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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 11, 2023 10:00pm-10:31pm AST

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one studio be unscripted on this era. we town the untold stories. ah, we speak when others don't. ah, because of all sides. no matter where it takes a police. fill in your guys and power in passion. we tell your story. we are your voice. your new york net back out here. ah. rescue operations off italy's coast moving 1300 migrants and refugees brought to dry land. ah,
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nor into this. and i was there, lived in london, also coming up from the golden thousands rally and israel again. government plans to limit the power of the supreme court and move they call a threat to democracy. a childhood torn apart by war, then natural disaster. the un wants of the psychological impact on children in northern syria. and the largest failure of the us financial institution is why silicon valley bank cannot ah or the italian coast on says dealing with an influx of people trying to cross the mediterranean in small boats. almost 5000 people have arrived by sea since wednesday. a major rescue operation was launched for 3 boats struggling and rough seas of the southern region of calabria. on friday,
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1300 people were rescued in that incident alone. italy's defense ministry says it's working on transferring people from a crowded migrant center on the island of la, producer to the mainland. after 10000 people in the italian town of control have protested against a new migration policy. the move it up stiff, a prison sentences for human traffickers and renews a pledge to stop illegal vote trips. the policy was adopted by prime minister georgia maloney on thursday who drew the sight of a shipwreck that killed at least 74 people trying to reach europe last week. i think vice is a spokeswoman salesman for see what international germany knows. ation that operates rescue boats in the mediterranean. he says italian authorities are overwhelmed especially in the center mediterranean sea. ruder. this is covering its absolutely caustic, especially in a couple of days of our song, the seo tool we for example, with this 9
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t and distress cases on the end of march. another 41 on demand of march in 6 yesterday. and we also witness to show one in front of to meet with these for the strong and another one. and where is one room and if drawn and cooperation with coast guard and especially also inside of actors is absolute, inaccessible because it's not in place at all. and right now we also have no job which is capable of perform such rescue in the mediterranean sea. right now we don't want to be attending government because especially in the past couple of days, it is quite an amazing job. but it's also quite obvious that it's absolutely overwhelming, but these type of been a maritime rescue of spain's canary islands. almost 50 people were pulled from a boat about 160 kilometers off the spanish coast on friday night. the group included 3 pregnant women and 6 children rescue workers transported them to all the negro in port on the island of drunken area. criticism is mounting over
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racial attacks against subsaharan nationals intern is here. last month, president case said claimed there was a criminal plot to change the country demographics through irregular migration. now many people want to leave the country, citing physical and verbal abuse out there is having a big fortune, eunice, the heavy and beneath. if i even look, the building is incomplete, but sudanese refugees have found temporary shelter here. the conditions are harsh and they lacked the very basics to survive. now they also live in fear since president chi psi, it's february statement that acute sub saharan africans of taking part in a plot to change to new his demographics, or the rather let out a little bit of delay over love it or the following. the decision that has been issued in recent days, we stop working and we no longer know where to go and then swung leisure. the woman that has done i, most of these refugees have lost their jobs, and some of them said that they were subjected to attacks. they came to the
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headquarters of the un refugee agency to ask for protection and resettlement. others gathered in front of the ivory coast embassy in the capital tunis, attempting to get return tickets to their countries. yup, replied epistle, and they are racist. people who do not want to see africans here. and for them, he does not matter if you are a student with residency documents or not. they do not deal with us as a human beings, but see us as a masters from a forest. presidents, i had denied accusations of racism and announced measures to protect african refugees. it still doesn't or not that wants to accomplish. they are in another world. what happened was a misunderstanding that i could describe as not innocent, that the important thing is to respect the tennessee in law. these are brothers. i reiterate, they are brothers. so what are they talking about with this campaign? ah, many teachings express solidarity with refugees. rejecting offensive statements or actions against them by the law beaman was, may be led to him,
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but on saudi. yet they were angry that their government is being accused of racism more, but also feel ashamed of the violence and hope the crises will not spoil tunisia or undermine its values. i think i see about that that ah, thousands of people are in tel aviv to protest against plans by the israeli government to restrict the powers of the supreme court severely. ah, it isn't a series of mass demonstrations against the bill brought in by prime minister benjamin netanyahu is far right cornish and government critics of the bill, which would significantly increase the powers of the government at the expense of the court. say it is anti democratic reforms would give politicians significantly more power and the courts much less. it proposes giving the clear set the power to override supreme court decisions with
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a simple majority of $61.00 votes. it will give politicians the power to choose which judges to appoint. currently judges are selected by an independent panel. the changes were also removed. the supreme court's ability to review the legality of what's known as israel's basic laws, which function as the country's constitution president isaac has okay, has vocally opposed the changes. same plan is pushing israel to the verge of legal and social collapse. he called on the 1st reading to be postponed, so that talks could be held with opposition to come to a compromise. around con was after protesting genevieve, this is the 10th week of protests i was here last week when the protesters managed to get through police lines and get on to the highway, unblocked the highway. that's something that the national security minister at the mob been given doesn't want to see the protesters do that actually added a lot more security. these trucks weren't here. the barriers now go all the way
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through the can see the police officers just over there, staying god. now what the protest is, we'll try and do what we think is they'll try and get through one of these barriers here. but if they do, they still wet, met with even more trucks and even more barriers. now as a result of thursday's demonstrations at the martin give, it actually sucks. the district commander of the, the television of police force. but the attorney general actually overturned that order saying that it needed to be investigated, that the legality of it needed to be investigated. this is the kind of thing that the protestors want. they want a strong supreme court. the fight with the attorney general actually is investigating and it's about been given a decision is something that he's absolutely furious about. the protesters ahead, they're going to be in very, very large number. it remains to be seen whether they'll try and get through this
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incredible amounts of security. it looks like the may well try and get on to the highway at some other points. and let's see what the police do. when that happens, american al jazeera television, united nations is warning about the psychological impact and febreeze powerful earthquakes in southern took here, and northern syria. almost 4000000 children live in the affected areas of syria. and the u. n says they've lost any sense of safety. autrand, during years of war, some of the children and the opposition controlled northwest have opened up about their experiences. you know how to report. many of the victims of february's earthquake sat hid southern turkey and northern syria were children. those who survived still live. the tragedy mohammed of dollar, as from the syrian village of iron shorter, he lost his parents and other members of his family. he also lost his hand. this young boy's life has turned upside down and my feel channel. while on the
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look and see whether my mother, she was a marble but a mom and then the record i only had obeyed also lost his parents. he's now living with his uncles, family, off the bottle, saw them wildly. well, i mean, we're all 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 hear from a different kinds of experience. for had says he can't forget his father's last towards. now we have mccoy, a bully jolla or guys telephone meet. and i sure don't get me darlene. meet gathered john away. i'm sure it. oh who it
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just jo latasha, the mother's muscles were funny. hello. dasia little muslim duck, who will be the sir william. the united nation says more than 3700000 children across syria have been affected by the quakes. and it 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 is or 2 or hang on. that's because mohammed lost many of his friends in the earthquakes center. other l shakita antonio victorino as the director, general international organization for migration. he's visiting some of the hardest hit areas in took here and says much more needs to be done to support survivors.
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excess water, access to electricity is critical to resume life and health care. and particularly psychosocial support will be fundamental for the families to restart their life. they are the needs of your money, data assistance, and the task all the all thought of these and all that we need, including iowa, is to provide them with that as urgently as possible. and that we should, that he's one clear example, previous article in everybody's irrespective of their legal status. you respect people that are, did you, we are all human beings. and we have all been seen as the 8 by the earth. great. and we all need on equal food, the same kind of care, attention, and protection from the international community i o. m has delivered more than 200
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trucks in the last couple of weeks after the break. but then fortunately, i must say the needs are very i and there remain serious gaps to provide that assistance to those populations. addresses of clashed with police in the french capital, paris, in a 7th day of rallies against a pension reform bill. hundreds of thousands of people joined the nation wide demonstrations. unions are on strike, leaving oil refineries, closed trains, not running and rubbish, not being collected. the bill. what's the retirement age res? from 62 to 64 years president. and when you're in my corner reject it talks and the final vote is expected. in the next couple of weeks. in london, there been demonstrations in support of health workers, just as a demanding the u. k. government does more to alleviate pressure on the national health service, and the baba has more. this is the latest in a series of protests and of course not just protests,
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but associated strikes that started in december in various sectors of the national health service. within ambulance workers go out on strike nurses. these people are from various sectors, but on monday you're going to see 3 days of strikes. an unprecedentedly lodge action by junior adults is not a co junior, but some of them will be working for years. and they make up 40 percent of the medical workforce here in england. that disruption could be very big, not just for routine treatment, but for places like accident and emergency department. now the government says that it simply can't afford to give in to the pay demands of the various unions involved . some unions have suspended certain industrial action, the junior doctors, very angry. they say that they've lost more than 25 percent of their pay in the last decade or so in real terms. but across the board, people are saying it's not just about wages, it's about what that means for retaining staff, facing their colleagues,
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leave the profession. they're also worried, and we've heard that in speeches today about the prospect of increasing privatization within the whole system. so to combine his area, 3 years out to the company, trying to kind of 19 pandemic viruses or engines main merchant debate. ah hi there, good to be with you. well, we've got some good news, a warmer push of era for the northwest. so temperatures are popping up into double digits, but it comes at it. costs are precipitation is still falling. we could see some more freezing, rain eastern lab via western side of the roof, and also with this rain falling on top of the snow in some cases record snow in the u. k. certainly the risk of seeing some flooding south of this. the suns out that's
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allowing temperatures to rise in southern and eastern spain, valencia all the way up to 28 on sunday now for a turkey and got some outbreaks of rain cooler air coming down from the north, warmer air from the south, where the 2 meet rounds of rain around the black seacoast, him for the capitol on camera with the height of 10 degrees, and that cooler air infiltrating central europe temperatures and single digits. but hey, signs out in san diego, the high of 8 degrees off to africa. we go in, it's a soggy forecast for liberia. probably also somewhat weather for the northwest of the ivory coast as wall and for southern africa. most of the energy is being drawn up around storm friday to the west, some high temperatures here. in fact, in the northwest, the botswana, we've matched a temperature record for the month of march, with a high of 41 degrees. that's it's susan. ah, the al jazeera world takes
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a road trip across spain. punish people, love to be, and way they come from. and i am no exception, one woman's journey seeking her heritage and of covering new insights into christian span of muslim origin. it's a story that seems to have been airbrush secretary in search of my groups on out here and i oh a tough storage him to 0, italian coast guard says it's dealing with an influx of people trying to cross the mediterranean in small boats. my 5000 people have arrived by sea since wednesday. a
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major rescue operation was launched for 3 boats struggling in rockies of calabria. as not a criticism over racial attacks against our national incentives, yet many people are wanting to leave the country. citing physical and verbal abuse and thousands of people are telling me to protest against party is really government to restrict severely the power of the supreme court related to the series of mass demonstrations against the bill, broken by prime minister benjamin netanyahu. all right, coalition government use regulators have shut down silicon valley bank. it's financial failure of a u. s. bank. since the financial crisis of 2008. in the statement to employees, the bank said it was engaged in talks to determine the next steps. the bank investors deposits insecurities, considered safe, such as bonds. so the u. s. federal reserve increased interest rate. the value of
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the bonds plunged, but the bank couldn't raise money because a slow down in the tech sector deposits on like many other bank, silicon valley bank is concentrated in one sector tech and the slow down in that sector exposed to high risk. there are concerns, other banks could face similar challenges. this led to 4 of the biggest banks in the u. s. using about $55000000000.00 of market values in a single day. hello, repercussions outside the u. s. as well, the tech start ups that rely on funds from american venture capitalists. indian media reports st. dozens or start ups. they're a tied to the bank process, couplers, banking, commentator and economists. he says, silicon valley bank should take responsibility for making deposits without insurance. the cause really of the balance sheet holds at some silicon valley bank. and before that sells gate are found they had was a consequence of the feds interest rate policy. as interest rates rose,
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so the value of the bonds that they were using to back their deposits fell. i'm but i think it's also quite to considerable extent of their own making. they will basically hoover not hot deposits from companies. the vast majority of which weren't insured, there was no ethnic insurance for them because they were too big and backing them. not as you might expect with treasury bills, short term liquids, bonds, or with reserves at the central bank, but with longer dated bonds, un treasury's agency mortgage backed securities, that sort of thing. and ended up with a duration mismatch and into compound it's when they took losses due to them born in the market price of those securities in various ways, they avoided accounting for them. so this all rather caught them out. this is really quite a concentrated niche sector. this bank serves the tech sector. there is going to be
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an impact on the tech sector and it could be quite a bad on, including here in london and potentially also in dover. but i don't think that there's going to be a wider effect on the whole economy. it's been 3 years since the world health organization declared pandemic for me. outbreak of coven 19. the 1st signs of the virus were detected in the chinese city of wu han. while life is returning to normal government and health experts around the world as to divide it about the origins of the virus. katrina, you reports from beijing. the city of han today is bustling, but the strict grew it of iris lockdown employers 3 years ago, is clearly remembered by its 11000000 residents, including shopping will manager, mark leo. your shipping will go off. so there was a lot of information that wasn't clear to watch. we were very close to outside. and how have you been coping with algebra interviewed him at the time as he did his
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best to keep his young son busy with the 1st city in the world to be locked down because of the spread of curve at 19. on march 11, 2020. the world health organization declared the outbreak a panoramic and various governments demanded answers regarding its origin in 2021, trying to finally allowed a team to w h o experts to visit hon. but the trip was short and tightly controlled measures, aging said were necessary for preventing the spread of course of 19 china was the last country to drop. it's strict corbett, $900.00 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 rona virus and the w. h o. a plan. second phase of the investigation has been cancelled fighting challenges conducting the study. politicians in the u. s. have accused paging of a cover up the f b. i says a lab leak was likely the u. s. energy department agrees,
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though with low confidence. chinese officials have dismissed the findings. as political hype. some health experts say the hunt for patient 0 isn't unhelpful distraction. we have been so distracted by trying to chase this down, though we're not taking the actions that we need to stop it from happening again. and so i think our focus should be on, let's think systematically about where we can reduce risks. mark leo says he's just relieved his work and his family's lives have returned to normal on his own contract. whether it's business with studies working harder than before, making up for lost time. like many living in hon. he wants to focus on the future and not the past. katrina, you are the 0 dating. as kevin 19 spread to the united states in early 2020, the city that never slept was soon locked down. new york city quickly became the
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global focus for the virus. they were on the reports on what lessons learned. 3 years on the state of emergency and new york city, new york had just surpassed 7000 covey cases. the most co says in the state and 35 covered related deaths. this is overwhelming, the cities, hospitals, and 1st responders. the virus was spreading fast. the number of cases doubling in the new york city area overnight, fear was setting in a 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 rest. the action we can take. new york would soon become the global epicenter of the coven outbreak. 3 years on and 6500000 coven cases,
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and more than 61000 deaths later, what lessons have been learned? this had done make as a silent pandemic, associated with it. and those are the individuals that have guy infective, coven, 19 by suffering from a long holiday. and even those individuals that have recovered from their initial infection and now 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. second changing people's behavior with social distancing and mask wearing. 3rd, how cove it hit the economically disadvantaged, harder than others. and 4th, how misinformation affected the pandemic response. there are some positive lessons before the pandemic. it was widely believed. it took at least 5 to 10 years to
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create a new vaccine and then bring it to market. but with a covert 19 vaccine, it prove 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 that we're unable to contribute to society. new york's current governor kathy hoko last month ended the mask mandate in 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 is ando al jazeera new york. ethan africa is about to be hit by a tropical cycle in freddie for a 2nd time. a storm is just off the city of kelly mann in mozambique and is expected to make landfill in the next few hours. wind speeds of more than 150 kilometers now are being measured out at sea. and the store is already bringing
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heavy rain and flooding. mozambique is still recovering from when freddy hit for a 1st time 2 weeks ago. before heading out to sea and back again and what material just say is a rare looping trajectory so far to kill it. these 27 people and damage more than 28000 homes. 2 people have died in floods in california with more stormy weather expected through the weekend. california has been hit by several storms in recent weeks, and evacuation orders and severe weather alerts are in place until sunday. roads have been washed away and thousands force from their home. flood watches have been issued in the mountainous area. areas of san bernadino county where people are still recovering, lost from storms, phone calls, antique stores are seeing a surge in customers. store it is say many people are searching for items ranging from cassette players to vintage toys and jewelry, to help them reconnect with the past. jessica washington as well. in
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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 and me. i got boiler. this cup was distributed to kids and all gone by the colonial government during the coronation of queen elizabeth the 2nd in the fifty's to encourage them to drink more mila mama 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 poll her long, 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 time 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. and something like, why have some customers who are leaving hong kong and they loved to collect old furniture from government offices,
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but they weren't able to take these items to other countries. so they sold it to me at vinegar, and in a rapidly changing environment, many young people are keen to learn more about the past. from cassette tapes to old on the lopes and colonial era cutlery. shop owners say there's 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 back here and just like admire and appreciate some of the hong kong histories, very special. most people come to ricky lands, antique store, to look for toys made in the seventy's. when hong kong with the largest toy manufacturer in the world of abraham will somehow to us i, 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
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kong for good. he says his store of his customers an opportunity to better understand the cities evolving identity. the chance to being estelle jake had to carry those memories with them wherever they go. jessica washington al jazeera uncle. the world's 1st 3 d printed rocket is about to be launched. breaking new ground in space exploration. the tara one will read us low bit for 8 minutes after blast off gathering data. rocket was designed by the us company relativity space. they want to see if this type of cheaper rocket can withstand the pressures of liftoff and space flight. ah, one of the top stories yolanda 0, italian coast guard says its dealing with an influx of people trying to cross the mediterranean in small boats about 5.

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