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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 25, 2023 2:00pm-2:30pm AST

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a story, things sanity with being sold, the notion that we can offset all the carbon we generate does carbon offsetting actually work. what is being done isn't worth sitting in the problem is net 0 just to catch raise. net 0 missions that's there, right? 0 climate neutral poly re examines the myths and allusions in the struggle against climate break down. all hail the planet episode won on al jazeera in a post colonial world. the scars of european imperialism run deep. nowhere more so than in the democratic republic of congo, where her history still shapes the president. a visceral yet intimate insight through the eyes of a whistleblower and a patriotic military commander. witness presents this is congo, honor, jesse ego. ah,
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who w h o says rapid response. teams are being deployed after an outbreak of the highly contagious marber of virus in to african countries. ah, i'm cyril benya. it's great to have you with us. this is al 0 alive from doha. also coming up at least $34.00 asylum seekers are missing after they're both sank often is. yeah, it's the 5th such incident in 2 days. the u. s. in canada agree to close a loophole on immigration that allowed thousands of asylum seekers to cross their border. and a spectacular light show in the sky, the most powerful solar storm in 6 years. his fear ah,
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the world health organization says rapid response teams are being deployed to tens and need to investigate an outbreak of the marber virus. the health care teams will conduct contact tracing and affected areas and assist local personnel. the w h o says it's assessing the risk of further outbreak contains and here at least 12 people have died since the new outbreak began their and inequities, ariel guinea, kenya, and uganda are now on high alert and have started screening travelers on their borders with tanza mia, let's take a closer look at this outbreak. the marber virus is rare, but highly contagious. the illness begins abruptly with high fever, muscle pain, diarrhea, and vomiting. it's often transmitted to people from fruit bats. it then spreads through human to human transmission. the world health organization says the marber virus kills about half the people it infects, but the fatality rate can go as high as 90 percent. there are no vaccines at this stage or proved anti virus treatments. benson moran, go as
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a public health specialist and promoter at oxfam, kenya, he says, marburg spread is associated with travel and is a cause of concern. what the common government is doing is the mostly it has actually heightened diminishes full screening and they put centers and should encouraging people who are actually presenting the symptoms to to go fall. i need treatment management, then yes, 10 facilities. the detection can only be done through our laboratory measurements, so through investigation. so what is holding cottages that are in the past on the channels are presenting with fever and mid me them on history of travel to tanzania . talk to the present to the l facility, who can actually ticket for them to deliberate that investigation to actually distinguish relates to my book virus or any other disease. it's easily spread from human to human. it's actually close associated mi latino travel. so that's what,
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that's what it is, what is that wasn't just risk. and that's where you really concerned because of the human traffic between kenya terms and intell gamma and more for because of the, you know, even full informally, you know, and put us borders on the lake on the land. people are really worried because this is the 1st time on a specific getting kinda we've not had this maybe no other plant in other countries, a specific kind of actually had expert on this. but in kenya we've never had a guess of veronica diseases. so people are really concerned and most of the actually have are i to be concerned because are they this is a highly contagious. somebody. the hey, for tele, do it at least 34 people are missing. after a boat carrying mostly african asylum seekers sank off the coast of chin is the coastline as facts has become a major departure point for migrants heading to europe. this is the 5th such
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incident in just 2 days, according to officials. they're international organization for migration has called the central mediterranean, the most dangerous migration route in the world. it's also becoming the most commonly used route for migrants going to europe. conflict has driven a growing number of people from african countries to seek new lives there. in the 1st 2 months of this year, nearly $16000.00 migrants arrived on italian shores. felix vice is a spokesperson for see watch. he says a joint european approach is needed to tackle the migrant crisis. 41 bullets and told to try to cross the mediterranean sea yesterday at 41 and only 2 n g o boats back to and this is definitely a lack of rescue capacity, which is coming from the italian and also from the european union, which is trying to block rescue capacities and rescue ships in a while, which is now leading to this well, as i said, lack of capacities. we're just now leading to the strategies. what we see is that the tide and coast guard is quite active,
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but only in front of the lumpkins as well, though they normally don't leave out for more than 30 miles from italian mainland and the boats that we want to see right now that i kept sizing on maybe happening in international waters and in the middle, basically rude. so they got quite useless when it comes to this. both these rescue operations and the only acceptable solution would be more and you all boards or an entire organ, organized european rescue organization. the problem they've currently is the amount of boats that we have to deal. so when i talk about 41 bullets, it's completely overwhelming also for and your just in general. so what we do basically, what we need is a state rescue organization program which is controlling the current situation and is able basically to perform rescue an acceptable manner at the moment
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the us and canada have agreed to close a loophole on immigration that allowed thousands of asylum seekers to cross the border. if you're driving, yeah, you'll be arrested. then you want to got to get it up. you have to go to the point of entry over there at the immigration, close to 10000 migrants have used an illegal channel that linked new york state and the province of quebec. since the start of the year, president joe biden made an official visit to canada where illegal border crossings was top of the agenda. alan fisher reports it may just be 24 hours, but joe biden is hoping he's accomplished a lot from his 1st official visit to canada. since winning the white house at a time when you alliances are being forged elsewhere. this was about showing one of the oldest links in the world is still strong. both sides are putting the best spin the can on the visit, which brought a face to face, sit down and an address to the canadian parliament. americans and canadians are 2
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people to country in my view sherry one heart. but there are tensions, not least at the border crossings from america into canada, a note historically high levels. one point between new york state and quebec. a hot spot, even in winter. though both countries have agreed the can ton away would be asylum seekers. one in exchange, canada will accept 15000 more central and south american migrants through legal channels. our border is no longer just the place where we meet each other. it's the place where we will meet the moment. cheerleaders also addressed issues like climate change, the water ukraine, and the growing threat from china. the spy balloon, that flew over america recently before being short don't cross canadian air space. suspending, more than defense has become a priority. as, as paying attention to existing allies, we have a, you know, significantly extended our alliances. i haven't seen that happen with china and
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russian or anybody else in the world. we're in a situation united states, we're nato, a stronger. we're all together. the g 7, a quad ashi and japan and korea place we don't trust, visited canada in 2018. tweeted out an attack on the prime minister after he left the warm smiles and farm handshakes. this time round, suggest relations between the 2 countries are better, but they still have issues that haven't disappeared. allen fisher, i'll just need to welcome to people have been found dead and 13 others suffering illness inside a sweltering trained car in southern texas. they are believed to be migrants who crossed into the united states from mexico. the us border patrol stopped the train on friday after an anonymous emergency call told police that it contained a group of migrants. they nearly suffocated as temperatures in the area reach 30 degrees celsius. an investigation to the incident has been opened. at least 1900
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people have been killed after a tornado ripped through the u. s. states, mississippi and alabama. winds of more than 100 kilometers per hour, tor roofs, from houses uprooted trees and knocked out power. there were reports of hail the sight of golf balls. people in the path of the storm of being urged to take cover of firefighters and spain have contained the 1st major wildfire of the year. the flames spread through the eastern valencia region, destroying more than 4000 hector is a forest. they force 1500 people to abandon their homes. meteorologist say the weather will be dryer and hotter than usual this spring along spain's northeastern mediterranean coast. a poll ruthie sabina, the man who saved more than 1200 lives during the rwandan genocide has been released from prison. the former hotel manager was sentenced to 25 years on terrorism related charges 2 years ago. now he's one of several people. sentences have been commuted after diplomatic efforts, baketer and the u. s. barber ango,
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reports. he served more than a year of a 25 year prison sentence after a rwandan court convicted him on terrorism charges. now paul recess, a beginner, is a free man. 2 years ago, he refused to participate in court proceedings. write scripts, and observers said the trial was a sham because of so somebody may have household to the old. how the, the nature of that one done a government or because it does not own, it does not tory to criticism. and so it just showed the right to the, to the system or for wonder of the big scottish it or does why the, this is what we could have been fighting for for human rights and wonderful democracy in her wanda. and he didn't even try to become victim excited nearly 20 years earlier, he became famous when the hollywood film hotel rhonda told his story,
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his credited with saving more than 1200 lives during rendezvous. 1994 genocide more than half a 1000000 tutsis and many his were killed by a hoo to militia during a civil war. the rondon patriotic front let by poke a guy may want the war and took power. carmella to became president and recess of akina became his critic rhonda, accused him of supporting an armed creep that wanted to overthrow the government. we have maintained. oh, serious concerns about this case, especially as with regards to political violence, but i'm groups including those that are led by people operating from developed countries. but we have now agreed on no fundamental principles and we're able to to, to move forward with the humanitarian relief recess. of a can,
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a has belgian citizenship and was the resident of the u. s. 3 years ago, he was deceived into boarding a plane into by and later appeared in rhonda capital kigali in handcuffs. right. scrape say he was kidnapped. rwanda's government says his sentence has been commuted after our presidential order barbara and gave her alger sarah. my colleague steve clemens host of al jazeera as the bottom line has interviewed for wanda and president polk, gummy twice in recent months. he shared this story with us a remarkable change, the turn of events in december i interviewed president, could guy make you said he would not be bullied into making a decision and that it would take an invasion to get paul recess of again out of prison in march in doha, his i asked him, i said, hows that position going. and he said, you know, sometimes you have to forgive the unforgivable and i got goosebumps on the back of
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my neck. i said, wow, they're going to release paul recess to begin. and then i said to him on stage it in the interview, if may, if you make that decision, will you give me a call? and they did. and so i think that the united states, with a lot of assistance from cutter was able to get to an understanding with or wanda about how to get paul recess begin at 20 others released without removing or pardoning his conviction. so the conviction remains on the books, his sentence is commuted. he is going to go to doha soon, and then we'll move to the united states to reside there. what seems to be the key element is a change in stance. from the u. s. government about how it was approaching, present, tagami, and so rather than framing recessive could be in a, as a wrongly detained person, thus invalidating the legitimacy of his conviction. i think the white house might sources tell me the white house reached out to find
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a different path that would not undermine the solvency of ra, wanda's concerns about security and terrorism. and the death of civilians that they felt was tied to some of recessive beginners. associations still ahead on al jazeera ah, deep divisions in israel, weeks of protests against the government, now spilling beyond political circles. and germany agrees to return some looted artifacts to cameroon. but can it heal the wounds of its colonial pass? ah, unflinching questions is war with lawanda imminent rigorous debate. people are dying because of lack of treatment. black lives don't really matter in the police will join me, mark them on hill upfront. what out?
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0 tension in the occupied westbank is on the increase leading to a new wave of palestinian retaliatory action. you are one of the most one thing. why is that a al jazeera world investigates to new on groups, gaining public support and meeting israeli forces had on a new face of palestinian resistance on al jazeera, sears for miles. is it on the go? and me tonight, out is there is all new mobile app is left to you. this is where we dissects, analyze the fun with from algae. there is a mobile app available in your favorite apps do. just that garrett and tapped are made and you opt from al jazeera new at you think it, it ah
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ah, ah, you're watching al jazeera reminder of our headlines this our, the world health organization says rapid response. teams are being deployed to tanzania to investigate an outbreak of the marber virus disease. at least 12 people have died since the new upgrade began there. and in equitorial guinea, kenya, and uganda are now on high alert and have started screening travelers on their borders with tanzania. at least 34 people are missing. after a boat carrying mostly african asylum seekers sank off the coast of chinese. yes. the 5th such incident in 2 days, the coastline of specs has become a major departure point for europe. u. s. president joe biden has wrapped up
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a visit to the can canadian capital. he and prime minister just intruder announced plans to close and immigration loophole that allowed thousands of asylum seekers to cross into canada from the u. s. of israel now where opposition to the government's proposed. judicial changes is growing by the day. the 1st law passed on thursday shields the prime minister limits the ways he or she can be declared unfit for office. critics say prime minister benjamin netanyahu is using that to protect himself al jazeera, as they were on con, has more free television, awe, 12 weeks and protests against the judicial reform bill showed no signs of slowing down. with each week the passes more sections of his railey society, adjoining the demonstrations that want to stop the kinetic bid to have the ability to overturn some supreme court decisions. oh, despite this opposition,
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prime minister benjamin netanyahu is not backing down a display of israeli flags of protests is the expression of the deep sense of patriotism among those taking part. but now even that flag has a different meaning to different people. one of his roles most well known political columnist gideon levy says political divisions have always existed. israel never decided what it wants to be. are we, are you appear in western liberal society? i, we em, oriental religious said traditional. busy society, are we secular or religious? are we jewish or more slim or be national? i mean those questions so open because israel had not come into terms with its identity here in the occupied westbank israeli soldiers. thank god. but his role faces a crisis here as well. air force pilots and reservists are refusing to report for
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duty. the numbers are growing. and according to the israeli military, its ability to continue enforcing the occupation and ability to motel strikes and garza will be severely impacted breaking. the silence is a group of form. it is where the soldiers is dedicated showing what its members say is the grim reality of israel's occupation of palestine. the fact the active soldiers are refusing to serve has come as a surprise to them. to be honest, i am surprised by how fast refusing to serve in the army. i became a political, legitimate in our society. and when it came to this issue of that with the shall overall i think that it is a brave and it's an important way to non viral lee or resist and profit policies that you are against. and it's not just military personnel. intelligence officers are also joining the protest movement, and that's unusual for people used to working in the shadows. here in tel aviv, if you could be forgiven for thinking it's business as usual. but the protesters
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want to escalate and they are getting numbers out on the street. and their impact is being felt is being felt in the economy as people take time to protest. insecurity as soldiers refused to serve in the judiciary is your position fights was independence. and in the government is becoming increasingly more hard line as the weeks go on. israel is now more divided than ever before. iraq on out 0, television. argentinians have been marking the 47 fan of nursery of the 1976 school . thousands of people marched and when osiris demanding justice from the government and remembering the victims of what is described as the dirty war. human rights, campaigners say 30000 people were kidnapped, tortured and killed during military rule between 19761983. some were victims of what became known as death, flights in which opponents were thrown from an aircraft. miriam lew in
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a journalist who survived an abduction at the time has led a team to track down one of the planes involved. here's her story, in her own words. my name is maria levine and i'm a survivor of to concentration camps here in the city of one of iris. and i was hidden up after the military crew. i was torture. i was held in captivity for almost 2 years. i. 5 back in 2007, i was in new sta, reporter when this italian journalist photographer called me, he says he have you ever thought will our dear death flight planes. and he said, i am convinced that ah, identifying the planes we could could identify flight. the pilots
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and the bios were murderers. i started working with shank hello to louder and now after a few weeks, we were able to locate the planes that participated in the that slides. and we located the electress and we located a sky lance. we found there, ah, the flight logs, we'd all the summation, all the, he's shuree of the plane and that is the plane. from were the bodies of the founders of mothers of plus had a major and 2 french nuns who were work in helping them or were thrown to the ocean. the fact that displaying is coming back to washington is going to be exhibited, add this site of memory of their school,
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of navy mechanics. is it's a strong symbol for the notion ration. you ought to remember the crimes that happen in this country so that we can be sure that in the next generations the defense of democracy is going to be steady. the vatican has returned to 3 ancient fragments from the parthenon temple in athens to the greek government. the artifacts had been kept in the vatican for centuries, and pope francis ordered their return. last year. greece has repeatedly called for the return of a much larger collection of marbles. one exhibition in the british museum. they were stripped out of the parthenon in the early 18, hundreds on the orders of a scottish nobleman known as lord l. again. our number of german museums have
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agreed to return sacred objects looted from cameroon during german colonial rule. but indigenous communities say the process is stalling because hack reports from cameron's capital you own de 3000 miles from cameroon, locked in a museum in berlin, a centuries old data named and gone to the 1st time that i learned that and gonzales and the museum. i was angry, i was totally angry. i was mad for the 2000000. and so people in cameron's english speaking region, the in guns a day, he was pillaged by german colonizers, tv, and job to is asking germany to release her. the question of justice. we have the right to our heritage. the return of this object means that it's reawakening of, for the common person to think about identity to be and colonial boundaries. from 18842900. 16 cameroon was a colony of the german empire. at time of bloody conquest and frequent rebellion,
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this neighbourhood in downtown yolanda is called a to make in the local language, it means a pond of blood communions. believe that this was a sight of a massacre committed in 1907. by the german colonial army. hundreds of people were killed and the local chief was beheaded. his head was then taken away to germany as a battle, choking to this shape. germany has not publicly acknowledged the killing. germany has agreed to return to the looted colonial artifacts to africa. he didn't effort to confront some of the brutalities of its colonial history in the adults. yes, yes, yes, i can elect the german colonial army, identified the 2nd objects and would steal them intentionally to subdue the population. rebels felt like they had failed. the german authorities have not returned and go through yet, but the statute has been taken down from the exhibit in berlin, whom both for museum and job to says this is the 1st step in setting her free and
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for millions of in. so people to start re invoking their cultural identity. nicholas hawk al jazeera young de cameroon. will you take a look at this? the most powerful solar storm in 6 years hit the earth on friday, spectacular light showers, known as the aurora borealis lit up the night sky across europe in north america. uncle, so sharif has more dislike. shaw is usually restricted to the arctic but has been visible over lake alberta and canada and as far south as the u. s. state of new mexico. the rare phenomenon is caused by solo when particles smashing into the earth's atmosphere and turning energy into light. and they said to be mo, displays over the next 2 years. that's because the summer's reaching the most active part of it's 11 years cycle. the storm has thrown vivid colors across the
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sky and europe, including this slide show in finland. scientists observing the flesh and sweden say it is not dangerous, although the jew magnetic activity has the strength to knock out power grids. people now come to make the regions life result gps, satellite tv, or mobile format. so to have all this, we need to know space was when we have strong captivity, young to have a tutor. all this stuff can be destroyed. you will space, will there be no reports of public got so far? for now, in the northern hemisphere, there's all and wonder for people looking. uh huh. when we consume sharif under sierra. beautiful. that's it from me several than yeah, the news continues here now to 0. after inside story usage.
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ah. ah, it's one of those weekends you're going to need the umbrella for japan's vein island of hunter. those details right now. thanks for joining in. there's that batch of what whether we did have landside advisories and play not too far away from tokyo as well. that's it's the rain, but the winds weapon up to about 80 kilometers per hour for southern china to see this much rain this fast. i think we're likely going to see some flooding. our brainstorm alert in play for hong kong about 30 millimeters of rain within a single hour while a cluster of severe thunderstorms in the north west of india. punjab state has led to our 2nd tornado in a week. this early estimate, sorry. it was classified as an e. f 3 twister, and it destroyed hundreds of homes. i think the act of weather though, on sunday, more eastern areas. so think states like chatted, scar,
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o disha and westbank gall. torrential downpours in northern pakistan. the hor dropped down the temperature to about 12 degrees. much quieter conditions though on sunday just a few showers hanging around here. the wind, really the big story for the golf. it's i type of weather where you're driving around in your car and it just jolts you around because of all the wind. also some rain as while the 3 day forecasts and dough has shows as could see wind gusts, monday up to 65 kilometers per hour. be careful out there will soon take care. ah, thought the law will. the law win with neither side, willing to negotiate is the ukraine war becoming a forever war? is america's global leadership, increasingly fragile? what will you at politics look like as we had to the presidential election of 2024 . the critical could you as politics the bottom line.

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