Skip to main content

tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 11, 2023 1:00pm-2:00pm AST

1:00 pm
if they talk about our senior consult with us inside story on al jazeera, al jazeera goes beneath the waves with a team of women determined to save the dolphins. we all share the same responsibility when needed. something lee was acting amazing on him or using a variety of scientific techniques to study their behavior. we can monitor them for their ball, photos and behavior. we're able to how they're adapting for their new environment. women make science dolphin sanctuary on al jazeera. ah ah hello, i'm 0 then. yeah, it's great to have you with us. this is the news. our live from doha. coming up in the show today. it's been 3 years since the corona virus outbreak was declared
1:01 pm
a pandemic. we'll be looking at how life is changed in juan, where the virus was 1st detected. i'm gabriel's onto a new york, a place that was once the global epa center of the covert pandemic. 3 years on what were the lessons learned and is this city ready for the next one? also ahead of us bank, that funded tech start ups is shut down by regulators raising fears. more financial institutions could be at risk. and how sanctions on russia are creating new opportunities for entrepreneurs. i'm devin ashworth, sport. india's basses fight back on day 3 of the full tasks against australia and barcelona accused of corruption, eva years of payments were former referees official. ah, so it's been 3 years since the world health organization declared
1:02 pm
a pandemic following the outbreak of kobe 19. the 1st signs of the virus were detected in the chinese city of war, hunt, why life is returning to normal. there. governments in health experts around the world is still divided about the origins of the virus. katrina, you reports from beijing. the city of hon today is bustling, but the strict group of virus locked out employers 3 years ago is clearly remembered by it's 11000000 residents, including shopping will manager, mark leo. your history and shipping will go off. so there was a lot of information that wasn't clear to me was we were very close to the outside world. and how have you been coping with algebra interviewed him at the time as he did his best to keep his young son busy. one was the 1st city in the world to be locked down because of the spread of covered 19. on march 11th 2020, the world health organization declared the outbreak. append demik and various governments demanded answers regarding its origin. in 2021, china finally allowed
1:03 pm
a team of w h o experts to visit with han, but the trip was short and tightly controlled measures. beijing said were necessary for preventing the spread of corbet. 19. china was the last country to drop it. strict. corbett 19 rules at the end of last year. and now life in many cities looks very much like it did before the pandemic. but we're still no closer to knowing the exact source of the grown of ours. and the w h o says a plant 2nd phase of the investigation has been cancelled citing challenges in conducting the study. politicians in the u. s. had accused paging of a cover up the f b. i says a lab leak was likely the u. s. energy department agrees, though with low confidence, chinese officials have dismissed the findings as political height. some health experts say the hunt for patient 0 is an unhelpful distraction. we have been so distracted by trying to change the style though we're not faking the actions that
1:04 pm
we need to stop it from happening again. and so i think our focus should be on, let's think, systematic me about where we can reduce risks. i mark leo says he's just relieved his work and his family's lives have returned to normal. whether he's hunger, you or whether it's business, we're studies or we're working harder than before. and i'm making up for lost time . like many living in the hon. he wants to focus on the future and not the past. katrina, you al jazeera beating. as coven 19 spread to the us in early 2020 new york city quickly became the epicenter. gabriel elizondo reports on what lessons were learned . 3 years on the state of emergency in new york city, new york had just surpassed 7000 covey cases. the most cases in the state and 35 cove, it related deaths. this is overwhelming, the cities, hospitals, and 1st responders. the virus was spreading fast. the number of cases doubling in
1:05 pm
the new york city area overnight. beer was setting in the community spread dynamic is unpredictable and worrisome. then governor andrew cuomo had seen enough and did the unthinkable and ordered new york to be shut down completely. it was march 20th, 2020. today we're bringing it to 100 percent of the workforce must stay home. and when i talk about the most drastic action we can take, this is the most drastic action we can take. new york would soon become the global epicenter of the coven outbreak. 3 years on, in 6500000 coven cases, and more than 61000 deaths later, what lessons have been learned this pandemic, as a silent pandemic associated with it. and those are the individuals that have gotten infected with cobra. 1900 are suffering from a long covey, and even those individuals that have recovered from their initial infection and now
1:06 pm
are at higher risk for cardiovascular and lung damage and liver damage and kidney damage. but she also points to 4 other lessons. first, the strain on hospital staff and supplies, 2nd, changing people's behavior with social distancing and mask wearing. 3rd, how covert hit the economically disadvantaged, harder than others, and forth. how misinformation affected the pandemic response. there are some positive lessons before the pan make. it was widely believed, it took at least 5 to 10 years to create a new vaccine and then bring it to market. but with a covert 19 vaccine, it proved that it can happen in a lot less time. it's kind of incredible to think about just how rapidly we had functional vaccines for the nation and network then able to contribute to society. new york's current governor kathy hoko last month ended the mask mandate in
1:07 pm
hospitals that had been in place for nearly 3 years. but her office still sends out daily cove. it updates on average, around 10 people still die every day in the state. that was once the epicenter. gabriel's ando, al jazeera new york. throughout the day, we're looking at the global impact of coven 193 years on. so will be in kenya and india. this our as 1st go to pathname, italy in nevada, near new delhi. but me is india better equipped today to tackle another pandemic? so india has seen some of the most devastating scenarios play out since the pandemic began 3 years ago screening and already tread bear health care system though was wave of corporate 19 was in the summer of 2021 in a span of just 2 or 3 months housings of people died x plus estimate that the
1:08 pm
actual death towed was significantly higher. the greatest tragedy is that some of these death war preventable possibles ran out of beds. families was scrambling to get oxygen supply at the government was criticized for not being adequately prepared for being caught off guard. prime minister marines movie was also criticized for hoarding election rallies. now since then, the scenario has changed drastically. case load has job, daily debt still has gotten as a stop and hospitals like the one we are at say they don't have an equal with 1000 patients admitted. now i do have with me a doctor, manasseh, god, who is the director of homology here at for this hospital. so no mosque wearing really, very few restrictions is in doubt of the woods. so i think you must building is still very much then, especially for hospital settings. we still were mosque, but the craziness, the board, everybody having to we had
1:09 pm
a mosque every day is probably out a number of cases are still around, but the probably the aren't sick enough to win new hospitals. so we just need to be alert and is indeed better prepared to handle another surge of colbert 19 cases or another pandemic. i'm sure, yes, because one, we have a very good penetration of vaccination. although the 1st of those is of gone well the booster southern when dickens are well by the population, we are much more prepared in terms of oxygen supplies to all the hospitals across the country. and we are prepared mentally how to deal with a big sized phantom lake, but is the hospital system the health care system, particularly in rural areas, better equipped to handle an influx of patients not just proven 19, but any other virus the health care system doesn't get changed overnight, so the changes it across the country and during small of less,
1:10 pm
lydia's is something which is going to dig a lot of effort sustained for to what a long, bitter time. so epidemic are handling and it be domingo panoramic being one part of it. so the family health centers are village, hospitals will be the 1st ones to notice. in some new cases are new disease happening. what's important is to hook them up to bigger centers. so that sort of millions of these diseases can be done, including genetic mapping to see if there is a new way in the providers. that he wasn't only wanting. and that can make a big difference to how we handle the next. find them going to be hitting us so until then, as the doctor said, keep reading marks, get you back. nations. that is what he has ordered in guy is definitely fad. fighting a lot better, you know, a few months ago, few years ago, but it's still not out of the woods. my problem, the retail reporting from new delhi, thank you very much to you and your guest. malcolm webb now is in the canyon
1:11 pm
capital nairobi malcolm. 3 years on has the continent recovered from the pandemic? will almost half of the death recorded were in south africa, which was hit hard as some other middle income countries like brazil and india. south africa is relatively good. public healthcare system was brought to its knees and the cemetery filled up. some of its neighbors were hit fairly hard as well. that scientists had predicted. it would be devastating throughout the rest of the continent because of crowded city and a lack of public health care. but that didn't happen, testing rates were low, but the recorded fatalities were low and there was no overwhelming evidence of a lot of on counts. it's death. and while vast sums were spent on researching cove, it, most of that money was targeted in richer countries. in the low fatalities in africa still haven't been fully explained,
1:12 pm
but what was devastating for much of the continent was the impact of international travel restrictions which brought tourism and trade to a standstill. made it even harder. people from this continent to visit europe and america because of those travel restrictions and the local locked downs and rural, so stifling for trade and for the economy. many of those locked downs were in force, brutally by soldiers and police. people were killed including here in kenya, and just as those precious dos to lift the conflict in ukraine will high fuel prices, high grain price is a shortage of fertilizer. the worst drought in decades is affecting east in the horn of africa. just more shocks on the economies into the state. many economies in africa. i still haven't recovered malcolm, thank you very much. with the perspective there from the african continent. we appreciate that helen reese now is professor at this university in south africa. she is the chair of w h o africa regional vaccine advisory group in joining us from johannesburg today
1:13 pm
. thank you for being on the program. what's the number one lesson you learned from this pandemic? well, i think the number one less from the world learned was that we were not prepared despite the fact that we had had a bona in 2014 and countries had made quite a lot of efforts to become prepared with a set of regulations called the international health regulations that and advisors countries and what you need to do, we weren't prepared. we had weak surveillance, weak lab systems, and we have weak health systems that simply were not prepared for the number of patients that came in. and this lack of preparedness, i would argue it was true in high income countries and in low and middle income countries and a large countries and small countries. so i think that was the biggest lesson that we've learned. and that's what people are now focusing on with a pandemic record. to say we can't do this again. next time round. we must learn
1:14 pm
the lessons and be better prepared, but perhaps i can cheat and give you a 2nd huge lesson. go ahead. thank you. well, this is the whole lesson about inequity. certainly, where i'm sitting in the african region. while vaccines were hoarded in high income countries, with twice as many vaccines even 3 times as many vaccines as were required for the population. we sat for months down here, having no vaccines with huge delays. and the result of that was that when the vaccines eventually came, because we have a young population, many young people just shrugged their shoulders and said, we don't need a vaccine. now, if this thing has been and gone, so the inequity of access to resources was true for vaccines. it was true for therapeutics, it was true for diagnostics. and so a big lesson is that we don't know where the next pandemic has. the gen will come
1:15 pm
from, it's likely to be from a low midland come country. it's likely that it might be again, a jump from an animal species into a human species. but if we don't actually focus on that inequity next time, we are never going to be able to control the pandemic because you can't have part of the world's regions. high income, protected when you've got a virus or a bacteria being very prevalent in another area with an shuttle it will spread. but so how and give me your honest assessment. do you feel that we've made any progress as far as tackling inequity? do you feel that if the same thing were to happen again to day, we would act differently, vaccines would get the lower income countries any faster? and i think it's a very fair question. and i think there's an inevitability for presidents, prime ministers, the world over that if you have something you're manufacturing in your country and you have a population, there would be
1:16 pm
a huge expectation from your own constituency that you would prioritize them 1st. but having said that, there's now a huge dialogue going on around a pandemic record. and part of that is to say, how do we get better equity? the other thing i think that has happened is for the 1st time we've seen real political leadership on this in the african region. for example, the leaders of the african union have, who are the presidents and the leaders of the countries in the region have now recognized that because of this inevitable that he, that pete, the countries would hold back. and you wouldn't get large quantities, you would get thumb probably now, but not large quantities, for example of vaccines. there's now a huge emphasis on strengthening regional manufacturing. in the african region, we've already seen the establishment of the m r n. a vaccine hubs being developed now at, at a speed, so that we can start to both develop vaccines ourselves and manufacture them. and
1:17 pm
not only for coven, but vaccines for the region, because at the moment in the african region, any about point one percent of the vaccines we used to manufactured him. so the good news is, i think that there is a pandemic record. that is trying to talk about equity and trying to tackle this in a complex environment and that there is manufacturing and a focus on research and development in low and middle income countries, which wasn't there previously. i how and re so joining us professor at this university in south africa. thank you very much. and there's plenty more to come on . the news our including looking at how children and syria have been effective psychologically following years of war and the recent birthways and in sport, there is a big upset in tennis, the indian wells that is coming up with jenna later that ah,
1:18 pm
the united nations is warning about the psychological impact of february's powerful earthquakes in southern turkey and northern syria. almost 4000000 children live in the affected areas of syria. and the un says that they've lost any sense of safety . after enduring years of war, they know harder spoke to some of the children in the opposition controlled northwest. they know how to reports. many of the victims of february's earthquakes at his southern turkey and northern syria were children. those who survived still live the tragedy. mohammed abdulla, as from the syrian village of n shorter, he lost his parents and other members of his family. he also lost his hand. this young boys life has turned upside down and allowed my farm field while on the look and see whether my mother she or, or the marble but a mom. and then that the record i only for had obeyed also lost his parents. he's
1:19 pm
now living with his uncles family, so the whole family of the bottle saw them wildly. well, i mean, it was gone. well we all the natural disaster has had an emotional toll on children in the opposition and cliff in northwest syria. some of them have still not healed from living through war. now they say they need to heal from a different kind of experience. for had says he can't forget his father's last words. i will have them believe jolla or guys telephone oh meet. nice. you don't get on regarding meet gather john away. i'm sure it. oh who it just, joel. it actually mothers muscle to were funny. like our her look as a plot i usually most duck. a who bought busy sir william the united nation says more than 3700000 children across syria have been affected by the quakes. and it
1:20 pm
says, many will need psychological support. they've lost any sense of safety, while many others are displaced yet again. and there are those who find themselves alone. whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, one or 2, or hang on to that because mohammed lost many of his friends in the earthquakes. said other l shakita antonio victorino is the director general of the international organization for migration. the i o m. he's in, i'm taco and turkey and he's with us live sir. you say the response to the quake has moved into a new phase. what do you mean by that? i mean 1st, before that we need to take care of what they think the pupils in
1:21 pm
a more stable way. the phase of the tense, progressively changing into phase where they think people in the containers who release the better conditions to cheap off the apex of the earthquake access water, access to electricity is critical to resume life. and the, as your piece shown, health care and particularly psycho social support will be fundamental for the families to restart their life communities affected in syria or even more isolated than the ones in turkey. and i know you're headed for the border area with northwestern syria soon. what's the priority for them for those who are in syria? once again, we are confronted with the need to find the accommodation. you don't,
1:22 pm
you cannot forget that in west city every day. we have already almost 4000000 people who depend off internationally many that survive. and therefore those needs are even aggravated now because of the earthquake. so accommodation is critical, as well as keeping the flood of food and non food items i o. m has more than 200 trucks in the last couple of weeks after the break. but then fortunately, i must say the need very i and there are remain serious gaps to provide that an assistance to those populations. now the iowa and of course was present and working in turkey because it has millions of refugees. many of them from syria that have been living in turkey, a, in camps and intensities for a long time. you are calling on refugees in turkey to be re settled in their home countries faster so that they can be moved out of the disaster area on paper that
1:23 pm
makes sense. but in practice, many of them come from syria, which as we know, has also been hit by the quake. so how is that going to happen? the entire region has been impacted by the square, as you mention and several of the refugees move inside the kia and several of the back to syria. but in all cases, they are in need of your money that and assistance and the task off. y'all thought it based off the national community, including iowa is to provide them with that as urgently as possible. and that was said that he's one clear exam earthquake, reduce the impact in everybody's irrespective of their legal status. irrespective of that are, did you, we are all human beings and we have all been seen as the 8 by the earthquakes. and
1:24 pm
we all need on equal foot. the same kind of care, attention and protection from the international community. and that protection and that cure has to be paid for last month. the i o m asked for $160000000.00 to support it's operation. you've only received 30 percent of that. what happens if you don't get the funding? it is quite clear that this funding go $161000000.00 us dollars both for 2 year and one west. northwest tdm is for the next 3 miles. it's only addresses the most urgent need and definitely if we cannot go with the target that we have set that will be left without protection without support. we'd like saving assistance, but i'm confident that the, before the end of the mouse, there will be a conference feeling to the international community to come full and coming for means providing in kind donations as if there's already been that must say i o m
1:25 pm
itself organize more than 44 cargo blades, we kind donations of emergency assistance, but now we need to look to the future to start the recovery of the population impacted by the earthquake. and that requires the financial support of the international community and tanya renault, director general of the international organization for migration. thank you very much. iran and saudi arabia have agreed to re establish diplomatic relations and reopen embassies after 7 years of confrontation, china was instrumental in brokering the steel alexander buyers report this deal, harold, a new chapter in the middle east, bitter rivals. iran and saudi arabia agreed to restore diplomatic ties all in secret with chinese mediation. he shoes the after her kaname her. we have been here
1:26 pm
in beijing for 6 days. i held talks of my saudi counterpart that led to the agreement to normalize relations. we agreed with saudi arabia to open a new page based on the interests of the 2 countries on and on regional security and to promote stability instead of exacerbating tension. so we hope this will contribute to the establishment of security and development in the region for the historic agreement. we'll see both nations exchanging envoys, 7 years after severing relations. china's role revived a process that brought together officials from both countries in iraq and oman. during 20212022. i did on the agreement basically focus on the respecting the international law. the agreement also talk about the vienna teacher with regard to the diplomat and political and diplomatic facilities. so that is also important. it talks about respect of the sovereignty of the state, which is very important. if we take all of this in account and it says it's a new badge. so basically what we're saying,
1:27 pm
we're trying to stop all the escalation, go to discretion. now focus on the, on the unilateral relation that bring peace or security to the agent here. and that means no innovation on the domestics affairs issues from iran, and to saudi arabia, which is very important. while the deal itself could have major implications for regional security. it's also evidence of a wider shift. saudi arabia has long prioritized its alliance with the united states. disagreement highlights beijing's growing influence in the region. alexandra buyer's al jazeera. california is financial regulators have shut down silicon valley bank. this is the largest failure of the us bank since the financial crisis of 2008. it took a hit due to higher interest rates and then failed to raise fresh capital. so silicon valley bank suspended trading after its shares plummeted, and that prompted depositors to withdraw their money creating
1:28 pm
a run on the bank. there are recent developments that concern a few banks that i'm monitoring very carefully. and when banks experience financial losses, it is in should be a matter of concern. cornelius hurley, the former director of the federal home loan bank of boston, and he explains why this collapse will in his opinion not cause a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis banks around the world have seen their shares planet in the last 24 or 48 hours, but this is really a concentrated issue. i think the take away from this is a, is really a us issue. primarily it demonstrates that the coordination among the bank regulators in our system, which is complicated. we have so many players. we have the federal deposit
1:29 pm
insurance corporation, we have the then the federal reserve. we have state thinking agencies. and then lurking in the background, we have an agency that almost nobody has ever heard of which provided massive mumps of liquidity to silicon valley bank. as much as 6 months ago, i'm talking about $1314000000000.00 that could easily that could easily have been the warning sign with other regulators should have and could have picked up on the flyers in the bank where i think to fall number one. it's a highly concentrated business strategy involving technology. big got caught in the time of rising interest rates and they were dependent tremendously on short term borrowing, namely deposits. and they invested those in long term investments,
1:30 pm
which lost their value with lising. rising interest rates, still head on al 0. and in hong kong, where more people are buying the mentors and it's hard as it undergoes rapid changes. and find out how robbie's latest smart ball technology is set to change the sport that is on the way later with german. ah well has been freezing rain in minsk centimeters of snow in northern england this clearly slo wouldn't re flavor to the weather that there is still a winter storm. that's what brought the freezing rain to mince kan, this whole area is quite cold air diving south. that's what look, it looks like in sheffield several centimeters now. inordinate now during to day is going to be really, really fine. and sunny though,
1:31 pm
feeling cold. the excess no more light to be catching, denmark, norway, bits of sweden, and still the baltic states. bella ross, you'll notice warsaw gets away with the sun coming out out. maybe early morning snow there is still snow potentially in wales and northern england. was that much of this street down here is called sunshine, but we're driving everything south. so we bring the snow through during to morrow, into parts of ukraine, and then rain from dorky down towards southern greece. further back, the colds being pushed out. look at this southwest, the wind bringing rain london up to 13 pairs, up to 15 is dryer in france, getting quite hot in spain have to say. and of course, is quite hot in this a hell in north africa. look at these temperatures added to that quater breeze for the dust and sand. ah.
1:32 pm
in 543, he won a fraud, takes on the big issues. this isn't one off. he's talking about a systemic issue here. black gloves don't really matter in the police. world unflinching questions is war with rwanda 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 one al jazeera, a legacy of southern africa, colonial history family, a blend of traditional music with western instrument. i can guide all the villages of the suitable now echoes in apartheid disused mines where a new illegal gold rush has taken hold. guy has organized crime, gangs battle for control of this lucrative industry. huge that started in song too often and, and bloodshed. the accordion wars on a j 0 like
1:33 pm
the ah, ah, you are watching out 0 reminder of our headline. it's been 3 years since the world health organization declared the corona virus outbreak of pandemic. early 7000000 people across the globe lost their lives the coven. 19, since the 1st case was reported in the chinese city of one pallet, fornia, financial regulators have shut down silicon valley bank. the largest failure of the us banks in 2008. the firm failed to raise fresh capital after being effected by higher interest rates. and suspended trading after it's years plus iran and saudi arabia have agreed to re establish diplomatic relations. and reopen embassy is
1:34 pm
comes after 7 years of heightened tension and confrontation. this deal was broken by china. at least 3 people have been killed in 14 injured and a blast, enough can a stand northern bulk province. the explosion took place at a ship cultural center which is supported by iran. many journalists had been gathering you there to celebrate national journalists day earlier on thursday. the provincial governor was killed in a suicide attack in his office. a doctors without borders has temporarily closed its hospital and see they slay one of the poorest parts of haiti's capital, foul pass. this is the latest sign that gang warfare is getting worse. the united nations human rights commissioner is calling it a living nightmare. john holman, as we're on this in haiti, an already chaotic situation is getting worse. gangs is swallowing up yet. more territory is a non functioning non elect to government loses more control of the capital. the
1:35 pm
police are powerless under threat themselves. one officer told local journalists, yvonne valise that they will allen in the government, doesn't serve and protect the seat in the police. there's no reason to stay in this country because the hands of the gangs who shoot us massacres. assassinate us, and there's nothing that happens to them. his colleague living proof of what happens to some when they tried to fight back. it was those we had been conducting an operation for 3 days to dislodge the gang that was causing panic. i received 10 and 14 bullets, 6 of my stomach, 3 in my right leg, and to my left leg. they took me to hospital immediately. here, one of the men there off against a soldier from the so called 5 2nd gang, notorious like many of us for its brutality, is against fight the territory from resources. kidnappings become a daily threat for many haitians, rape a reality for women and goes with the gang soldier blamed the government will lack
1:36 pm
of it for the violence. can these and does, is gaskin we're, we will always keep our weapons until there's another government so that the country can function properly so that the authorities to polluting the country then we can decide to return our weapons. so our children have a better life than katie was already teetering on the brink of anarchy before the murder of president jo vanelle, moyse in 2021. after that, it tipped over. there have been a since to get together and international fools to try and help the police bring odor pose show the majority of patients, want it with no country wants to lead it worried of the past failures. meanwhile, things getting worse, doctors without borders. an organization used to operating was owns, his just closed it's hospital in city fillet. this interview was shot just before that. we can for example, talk about the violin confrontations that have been happening
1:37 pm
a few times since the beginning of the year. few meters in front of our hospital in sicily, in the neighbourhood of julia, an, in which our staff had to stay in the sick rekey rooms. so being able to treat patients for hours, because of the bullets that were flying over the hospital. many haitians are seeing that their only hope is to flee rickety crafts like this one, leaving the island for those who stay this little sign of a solution. on the near horizon, john home, middle out 0. i, columbia government, and elaine rebels have taken the 1st steps towards a temporary cease fire. they've agreed to start negotiating a truce. the breakthrough came during the 2nd round of peace talks in mexico city. on friday, columbus president was double petro as bowed to stop hostilities and bring total peace to the country. almost half
1:38 pm
a 1000000 people have been killed in the conflict which has raged for close to 6 decades. are central ramp. yeti reports from bertha didn't reach an agreement and a full bilateral ceasefire as hoped by president gustavo petro. but the negotiating sides have ended this 2nd round of talks in mexico with a number of substantial deals the look promising. moving forward in this difficult piece negotiations in front of a symbolic mural of mexican painter diego rivera. they have signed a 6 point agenda, a sort of roadmap for the talks. that spells out some of the most thorny issues, such as the participation of society in the talks, or the way the rebel organization is recognized as a political. i am group both very important for the yell en long. we were in then english se on is the new negotiating agenda that we are signing here is a powerful tool that we have named the mexico agreement with which we will call on all of columbia to participate in
1:39 pm
a common vision of peace. that really meant also the find the number of steps to reach that cease fire and a number of actions that the sites are promising to put in place immediately to try and reduce violence in remote that territories were also a bringing human, a fair and relief to the most affected communities. columbian vice president, france marcus, who was invited to the preceding, says, is what colombians deserve. after decades of conflict, kiddo ac, today's message is peace. and i want to tell the e l in that this is the 1st time in my life that i look in their eyes without fear . now that there is that clear agreement on the agenda that comes the most difficult part carrying get out the negotiations will now move to cuba for another round of talks at well the where the parts will start working on each of these points. and while the glass might look half empty to some here in columbia, it also shows the willingness to overcome that many obstacles that,
1:40 pm
that we made to reach peace in the country. a tens of thousands of professionals have left russia because of the war and ukraine. medical researchers who stayed at western sanctions have limited their access to technology and force them to innovate. as osama binge of aid reports, basic motor functions are difficult to master but the prosthetic hand. but asana says she's not ready to give up. his already learned to skip using both her arms. this prosthetic hand is better than the last one she had because it reads every impulse of her muscles. instead of her having to strain her arm because of the war in ukraine. russian athletes faced many restrictions, but oksana has big dreams, yet hardship by stepping piece eager, i want to get to the paralympics become a medalist and then coach the russian national team. this lab still provides prosthetics to international markets, but sanctions mean most of its clients are in the middle east, asia,
1:41 pm
the war and in so in challenges have caused supply chain issues. but the company has continued to grow to stop at a temp name. but for the machine, but we have now developed a control which allows reading potentials from the remaining tissues and with the help of ai to learn and control the prosthetic boy moving tissues and reading the optical services and the area where the tissues move up. with the conflict and last year's military draft have created under the problem, tens of thousands of professionals have left russia since the war, but many state as well. well, young larger foreigners are still here. the crisis also present an opportunity. researchers at a local university are employing artificial intelligence or a i to help diagnose colorectal cancer. one of the most common tumors in russia they've been able to get new funding because of the russian government. renewed interest in being important independent not, not there more than 40000 people in russia pathologist. the aim of our project is
1:42 pm
to automate this process in order to reduce the workload specialist to reduce the risk of human error and to enable young specialist again necessary practical experience while not risking patient diagnosis. it's, i live there in is to enter the global digital pathology market estimated to be worth more than $1300000000.00 by 2026. this counting cancerous biopsies pathologists are marking the malignant tissues to predict metastasis that is, learning the process. and with time and in the samples, it might be able to stimulate the process. and the materials required are either being locally produced or being imported from countries like india and china. the bus laid me what? in the last year we had more funding for our research projects. also, we are now thinking about why we need to buy from outside when we can do it ourselves. and that's really great. it absolutely transforms the thinking of the researcher and the project manager. so many russians like on the technological
1:43 pm
advances and research have proven life changing, and those working in the medical field and elsewhere. hopedale, persevere, despite the challenges they face from a job without the ra moscow. more customers are pushing through the doors of hong kong, the antique stores, store owners say that many people are searching for items ranging from cassette players to vintage toys and jewelry to help them reconnect with the past. just got washington reports from are gone. in a quiet alley way and shown one district is unassuming, store of as a window to hong kong past. and how important moments in history connect with the everyday lives of its people. i mean, i got boiler. this cup was distributed to kids in all gone by the colonial government parent during the coronation of queen elizabeth the 2nd in the fifty's to encourage them to drink more milk. mamma come since the queen passed away last year. i got many people want to buy these cups. now. mito opened the store nearly 20 years ago since then he seen his city change and the items in his store to i'll
1:44 pm
pass along. i normally do not need to introduce my products to the customers. they often see the beauty of these vintage products, which gives the sense of the old times in recent years, a series of political and social changes, including a crackdown on descent, have also changed hong kong thousands of emigrated since the end of 2019 tons hunting. i have some customers who are leaving hong kong, and they love to collect old furniture from government offices, but they weren't able to take these items to other countries. so they sold it to me . and in a rapidly changing environment, many young people are keen to learn more about the past. from cassette tape to old on the lopes and colonial era cutlery. shop owners say this rising demand for vintage products, seen as symbols of the territories history. some customers told al jazeera, they're specifically looking for items from hong kong to take to their new countries. i just moved to 6 months ago. so right now i'm in canada. so to come
1:45 pm
back here and just like admire and appreciate some of the hong kong histories, very special. most people come to rekey lands, antique store, to look for toys made in the seventy's, when hong kong with the largest toy manufacturer in the world today. hi your mohammed to say i played these toys when i was a kid. i feel emotionally connected to them. why do they also tell the story of old hong kong? there are also some customers who look for vintage products. they associate with their childhood memories to take with them before leaving hong kong for good. he says his store of his customers and opportunity to better understand the city's evolving identity. the chance to being still, jake had to carry those memories with them wherever they go. jessica washington al jazeera hong kong. still ahead on our 0. this news our all eyes on this ski stars she looks to break the record for the most number of world cup winds. will have details on that with gemma sport. when we come back, ah,
1:46 pm
we are all bristles, even people far away are so helping with the environment, problems in the amazon because they are consumers. i teach kids about the threats that our oceans are facing today. i've been working in earnest, trying to find ways to get this language up to the kids. want to wait. do as oh, sure. yeah. and what are you going to do to keep out of school? it's our language that keeps the rental blood. women, right. say that they have one, several back over there, fight for equality and gotten america. and i was told the things that were texting women were made a challenge in the region. ah, i will not being pro life. i won't sleep, we don't have read them evinced, don't think these about 2 weeks now. i say 3 days, journey to a show club. we wish them you cried so and destroys our country. someone needs to rebuild.
1:47 pm
oh i and that's probably more sports coverage with german. thank you 0 thought elaine, i have been accused of corruption by spanish prosecutors, a related payment to a high ranking referees official complaint was filed on friday against the club and to its former presidents, claiming boffa paid almost $8000000.00 to a company owned by a former vice president of spain's referees committee, a judge who now decide whether to take up the case boss later deny wrong doing what club barcelona said about these. well, not much these cases start
1:48 pm
a couple of weeks ago where these alleged crime was naked to the press at the very beginning. but so when the president draw up, all of us said that these was just than a pack because football team, we're doing great big we're leaving legal and very close to be in the spanish couple final. and they said that they admitted the payments, but they said that there was to get reports about young, punish football, talents, and do have information about referees. but you know, in a legal way to know how to prepare the games in the way that the referees act they have and they said they will be doing formal b press conference. but the 2 weeks happens and there's no explanation yet. but, but the thing is that the reports lead to the press, they don't only talk about these years of 2016, 2018. but that these payments could be happening for over 2
1:49 pm
decades. natalie rivals been the spanish competition. the rest of the themes and the ref, forties themselves, they want an explanation. also the members. so bob, so not because it's a clap owed by their members. they want these to, to have a, an official explanation because the truth is that they just the beginning of corruption case, but the smell so bad and it smells so much of corruption because at the end of the day. so now we're paying for over 20 years to the number 2 of the chief of the spanish referees. britton's highest profile football show, match of the day is in crisis after the b, b. c took present, a gary nika, of air for breaking the broad costs. impartiality rules, it followed his tweet, criticizing the u. k. government's new asylum policy. since the b b. c asked him to step away from this, we show that it was fellow pundits and commentating team have all refused to take pos as well. there is a former england captain who played football, selena,
1:50 pm
i'm tottenham, he's presented matches a day for 24 years and is the highest pays out the baby. see in italy into the land title. i have all ended off the shock defeats, they were beaten to want to wipe, betsy relegation swept into had already missed the penalty when daniel mousy need betsy, are in front really call this score penalty is level it up with 7 minutes left into gave away another one and a ballot, and zola scored it to when it suspect the liaison in just a 2nd. 15 points behind leaders, napoli, you play atlanta on saturday in this credit as a battling hard in the full test against australia. schumann deal hit to 2nd test 100 before eventually falling for a 128. that came in that decrease approaching 50 india 258 for 3. still some way behind australia. big 1st title,
1:51 pm
400. 83. it meets when this shit where the series, while india and the victory to join australia in the final was now to tennis, found there was a big shock because indian wells was 2nd seed is definitely fits the past was knocked out in the 2nd round. the greek 12 number 3 was up against australian jordan thompson. in his opening match of the tournament. the past have been struggling with a shoulder injury since reaching the australian open finally in january. and he lost the 1st set. but he battled back to take it to a site the decider, but it was something that runs 87 in the world who wanted to break any his 2nd victory over the top 10. something that into the 3rd round for the 1st time. well have a qualify, i'm very traveling. been on a bit of a run of matches and i felt confident even even playing in the top 10 play i felt comfortable in my own skin and what i was doing and just knock out a when darnell mad. whatever is the most inform player in men's tennis right now,
1:52 pm
having won his last 3 tournaments, the 5th said have no problem getting past brandon. next she'd love to reach round 3 and extend his winning streak russian faces in the women's elemental strain. and i've been champion arena. blanca is into the round of 33. she be getting over dina, and straight and dropping just 2 games along the way. i think it's likely it 2 of the well, the top the 3 gulf as won't be competing in the final 2 rounds of the players championship rank, john rom is definitely out after withdrawing through illness while rowing mcroy i've been struggling to make because micro is 5 shots, the drift of the projected mach with 8 holes of his 2nd round left to play. he's 14 shots behind miss month joint need a christian, because even out he was at a time to fall through 14 holes. one play was suspended juice about whether the south african top salita both long side counted as adam spencer. and you still how
1:53 pm
7 holds left of his 2nd round jordan speak is one of those who managed to complete his round and the out of very lucky bright gone. his final whole it's t shirt was heading for the water before bouncing off the spectators. ne, i'm back on to the fairway while he would end up shipping in for a crucial eagle to ensure he'd make the cop. hi guys, me extremely lucky, very phone number 9. i wouldn't be playing weekends. so trying to try and get that guys information and see literally whatever he wants this weekend because everything from here on out is because it hit him. so yeah, very fortunate can say i deserved it, but i try to hold, hold my attitude together and just keep on focusing on try and one for the other. and i don't know if that means i got rewarded for that, or what rub visa 6 nations,
1:54 pm
have a huge class coming up later with england and france. the french are favorites and currently right 2nd in the world behind allan who beat them in the last much, but they not want to 6 nations game it took and since 2005 it's been a long time. and i think it just shows the task the immense task we face always special for you to play facing from the dismissal, from the division for them. and it's always a good reputation for us to rugby has led the way in the use of technology. and the latest innovation being used that the 6 nations could revolutionize ford across the world pool race reports. for the be faithful in europe, occasions don't come much bigger than the 6 nations. its traditions of unity and friendship, even among rivals. it's attract hundreds of thousands of families each year in the
1:55 pm
past, in the world, best all in the world, most time gets a little tough. so it's probably the big a good talk to you. we've changed the 3 digits up in another rugby tradition is a plane. aaron approach to technology and the sport is leading away again at the 6 nations kicking off another tech revolution on the pitch. this is a smart ball. it contains a micro chip that tracks its movements, its speed, even how much it's spinning. unlike rigby is previous innovations, it could eventually change out of the sports or played officiated and watched sensors around the field receive signals from the my car chip and send them to technicians from the bowls designers sponsible. so we have a jordan and connell out here on the pitch, passing back and forth, and instantly i can see the data coming through on our system. george is going to do a pause there, mimicking a scrum off. so we can see that i'm his pulse was no point 3 seconds. graham reload, which is pretty quick. the data is handled by analytics company sage,
1:56 pm
which also works in cricket, and major league baseball, giving teams instant insights into the effectiveness of their tactics and their players. during the match. the idea came from format nasa scientist, peter, who simeha while he was watching a game of ice hockey. the problems faced in rugby are similar problems faced by a lot of bull sports. it's being able to track the bowl to know the bulls doing and how the players are manipulating it. in real time, we're trying to give teams the tools they need to monitor player performance with respect to kicking and passing for fans. being able to know instantly the territory gained the distance and in the last pot was we're trying to give referees another set of eyes. there are many problems at the small pool can solve out the box that a human just can't. the bulls have u. s. b inputs and can currently be seen charging on the sidelines of the 6 nations earlier tech introduced by rugby such as video referees took almost 20 years to be adopted by football. the design has hype, other sports will be plugging and playing with a smart bowl
1:57 pm
a lot sooner than that. pull rece out is era london to the ambia in the western conference leading. denver nuggets have been shocked by the san antonio spurs. nicolay okay is going for his 3rd straits m b p. c's had racked up 37 points, 11, rebound from 11 assists for the nuggets which was his 20 sick the triple double of the campaign. it wasn't enough to avoid defeat his birth took the victory a 128 to 120 denver say top in the west, but full 2 and a half games behind the milwaukee bucks in the race. the leagues best record and at the wild baseball classic australia have made it to winds from 2 they smash china while 2 in tokyo, the game ending after the 7 innings due to the so called mercy rule, which means the game stops as soon as wanting it moves hadn't runs clear mckayla schiffron has a chance later to become the most successful ski racer of all time. the american equaled the record on friday, winning the giant slalom and sweden to rack up her 86 career well to help victory
1:58 pm
level within last year. luck and set the record. 34 years ago. 27 year old she's been we'll have her 1st chance to move out on her own. and she takes part in the solemn race later on saturday. that is always wolf. now i'll have more laser. wanted to let the material schiffron don't just so it was delivered coverage and we're back with more world news. ah ah. under covered with exclusive stories, explosive results,
1:59 pm
al jazeera investigations. the down in baldwin is an important part of indian culture. it's no surprise and many people want to, but in the industry, one doctor and one career tried to balance family expectations and cultural tradition. i guess the way now i was, i was with the reality of working in the giving industry hollywood on iraq from the al jazeera london broke up fantastic to people in thoughtful conversation with no host and no limitation. it leads to the place of color. it was a struggle here that would be much easier for me. it's might feel that white people part to go into china and sing a song writer skin, so carry other people's, wait a minute, you get why don't you stop what you're doing and made one studio
2:00 pm
b unscripted on al jazeera years from al jazeera on the go and me tonight out is there is only mobile app, is that the, this is where we dissect online to find it from out there is a mobile app available in your favorite app store. just set for it and tapped, made a new app from out there, means that you can get it. ah, it's 3 years since the corona virus outbreak was declared a pandemic cor. gonna look at how life is changed in wolf. han for the virus was 1st detected. i'm gabriel's onto a new york a place it was.

32 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on