tv News Al Jazeera March 12, 2023 8:00am-8:31am AST
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20 years on from the start of your rock war, we examined how the past 2 decades had shaped the country and the major challenges confronting future generations. documentaries, that inspire witness brings world dishes into focus through compelling human story amid widespread industrial action and the cost of living crisis. the u. k. government seeks a way to turn around it's faltering economy march on it just 0. mm . lulu. protests in italy against the government's tough stance on immigration as hundreds more people are rescued at sea. ah.
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hello norah kyle: this is al jazeera, alive from doha. also coming up reco numbers of demonstrators in israel come out against government plans to reform the legal system. the french government inches closer to bringing in nor to raise the age of retirements, despite mass protests. and after the trauma facing children in syria of last month up, quakes in this, god from years of war, ah, more than $300.00 migrants and refugees have been rescued in the mediterranean sea, italian coast guard says they were crammed into 3 overcrowded boats. as this government is under pressure to help stop lives being lost at sea mile m a hub, a tablet sap pay reports a race to rescue hundreds of migrants in the mediterranean,
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the italian navy and coast guard launched an operation to reach 3 boats of south of calabria, they pull those on board to safety and take them to italian ports. there among 5000 migrants and refugees to reach italy since wednesday rescued. say the numbers are overwhelming. especially in the central mediterranean sea route and this see we're just covering, it's absolutely caustic, especially in a couple of days of our song, the seo tool we for example, with this 9 t and distress kate is on the end of march. another 41 on the 9 of march and 6 yesterday. and we also witness to show one in front of to meet with these 40 and strong and another one. and number 2 is one room, and that's drawn last month, another boat washed up on a beach in the calabria region, at least $76.00 people were killed in that accident. the victims include a young girl whose body was only discovered on saturday. february's shipwreck has
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angered the local community. thousands protested on saturday against the government . they accused of failing to intervene and save migrants. they say prime minister georgia maloney's plan to crack down on human traffickers is not the answer. once, as long as we are in control to demonstrate for these victims and for all the victims of the sea, i hope this stops them. it is necessary to face the migrant issue with the creation of secure and legal channels. because hardening the sentences of smugglers will not stop this phenomena. meanwhile, facilities to process migrants and refugees are at breaking point. italy's defense ministry says it's break into transfer. thousands of people from the island of lamp reduced to the mainland. official say more than 17000 people have arrived by sea this year alone. that's almost 3 times the number for the same period last year and
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with some are approaching. that number is expected to grow. malibu mud separate al jazeera. chris says m as mounting. i've a racial attacks against sub saharan africans and she nicea last month. president chi said claimed i was a criminal plot to change the country's demographics through irregular migration. now many african refugees and migrants want to leave sizing, physical and verbal abuse. his half 8, mirabelle report from tunis, which has been translated from arabic. b heavy. it's been a if the if you look, the building is incomplete, but sudanese refugees have found temporary shelter here. the conditions are harsh and they lack 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 jersey demographics or the rather what a little bit of the level of it are. the following. the decision that has been issued in recent days, we stopped working and we no longer know where to go. and then wranglers are the woman that has done that. most of these refugees have lost their jobs,
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and some of them said that they were subjected to attacks. they came to the headquarters of the u. n. refugee agency to ask for protection and re settlement. others gathered in for the ivory coast embassy in the capital tunis attempting to get return tickets to their countries. yup. replugged 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 that as does he 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. so doesn't look that wants to that company. they are in another world. what happened was a misunderstanding that i could describe as not innocent. the important thing is to respect the, to niecy in law. these are brothers. i reiterate, they are brothers. so what are they talking about with this campaign? ah,
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many generations express solidarity with refugees rejecting offensive statements or actions against them by the love i've been wealth may be led in, but on saudi. yet they were angry that their government is being accused of racism, but also feel ashamed of the violence and hope the crises will not spoilt in asia or undermine its values, which is his presence as he placer his stone diplomatic relations. when sir an jonas caught times with damascus and 2012 and protest, antoine civil war began and the bashar assad government crank down and political opponents. sir, an ambassador, teach in his ear was expelled. that same year that lay silica, mo, whatever. unless there is no justification for the non existence of a to nisan ambassador in the syrian arab republic, or the ambassador of the syrian, our republic here into news. yet the matter of the regime in syria is an issue of concern to the syrians alone. we are dealing with the syrian states and the choices of the syrian people. we have absolutely nothing to do with their choices. half
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a 1000000 people have turned out across israel to protest against the far right coalition. government plans to severely limit the part of the supreme court is the largest demonstration since opposition against the bill began 10 weeks ago. critics say the move by prime minister benjamin netanyahu is undemocratic. you'll see michael, but i guess an associate fellow at chatham house, specializing and middle east. and as wally politics, he says the protests are growing despite government officials trying to crack down on the sense it's not, it's sometimes you seen this kind of them solution and paul test the, it's great you fades away. the opposite is happening, the more the government is trying to push the bit called legislation. judicial reform, which is more than constitution bundle is all the more people in the states and the more the police is using force against them. the more they actually didn't understand the checks and balances a democracy is killed by the story, but the is the government,
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the less should be going to be what, what we see right now is the result of me still national security. on the very far i can use them open and you talk to police on the the thing is opinion too soft on the 1st. so the only thing i think the last few weeks we saw more was bargains. but i think actually this weekend, it seems that the police understand that if they came into the minister, it was on related to a disaster, france as controversial plan to reform the pension system has moved a step closer to becoming law. the french senate has approved the plans. they will now be sent to a committee to work on a final draft. i've been weeks a protest against the changes which would raise the age of retirement from 62 to 64 . went into annual max claims. his plan is essential for the country's financial health. my son is basing for more strikes in the national health service this week
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. like and say that underpaid and the health system needs urgent investment. and the bumper reports from london. the n a chess is on its knees and its leading to hundreds of people dying needlessly. every week the messages thousands came to defend british national health service. it came ahead of the latest strike in the sector, pushing for better pay and more investment. now this demonstration has been cold by various healthcare unions and campaigning bodies. but behind them lies a huge workforce. and they've been wanting for some time that the whole systems being under funded, leaving them demoralized children. rivera is an occupational therapist to the public hospital. she's been busy supporting colleagues taking strike action. and before this protest, she told al jazeera, nobody takes the decision lightly at the minute it feels like that's the only way her fight for the. and i just actually, i mean,
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we're not just people who work in the n h f. we are patients as well. these are our family members who are also impacted if, if there was no an hfs campaign is accused the government of pushing people towards private health care and allowing the n a chest to decline. that warning was taken up by us act of rob delaney who's 2 year old son, died of a brain tumor. and because of the way that the, any chances started a flint name, the surety of what the n h as is, and how it's free and point of use and how there is no barrier, no for profit barrier between you and your care. we didn't spend a minute on the phone with people from health insurance companies and you can't get that m r i. we don't approve that drug next week. julia doctors who make up 40 percent of the medical workforce stage 3 days of strikes. they say real terms, pay cuts and increased workloads, a driving people from their profession, like covers family doctors, one of the highest tier sectional groups,
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suicide race because of the stress of their end. and then the government attacks into not working hard enough. i'm going in stossel worried that by the time they get to somebody on an emergency in the home, they'll find a dead body rosin, something like that. they can look after her, the massive level of anxiety on the back of cove. it was, they gave everything with the m a chest, a top priority for british voters. the politicians are under pressure to commit to saving it now. and in the long term the teen baba al jazeera london, california is dealing with extreme weather conditions in some parts. some parts of the state and buried under meters of snow on flooding in other areas has killed. at least 2 people enforced thousands from their homes. allan jordan reports for the 10th time this winter, california has been hit with what meteorologists call an atmospheric river. narrow band of tropical moisture that jump lots of rain in a short amount of time,
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creating a mess for residents. people who live in the town of ha ha, have lost everything the lobby holding back a nearby river collapsed on friday night. the tell mayor tweeted he has appealed for state and federal help. he said it will take months for residents to repair their homes farther south in the mountains near los angeles brain isn't the only threat. several meters of snow have fallen in the area, trapping residence in their homes and creating safety hazards. the weight of the snow as it comes down as a source of fries will compress oriental drop on the gas meters, causing them to do back up in cause gas leaks. and as he had a couple fires in the area due to that, laurie, you were said after 2 weeks of snow. the last thing she needs is right now i put tarps around my big berm, so it wouldn't flood my house. what laurie you were and tens of thousands of
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california residents would love to see right now a break in the weather so they can rebuild their lives. rosalind jordan al jazeera and this is just the american struggling with wild weather tropical cycling friday made landfall in mozambique for a 2nd time, bringing with it heavy rain. the storm has off the city of keller, money, shops and businesses are closed on flights in the area have been suspended. least 28 people have been killed and tens of thousands of homes have been damaged and then astray. li, a heavy rains of triggered flood evacuations. dozens of people have been told to leave their homes in bucktown, a remote area in the states of queensland, where the forecasters say river levels will peak on sunday, and police are coordinating the evacuation by helicopter the united nations as warning about the psychological impact of february's powerful earthquakes and southern turkey and northern syria,
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almost 4000000 children live in the affected areas of syria and the u. n says they've lost any sense of safety after enduring years of war. zenato reports. many of the victims of febreeze earthquakes that hit southern turkey and northern syria were children. those who survived still live the tragedy. mohammed abdullah, as from the syrian village of an charter, 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 i have maria genera while i'm there. and oh, well my dad is mother she or the marble. but mamma sent the record on me for her, though bade also lost his parents. he is now living with his uncle's family. the fly off the bottle saw them wildly. well, i mean, it was gone. well william,
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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. and i will have him believe jolla or guys telephone. i'll meet nice guy regarding meet gather john away. i'm sure it go who it just jo latasha mothers muscle to were funny news like our her look of the plot, the eyes of the muslim the who will be the sir william. the united nation says more than 3 point. 7000000 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
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themselves alone. whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, one or 2, or hang on to that because mohammed lost many of his friends and the earthquakes than other al shakita cilla had hair on out to sarah, celebrating the life of the south african dancer who found his feet on the international stage join a party plus with failing to launch why left off from the world's 1st 3 d printed rock? it was a booth said the last minute once again. ah .
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and off we go with your world's weather update for the middle east and africa. nice to have your long and it is looking like a soggy forecast for many parts of saudi arabia, whether alerts in play for moderate to heavy rainfall and think we could see the renews threat of flooding in some spots that have already had rounds of flooding for example around jetta on sunday as well, but the rain stretching from the red sea right through to the top end of the golf and truth be told scattered though ha, could see some showers of thunderstorms on mondays. we'll continue to keep tabs on that. got a disturbance rolling through central asia. so that means some what weather for bish kick tashkent and shan bay on sunday. some of that is also going to clip. cobble and is lama barbara doing little to lower the temperatures here. now for turkey, a, we've got cooler coming down, meeting up with warmer air, so this means some pretty heavy rounds of rain along the black sea coast on the
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capital region as well. and for on talia saga forecast here with the temperature of 16 degrees. also what, whether to be expected for liberia, potentially creeping into the northwest of the ivory coast. and it's our usual plentiful showers and storms for central africa. of course, we've got freddy going on, but we've also got heats in the northwest. a botswana. temperature is at $41.00 degrees. ah, ah, a legacy of southern africa's colonial history. famel a blend of traditional music with western instrument i did born in the villages of this little log now echoes in apartheid disused minds wherein you illegal gold rush has taken home. god has organized crime, gangs battle for control of this lucrative industry. huge that started in song too often and in bloodshed. the accordion was on. has jesse eda
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lou ah and again you're watching out, is there a his reminder about top stories this hour? more than $1300.00 migrants and refugees have been rescued in the mediterranean sea, italian coast guards, as they were crammed into 3 overcrowded boats and have been taken to shore. half 1000000 demonstrators have taken to israel street to protest against the government's plans as severely limits the power of the supreme court. the valley is the largest since opposition to the bill began 10 weeks ago. and the controversial plan to reform the french pension system is one step closer to becoming law. after being approved by the senate, the bill will now be sent to a committee to work on
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a final draft, have been weeks of protests against the changes the best book of incorporation, the b b. c has apologized for cancelling several sports programs on saturday due to a boycott by presenters. they refuse to work after much of the day host gary lenika was suspended for public remarks against the government's asylum policy. the public broadcaster said lenika breached guidelines after tweets, which compared u. k. government language on asylum to that used by nazi germany on the bbc director general, tim davy says he will not resign over the controversy. i think my job is to serve license for repairs and deliver a, b, b, c. those really focused on world class impartial landmark output. and i look forward to resolving this situation and looking forward to delivering that the u. k . prime minister is she cynic said he hopes the issue, can be resolved in
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a timely manner, but said it was a matter for the baby seam opposition leader care stammer said the public broadcaster had gone too far, that the suspension, bbc is not acting in partially by caving in to toria apiece were complaining about very limited her. but got this one badly. ra a now the very, very exposed as is the government. because at the heart of this is the government's failure of the asylum system. a rob and take responsibility for the mess. they made the governors casting around to blame anybody else, gary, linux, the b, b. c. civil servants, but law. what they should be doing is standing up accepting. they've broken the asylum system and tullison telling us what they're going to do to actually fix it. not windowing on about gary lenika, villages in the eastern democratic republic of congo. say they fear another attack by an armed group that killed 44 people on wednesday. some of the few survivors from the village of mckinley are being treated for machete wins. they say they were
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raised by the allied democratic force as a group aligned with iso, has been accused of slaughter and thousands of civilians since 2017. for some young people in man, while the decision to oppose the military coup has taken them from the streets and protests to the jungles to join the armed resistance groups. if they end up seriously injured, they have little choice other than to flee the country. tony chang met one group of former fighters who had determined not to give up on their struggle for chicone, and the door was home is just down the hill so close. and yet, so far they fought against mere mas military opposing. it's cool. new, after getting seriously injured, they fled to thailand, but they haven't accepted defeat the other. we went to inspire other injured comrades to you don't have to lie in bed with depression. you can see us, we still keep walking, no matter what people see that we are moving forward regardless till we succeed
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with the revolution. now their battle field is youtube. their weapons of choice, a camera, and some pots and pans to be on the go. so how much they run a cooking channel using the skills they learned in jungle camps him. it's a challenge with the injuries they sustained both lost limbs in the fighting, but they have let that stop them. injure is like there's are increasingly common these free boom. a range is a rushing to the cries of a colleague. yeah, good. i love it. he screams in pain after stepping on a land mine while on patrol and kaya state last year. they say the minds were planted by mere mars military after its soldiers set fire to a nearby church. the young man survived, but lost his foot. this clinic just over the border and thailand is one of several treating those who survive. their attacks artillery and heavy armour are inflicting wounds that often result in lost limbs. if not death,
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the open air ward might seem basic. but inside me, emma, there's little choice. and i don't know our patients told us that there are no medical workers or doctors on the other side. there's no cleaning or sufficient medicine as well. that's why they told me that they have to come or to wait year long for those people that get injured in the fighting inside me, emma, getting across to thailand is a double edged sword. over here, they're safe and as health care. they're also stateless, and they had to live underneath the radar. back in the open air kitchen, the foods nearly ready, fried fish in a chilli sauce and a vegetable curry. it's a taste of home as close as they can get for the moment. throws all of you, i was, he wraps up doll. what dedicates the show to those still fighting across the border, even though they can't be there. he says, the revolution was succeed. tony chang al jazeera on the time. now my border as al
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african ballet dancer, who to fight racial segregation to make dance history is being honored on stage. jo, home with avo was the 1st person of color from his country to dance for london's royal ballet more than 6 decades ago. now his life is being celebrated and a new production led me to mina reports from cape town. ah, it was an unlikely success story. a young mixed race dancer from a partied south africa performing at london's royal ballet. they would put you harmless, awful. now retired to $95.00. it became a reality despite the challenges he endured. when i was a student at the university of guy. oh, oh, had to stay in a right at the back. there was a line, an o j no calls that load. and if a do, paul said to learn, oh good, good, good to looks from various from the other group of people,
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laws that promoted racial segregation prevent a jo ha, from performing openly. he started dancing. a talk is old and was often snacking to theaters to edition for international scoutis by the 900 sixty's. joe had won a place to study in london, was later made a principal soloist at the wheel ballet to be fully as a burnt to just do anything where a one to be the ending of was welcome was. but if room one after school, when i was a student, death for me was the greatest welcome to england. while jo hall was dancing on wolf stages, his home district, 6 in cape town, was declared a whites only area to her story. and his life in district 6 is one of several
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documented at this museum in cape town. it's hope it will help keep the history of that community alive in a country way racial segregation once silence the hopes and dreams of many historians say the forced removals was a deliberate attempt to dismantle what many considered the multi cultural soul of cape town. it was 25 years ago, 60000 people. so you can imagine how to make that must have been for people were we saw how slowly the community was broken apart. it was an act of genocide, i would say. on his return to south africa, joe hall opened and ran civil don schools, kate, of and roy, who as part of a celebration of joe has career rears his for his role. is joe, how watched from the sidelines? he remains an inspiration for a new generation of dances. for me to mila al jazeera cape town.
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space x crew members who has spent the last 5 months on bull, the insertion space station, half return safely to earth. the 4 person crew included the 1st native american women to go into space and the only female in russian cosmonaut program and the crew launched in october. it was the 1st time a russian flown on an american spacecraft in 20 years. the launch of the walls 1st 3 d printed rocket has been a boss it for a 2nd time. on board flight computers, hold the count on 45 seconds before the rock. it was due to block off relativity space which made the rocket. so the grounding was due to low fuel pressure tanya, harrison as a fellow at the outer space institute in seattle, washington, she says the failure to launch is not unusual. earlier today this week was due to an issue with the val, but they were able to fix stuff like this happens a lot when it comes to lunch. and so it sounds like the rocket itself is in ok
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condition from the latest update on their twitter feed. so it might just be another few days before they get another launch attempts. it's a really big update in the way that we can construct rockets. 3 printing is not entirely new to the space sector. there are other companies that are using 3 d printed parts, but relativity has taken the next step to basically 3 d print about 85 percent of the entire rocket. and so to, to make this advancement, they're able to bring down the costs. they're able to make the rocket out of fewer parts. and the launch itself is also significantly cheaper than watches have been historically. so if they are successful with this launch, it really opens up a whole new realm of the way that we can construct rockets in the future. supposing history has been made on the slopes in sweden, with mikayla's schaeffer and becoming the most successful ski race of all time. american one, the women, solemn and on saturday. so you know, well come tell you to 87 victories,
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moves one player of sweden's in game in law who had held the record since 989 or a different one have 1st ever raised back in 2012 olympics. good. grand bells as difference all round natural ability is what makes her grades schiffron has the ability to ski in all of the disciplines, right across the board and be competitive and in and when, and to have been doing it for 10 years as well. and she started when she was 70, as you want to 1st race in order in sweden, when she was 71, the world championships that season as well. and how well championship record is incredible or the number of 76 goals are with her. when rates are her podium rates in world championships is over 50 percent so so she basically for of the races she started.
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