. excellent passenger man strike can name or look at to mr. rest of the season.
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be 31 year old. picks up an ankle injury during a league game against the last month. the brazilian now needs to undergo surgery and the french champion site could be 3 or 4 months before he can even regime training. now manchester united manage erickson hark is described as teams. performance against liverpool on sunday, as unprofessional and unacceptable. united last 7 nailed, sullivan went on, feel the heaviest to fate against their biggest rivals and hog, say, now after regroup. ahead of iraq police high against rail. betty, on thursday or a small has been talking to scotland legend and bin sports analyst andy grey about what this result means for both things. i thought yesterday on yesterday's performance, liverpool was sensational. they were, they were back to the liverpool that had won the premier league. there were back to the liverpool that caught belt, full of energy, a high octane football and manchester that you couldn't corporate it. so liverpool
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on. yes, this performance definitely back. as much as you they did. wow. what could the see about their performance? the what did you use? abysmal comes to me. they just didn't produce a single thing. i tried to think yes. are there one mind? yes. you need to player that played well yesterday, and i couldn't think of one, but so bad. they were so they were awful yesterday what they've got for big games coming up to again trail betters the please. south hampton, at old trafford, the weekend and that's the massive game. the got to go and beat so fast and beat them well to sure the funds are bike. but the one thing that jen, hi guess, father, he was right, that performance yesterday from my jesse native is unacceptable. okay, now you yourself have scored goals at an field, but i want to ask you what with your peg of the goals last night. and i'll tell you when i like cody golf course. second. okay. i'm the fuck goal in the game. i think it was, it was the way it was constructed. that was, it was liverpool at the very, very best you know, a jordan henderson. and suddenly they've got, look at sheila,
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it just leaves shore. and then you think about where's, where's gap? co, who's are going to get, is you going to get some, he embarrassed is one of the best defenders in the premier league here. lexia and suddenly gap coke of that and that's a magnificent venue. so that go there. said to me that's liverpool at a very, very best in transition take. he was absolutely unbelievable to me. this is when the best defenders in the league on his feet didn't stay there for very long. and maybe this kid now is just that i have a little bit of a problem to the coding gap cope. this is what is the best perform is last night. and when you take the front men, father sat there, selah, nunez, and capital, and they're all score 2 goals each than the coach can only be. but very happy tennis will not one of a shock which is pulled out of the upcoming indian wells torments in united states . the serve is unable twins, the country because he is in facts and it's still against harvard. 1935 rose application for a special waiver has been denied, which also i missed last his us open because of his vaccination status. ukrainian
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mark the caustic on her 1st w. c. a title at this event in austin after the match, was to refuse to shake hands with her russian opponents of r for shaver. instead dedicated victory to her country and all the people who are fighting and dying, quote owing rushes invasion of crime. steph curry is made his return from injury. the golden state warriors the 34 year old has been out of action for the last month . or the spot is best of us in this game. kerry couldn't prevent his team from falling to a narrow loss against the lake is the running in bay champions. 5th in the western conference right now, 17 games left in the regular and the season opening in the car series races somewhat chaotic as we'll see, one drive at the hospital to cause going a bomb. and 9 competitors knocks out because of crushes sweden's markets. erickson did manage to avoid most of the drama, and he took the race victory. okay,
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that is facebook. so he's now let's get back to lauren inland. thank sandy. now to south australia where a petrol station worker was left stunned. when an unusual customer had been browsing the aisles took a liking to him as curious, koala spent 40 minutes inside the woodside petrol station. in the adeline adelaide hills, before one ly services safely took it away. while you pill walked all around the store before getting behind the counter, where he tried to climb up a store worker's leg. and what's it made, aren't i the 1st news up? i'll be back in a minute with more of this news. thanks for watching bye for now. ah ah.
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a launch on a just 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 until cut through the headlines to challenge conventional wisdom. 20 years on from the start of iraq war, we examined how the past 2 decades have shape the country and the major challenges confronting future generations. documentaries, that inspire witness brings work tissues into focus through compelling human story amid widespread industrial action and the cost of living prices. the u. k. government speaks a way to turn around it's faltering economy march on
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a jesse era. the dumpling in baldwin is an important part of indian culture. it's no surprise and many people want to book in the industry. one's on that and one side about family expectations and cultural tradition, i guess the way. now that was i was with the reality of working in the giving industry body with power lines our wow, we live here, we make the rule, not them. people empower, investigate, exposed it, and question the youth and abuse of power around the globe on al jazeera. what's most important to me is talking to people understanding what they're going through here. it al jazeera, we believe everyone has a story worth hearing. ah.
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