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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  March 28, 2023 9:00pm-10:01pm AST

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ah, that's a pushing with one global perspective. mm lou. ah,
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hello, i'm rob matheson with news. i live from dough help coming up in the next 60 minutes . protestors and police wage running battles on the street, sir paris on the 10th day of mass rallies against the president's pension reforms. at least 39 people are being killed and a fired and immigration detention center in mexico near the us border. the shooter who killed 6 people at a school in tennessee had legally bought the weapons he used. but the motive is still unclear. activists accused the u. n. of breaching its neutrality by 80 talks between me and mar, bangladesh. on repatriated ra, hand, get refugees. remarkably submerged that when the man mar delegation traveled to bangladesh. that transport was provided by the united nations comp time. how much not have the latest sports news, including a major statement by the international olympic committee. they've recommended that
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russ anabetta, russian assays that should be allowed to compete that international events under an util flag. ah, we're going to begin this news are in front sorts that tend to stay of nationwide. protests against president emmanuel, my calls pension, overhauled the demonstrations are getting more widespread and more violent. i will issue some live pictures from paris for hours. we've been seeing demonstrations confronting police who are firing tear gas out them. anger is growing against the president. after we sidestep parliament and used executive power to push through the reforms without a vote, mccomb wants to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64, but the protesters want the measure scrapped. now one of the unions has announced more strikes and demonstrations next week on thursday, lately, so ever gl upon law micron has been playing deaf and blind for nearly 2 months.
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ignoring week after week, all the anger and all the demonstration. and now once the law has been passed, he agrees to meet with the unions to disgust the social agenda and so on. what he doesn't understand, what the government doesn't understand is that to day the workforce refuses to move on until we go back on the terms of this law was counselors dealt with what people are fighting. we can't let this go. and what as feel to the fire is the behavior of the government, what the police violence in particular that her natasha buffer has more from the protest in paris. kristen michael could be signing this bill into law in the coming weeks for what the demonstration phase would say. keep coming out, just keep the pressure on the government. and the government will have to scrap the reforms. that is what they want because they believe that this reform is unfair job . the penalize is for people more than what the french president says.
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reform is necessary to sustain the pension system for future generations. so you really have to side to entrench and therapy, and it is hard to see how that that could be broken. one the prominent trade union leaders or has said, look perhaps what the government spend, the reform temporarily part of it. and we could have some independence mediation, but the government has rejected that. so as i said, you know, it's very hard to see what will happen in the future with most protests and fraud. we see that over and over again. they are, the protests are met by trade union, se, all pay for movements, but you do have some smaller group to come in to the movement who are mental, who just wants to make trouble and cause violence. and that's often the focus often the ends up being on back, but they all 4 percent of the great movement in this, in this particular the pension reform prototype. i don't think they're necessarily
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going to detract from the message that many of the mostly people processes have. and that is that they want this pension reform scrap want to bring in coal stangler . he's also a journalist covering labor and politics and funds. he's joining us by skype from paris. figure to have you with us. other countries have raised the retirement age. we haven't seen protests similar to the ones we're savvy, seeing in paris, and other parts of france. why is this making people in france so angry? why i think really there is, there's 2 things that are going on now what i would venture the question differently if we spoke back in january when the movement started. but i really think there are 2 things you have on the one hand, the opposition to the proposed type, the, the law. now it's been approved this hiking, the retirement age from 62 to 64. that's a big part of the opposition for, for cultural reasons for, for political reasons. there's been, i think it's an opposition to that proposal in france. but i think what we're
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seeing now is sort of a new phase in the movement is in large part or response to the method that the government is used to to push this this bill forward. and what we've, we've been hearing earlier, the government deployed this constitutional maneuver card called article 49.3, which allows it to push through bills without an up or down vote in parliament. and that's made a lot of people feel feel very angry. if you look at the polls right now, the 7 and 10 people are opposed to the reform itself and 710 people that actually support the movement against the reform and hope that it, that it continues. and so you really have these 2 factors that i think are driving people out in the streets. and we thought certainly today where i was impaired, i'm just checking out the demonstration. a lot of young people as well who are not immediately concerned via hiking the retirement age, of course, but they feel for that. and this is sort of an issue that touches the hardest french remark with the how is it that you have a president that they will the past approve of law that,
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that so unpopular despite mass protests, despite criticism from union, despite parliament not even having a chance to vote, and if you have a pen of anger that goes, i think, well beyond just the question of retirement, i want to ask you in a moment about that kind of political impact, this is happening on a manual macro and his government bought. i mean, there is a surplus of billions of years and finds his pension system at the moment, but it's estimated about 25 years. that is going to go into the red. i'm what i'm, what i'm interested in is why and that doesn't seem to be bothering people very much when 25 years down the line. there may not be the money to pay them a pension anyway. well that, that, that's certainly the line a manual. my coin and the government have put for it, but that, that logic isn't quite supported by the government's own studies on the issue. you have a council that studies the, the sustainability of the pension system. and yes, they have predicted there is going to be a deficit. i'm in sort of brute numbers. we're talking about billions of videos
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that sounds like a lot on it is to, in some extent, to some extent, but look at, in terms of percent of french g, d, p. france spends a lot on on retirement. a lot of money is also coming into the system. so that deficit you have a debate about just how significant it really is. um, i think what's fair to say, i think this is of a fairy statement. if you talk to economists, if you look at the government's own pension advisory committee, the system is not on the brink of collapse. and a criticism you have is that the government is essentially not trying to apply a political decision which is to hike the retirement age and generate savings by pointing to this economic logic, which doesn't quite make back up his case. i think i think the numbers really speak for themselves. there is going to be a deficit. it's projected, but we're not talking about a system. it's on the brink of collapse either. ok, let's test to talk about the change in dynamic and as far as the protests are concerned that you were talking about earlier, it's moving more towards the fight. the people are feeling aggrieved because they
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feel that they have been ignored. how much damage is this doing? to re manual macro and his government's ability to get anything done for the remainder of its term. so there's, i think, i mean, immediate level what, what this is done is it's really complicated relations between my coalition and one of the key partners, which is the right way to become party. some of the members, 19 of them actually voted for the motion of no confidence to eject the government. so it's hard to imagine them really working together on significant reforms moving forward. i think that's a really important step. a really important point to make this, when we talk about the institutional political situation in print. but look at poll to, i mean, my home makeover government is expected. if you have poor looking at what would happen if you had legislative elections today. my party is dropping the poles, i think around 4 or 5 points. so below both the far right and more importantly, the left the left to in coalition. and then we actually have one example at the not
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even looking at at the port. we had a concrete case study of how the reform is impacting his party, which is we had a 1st round of of a special election over the weekend in 2022. so last summer, my own candidate, the micro candidate came in 2nd place qualified for the run r brown with 20 percent of the vote. this time around that candidate got 10 percent . so, you know, essentially cut and half eliminate eliminated from, from the 2nd round coming in 4th place. not a very good sign if you're in the presidential majority. so that's a big reason to why the government isn't so in raleigh about the prospect of calling new legislative elections. if you know that your party is going to lose feed and potentially have even less representation that you have today, that's not going to necessarily push you to, to call for new elections. and that's another reason why sort of impasse that we're in a may well continue. really interested to get your thoughts on this coast time. thank you very much. and if you times i give will in mexico at least 39 people have been
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killed after fire sweat through a migration detention center. the incident happened in the northern city of white at wires near the border with the united states about 70 people are believed to have been inside. 28 of those killed were guatemalan nationals. mexico's president says the blaze broke out when migrants and asylum seekers set fire to mattresses and to finding out they would be deported. some family members are waiting for information about their loved ones. no ma'am, ma'am, yet they forget we're human. we have feelings, but we're treated like dogs, and i think you were not told about anything. our relatives could die and we'd never hear about it. when our uploads live for us in mexico city, what's the latest that we're hearing about this memo? we'll start with what we know. we can confirm that at least 39 people have died following that blaze at a migrant detention center in the city of sue that what is right on the mexico u. s. border just across from the u. s. a city of el paso,
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texas 29 people were injured. following that brace about blaze, we're taking the area medical centers in this you that what is? that's what we know. there are still plenty of unanswered questions as to what were the circumstances exactly. that led to these men at this dis, detention center being unable to get free, be unable to escape before that fire ultimately claimed their lives. now we have also heard confirmation from the immigration officials in guatemala, that at least 28 of the 39 who were killed or guatemalan citizens again did it to those unanswered questions. the circumstances that led to essentially what was a fire trap for these migrants? we did here for mexican president investment of lopez over at long early on tuesday during his daily morning press conference, where he says that he believes that the fire may have been started by the migrants themselves. who he says may of lit mattresses on fire. following
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a protest after they had learned that they potentially would be deported. but again, this is still something that we're trying to get more information on. so hopefully we'll have those details within the next. within the next broadcast manual, i understand that clayton squat us is just one of several centers like that along the border between mexico and the u. s. what a conditions like there. right, so as you had mentioned, this is not the only city where we're seeing overcrowded conditions of migrant shelters. that sort of pushing migrants into taking these desperate situations. d, the rush, the border or to or to hold protest. we should mention that, you know, riots are not that uncommon. we've seen riots that migrant detention centers take place before just last year. there was one in the city of tiquana across from the u . s. state of california. there was a riot at a migrant detention center in the city of tampa shula along mexico's border with guatemala. nothing anywhere near is dramatic,
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is what we're seeing it in terms of images out of to that. what is we should make note, however, that see that what is, is it is sort of taking the brunt of these sort of migrant populations that we're seeing. and a lot of that has to do with implementation of an app by u. s. customs and border officials, an app called c, b p one that migrants have reportedly said, is slow, is faulty. that is, a migrant experts have said that is if anything leading to a bottleneck effect of migrants who are creating these overcrowded conditions in cities like you that what is but again, this is certainly one of the deadliest incidents involving a migrant detention center in recent memory. and the highlights, one of the many dangers that migrants faced during this dangerous journey across mexico, ultimately leading them to the u. s. southern border bringing up today from mexico said who that's my raffle of manual. thank you very much dude anymore. i had on the news i, including north korea, reveals what appeared to be tactical nuclear warheads as the u. s. and south korea
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carry out to joint military exercises and we hear from one of those most homes by violence in king is rift valley. done and support us about the past. give dallas so much needed boost basketball actions coming up. ah, lisa, me, u. s. a released body counselor is showing the moment a school shooter was killed. it happened at a private christian school in nashville on monday, officers shot and killed the attacker who was armed with at least 2 assault star weapons and a hand gun. the 28 year old, who was a former student at the private elementary school, killed 3 children, and 3 adults. people have been paying tribute to victims of the school shooting. i make shift memorials been set up outside the school. john hendrick reports another school shooting another community, terrorized at covenant school in nashville,
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shots fired gunning down 3 children in 3 adult staffers. there is so many policemen and then the ambulances started moving away from school. and that when i entered it was a schools shooting minutes later in a school lobby to arriving officers fire back. the officers engaged her. she was fatally shot by responding police officers. investigators were left, probing the car of the shooter, a 28 year old, identified as audrey elizabeth hale, and what drove hale to open fire on children. i was literally moved to tears the c bills and the t as, as they would be it out of the building. there was a door that was entered. all doors were locked to our understanding and how exec see got in at this point. so the investigation, the daughter of one covenant teacher was texting with her mother who said she was
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hiding with students in a closet and hearing gunshots close by. it's disgusting and i. yeah, i just, i have no words like i'm trying to process at all. it's so terrible, so sad from president joe biden, there was more consolation with little hope of action. it's just sick. you know, we're still gathering the facts. what happened and why police say the attacker, a former student, was armed with a pistol and to assault rifles style a weapon. the u. s. congress banned in 1994 before allowing the band to expire 10 years later. biden, again called for congress to renew the band. we have to do more to stop con violence. it's ripping our communities apart, ripping a solace, nation, but on a divided capitol hill. he has no real chance of passing its or ending the decades long series of mass shootings in america. john henderson, al jazeera. not to john hans not live from chicago. what details relearned about
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what happened at that christian school in nashville? well, there was just a police news conference a short time ago, a police chief john drake, of nashville, told us a number of new things about the shooter. audrey hail was 28 years old, a former student at that school and had a mast, an arsenal of 7 weapons from different places and used 3 of them at the shooting. 2 of those. ready assault weapons, that's important because it's all weapons are a big part of the debate about guns in america at we learned that hale was under treatment at with a doctor for an unnamed mental disorder. and we're also told that hale was born a woman that recently began using male pronouns. and we're learning a lot more because of the police camera video that was released today at we have 1st of all surveillance video outside of the school that shows hail pulling up and what looks
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like a van. and then unable to get inside the door, shoots through the door, shattering the glass climes through. and then we have police badge camera video that shows those officers. they appear to have learned the lessons of you've all day texas, while police wasted precious minutes outside the school, while gunshots were going off inside, where the children were. at this time, the police got the call at 1013 that there was a shoot shooting at a school by 1027. that shooter was dead and police had cleared the entire 1st floor . we see this on the badge camera video room by room, and then moved up to the 2nd floor where they heard gunshots and those gunshots. get louder on that police badge camera video until you see the police shooting and eventually you see the shooter on the ground hail dead. so we're learning a lot more we we do know that there it kind of manifesto,
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that's how police describe it. that hail his written, we don't know exactly what is in there. they say they are still studying that, but that may give us clues to the motive behind this shooting. john, you mentioned the about the school shooting there. this is just the latest and many school shootings in the us. what's been the reaction to this one? well, president biden looked visibly exhausted. talking about this for the past 2 days. he is again called for a ban on assault weapons. as i mentioned, to assault weapons reused in that school, or at least coded by the shooter. there was an assault weapons ban. biden fought for that. it was passed in 1994. congress allowed it to expire 10 years later, so biden is clearly frustrated. there is a divided congress almost no hope of getting that change in just to give you an idea of how intransigent gun rights advocates on this issue. there's a picture that was sent out in 2021 by the congressman who is responsible for the
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nashville area. and in that his entire family are carrying assault weapons in front of a christmas tree. that gives you an idea of how hard it is to pass gun restrictions and america these days. john, thank you very much. indeed. does john 100 talking to us from chicago? it's in those pies it and has invited members of the coalition government for talks on plans. so overhauled the judiciary. many israelis are still angry over the government's plan on tuesday, prime minister benjamin netanyahu put a pause in the controversial move, following the biggest protests and is use history. more on rest is expected. netanyahu's had delaying. the judicial overhauled beloved discussions with the opposition to avoid what he. busy called a civil war, but opponent said the proposed changes will give the governing coalition unsent to 30 obama smith joining me. and i live from tel aviv. what more to be know about this meeting at the president's office by rob those talks are taking place at the
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present residence on one side of the table will have representatives from the opposition that jala paid, and benny kansas parties. they were prime minister and defense minister before netanyahu was returned to power last year on the other side, representatives from netanyahu was cabinet and now trying to work out some sort of compromise as to how to progress with, with this attempt to reform the judiciary with both sides having such entrenched views, it's going to be very difficult to see how they can reach a compromise. and tonight the organizes of the protest of said the benny guns in the libya don't represent them. they want people to still come out to protest until this law is abandoned completely. they won't protest again as we had into the weekend here in israel, on thursday and on saturday, britain and understand that the defense minister and the coalition had objected to these proposals and was subsequently sacked by benjamin netanyahu. but there seems to be some doubt about whether or not he's actually going what's happening with
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that. yeah, you know, i'm glad i called for this attempt to hold the judiciary to be at least suspended because he was sewing discord amongst the military. a couple of days later netanyahu fires him, but he hasn't yet gone yet. received the statutory note is telling him he's being fired, he's supposed to give me, give him 48 hours. notice where is this latter? he still and his job and it gives an indication of, of the tight rope netanyahu is having to walk a balancing these 2 sides and also 63 percent of his railings and 58 percent of the could support that is netanyahu's party are against the firing of the defense minister. so here he still has his job as far as we know, this is possibly one of the most difficult situations that benjamin netanyahu politically, at least as find himself. and as you mentioned, you described as a balancing act. what is options? now if missional still really stuck between a rock on a hard place,
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he hasn't abandoned this legislation, he just spoke it until the next parliamentary session some time in may. if he abandons it, then his coalition was certainly collapse because it relies on the fall support of the far right. if the coalition collapses, benjamin netanyahu, according to all the latest poles, will lose the next election. because of all the trouble that we've seen over the last few weeks, he could try and persuade the far right to row back on some of that demands to compromise somehow. but they tend to be more idea logically driven. the pragmatics of that's going to be difficult, or he could even try and persuade people who are in the opposition now to join him in government and get rid of the far right. but many of those people in opposition are the fingers burned previously been dealing with benjamin netanyahu, so they might be reluctant to do that. but and thank you very much indeed. does bernard smith bringing this up to date from tel aviv north korea later, came on, has asked his scientists to increase the production of weapons grades,
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nuclear materials. north korea has released images of what appeared to be new, tactical nuclear warheads. the developments come as the us in south korea are holding their biggest joint military jails in years. brian was on board us estimates. one of the was largest warships taking part in those exercises in the seas to the south of the korean peninsula. the us aircraft, carrier limits launches it's war planes, enjoying texas sizes with the south korean navy. it's part of annual drills that are being scaled up again. this year, following a 6 year lo, i'm comes that made escalating tensions with north korea. calling in to the south korean port of booths and the show of force is intended to demonstrate america's commitment to its allies. the u. s. and republic of korea alliance is prepared to adapt to new towns is and threats to ensure the security of future generations of koreans and americans. large scale ad drills have been held using the latest
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fighter jets, as well as nuclear capable bombers from the u. s. air force, life fire exercises have been showing off the combined fire power of the allies armor and artillery. such drills in rage, north korea, which says they could provide a cover to launch an attack. some people might dabble with the idea of a preemptive attack or a strike against north korea, but it's, it's realistically impossible. and even more so with nuclear weapons, the north has been showing its anger with a range of missile launches from the heaviest and latest intercontinental ballistic missiles, capable of reaching the mainland, united states to smaller, short range, ballistic weapons, as well as its most advanced cruise missiles and even an underwater drone that it
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says could produce a nucleus and army. on tuesday, state media released images of leader kim jong and inspecting what it says on you tactical nuclear weapons and technology for mounting warheads on ballistic missiles . undeterred, the u. s. is due to hold more naval drills with both the south korean and japanese navies. we all want more friends. so it's very important that we integrate and are interoperable with all our allies in the western pacific that scene as important in tackling growing threats both on the korean peninsula. and beyond that, the return of this powerful aircraft carrier group is sending a strong message not only to north korea, but also to china, which has been rapidly building up. its military might, especially its navy. the u. s. seems to be stating in the clear as possible term that it remains a significant presence in the indo pacific. rob mcbride,
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al jazeera boost on south korea sheila had and i'll just sit out honda yourself. this becomes kaufman's youngest and 1st ever, most leader, one of ages, premier fashion shows you turns to the 1st time since the start of the pandemic. on the spring box might be the kings of rugby, but we're going to hear from amanda believes other countries in africa can also play a major role with the school. ah, how low they will have a look at africa in a moment. the 1st of the middle east and levant, where we see more unsettled weather. as one frontal system pulls its way further east. we've got another one coming in behind that particularly affecting north western areas like it took here. we are going to see some snow in ankara on
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wednesday into thursday, and that wet weather sauces shift its way further south into northern areas of iraq that wintery weather pushing into the caucuses, and is certainly looking like a windy picture come thursday for eastern areas of the mediterranean, some rain expect its fall in beirut. lebanon were also expecting some rain across parts of saudi arabia, coastal areas, seeing a shower or 2, and some wet weather, pushing into western areas of yemen, joining up with rains across the horn of africa. but across the north of africa to launch the quiet, if not hot picture of the likes of morocco as well as algeria and the canary islands, temperatures here sitting about 5 degrees above the average for this time of year, much cooler for cairo, you can see the temperature fall, that's $21.00 degrees celsius on thursday, but a largely dry picture is farther south. we are seeing the weather conditions, the rains rolling across the tropics, over the next few days. rain edging into eastern areas of south africa. but cool up at clear in cape town.
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ah, around and women are being murdered in mexico every day. almost always my men, an epidemic of gender based violence that threatens the spiral of control. now specialists police was run by women a trying to reverse the trends and bring the perpetrators to justice. what can be overcome years of muscle culture and in different, behind the scenes with the fem aside, the honor. latin america is a region of wonder. i'm joy, tragedy and yes, of violet, but it doesn't matter where you are. you'll have to be able to relate to the human condition with . i've been covering all of latin america for most of my career,
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but no country is alike. and it's my job to said light on how and why lou ah, you're watching all the 0 reminder of our top story. is this our protest as a back on those streets in funds demonstrating against president emmanuel mac hose pension changes almost to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 workers and transport deviation and energy industries have gone on strike at least 39 people have died in a foreign a migrant detention center in northern mexico. dozens of others were injured in taken to hospital fires. reporters have started in restaurants, least in the u. s. of release body come footage showing the moment
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a school shooter was killed. it happened at a private christian school in nashville on monday, officers shot and killed the attack of who was armed with at least 2 assaults. tall weapons, and a hand gun. m. 23 fighters, a re taken a town in eastern democratic republic of congo. contradicting alley. reports they've withdrawn, the on group had agreed to pull out of 3 villages on condition that government forces didn't return to the area fighting between the army and rebels as force more than 800000 people from their homes in the past year. i'll just see this malcolm web is in saki in eastern democratic republic of congo, on the scale of displacement there. well, we've had multiple reports and been fighting around a town in west, so in the last 24 hours. now this follows a series of withdrawal. when 33 said that withdrew from about 4 different towns and villages last week, including some villages just near where we are now up in the hills,
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around the town of soccer. now this is meant to be part of a peace process. this involves regional government. one of em, 23 is condition for withdrawing as if they would only have 2 regional east african forces not to combine the government villages burundi and moved in way and 33 moves out but the burned into the small in number. they're not well resorted. it's been reported by multiple residents in news areas. the m 23 still actually controlled the road blocks in the area and also the groups which occupied the hills. much of the time and congo army is accused of supporting congress denies it. fighters from those on great, have moved back in to some of these areas now in more so further to the north where
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there's been fighting within the last 24 hours when i'm 23 pulled out. last week, residents held us that the armed groups came back in and 23, as for them, re taken the town. now, congress army says the m 23 attack its own positions name, where the local residents say that it was the group that m 23, the 5 thing and i'm 23 is now back in control plans by bangladesh and me in law to allow some ro here, refugees to return home being met with skepticism. just over 5 years ago, tens of thousands of escaped military track down and me and law, and remain stateless. now, un is acute, or breeching its neutrality, that's after the mars. it's boats for use to transport delegates from me and law to bangladesh for talks on repatriation. i'll just as diplomatic added to james bay's reports from un headquarters in new york. i'm to dash,
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says there about 1200000 rominger refugees living in camps in the country. bangladesh is foreign minister has told me that in recent days, a delegation from the military regime in me and mom met bangladesh, the officials to arrange a pilot scheme to start returning some of the area. they come from that area relatively ok. but if the globe back is sit, if the garbage they can help stabilizing the situation after all, their my and my people. remarkably, it's a merge that when the me on my delegation traveled to bangladesh, that transport was provided by the united nations to un agencies, the world food program and you and hcr provided boats. the insignia were removed for the journey and it's reported that there were weapons on board hidden on the top, hollins. when i spoke to the un special envoy for me and mar about all this, she restated the organisations long standing position that no refugee should be
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sent back until there are conditions which are conducive to the voluntary dignified and safe return. we are not satisfied that those conditions are there at this particular time. the generals who carried out a qu, now seemed to at least on one occasion, have a navy. and that navy is the united nations that must worry you. well, if they had consulted me, i would have stopped. but nobody consulted me. man, man, pro democracy, activists and human rights. campaigners say they're very concerned about recent events. the use of un boats would appear to be a breach of the organization's neutrality. and they say the un shouldn't be doing anything to facilitate the return of refugees because conditions remained to unsafe . james bays al jazeera of the united nations and from cox's bizarre and bangladesh, however, charger explains why he refugees simply don't trust me and was military. and their intention is still far from their dreams of returning home. more than
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a 1000000 refugees are stuck in the hills. of cocks, bizarre mohammed, bella lost everything when he left me and mar, and he doesn't believe it's military leaders are serious about helping people like him to return laguna doesn't they have no real intention to take us. it's all a show that we are appealing to the international community for justice. if justice prevails, only then will we go back to previous attempts to repatriate refugees. since 2017 have failed and talks to attempt another, have been suspended since the myanmar military staged a coup in 2021. many refugees believe the political situation in myanmar is too volatile for them to go back now. la, chandelier. they ended our gender looking. we faced many difficulties here, like limited rations on essential food items, lack of proper medical care, et cetera. so we do want to go back, but only when there is peace. royal seen is
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a ro hang a journalist who documents events in this camp. there are some initial yes. we have his in the came right. no, like they are is lack of integration. there is lack of like the old days or no abilities and visited his father who just was on repair. so all of that he would just want to go back home and with the dignified dumb sippy and security me on martyr attends the sole authority to verify those who can read and an issue identity cards to them. based on evidence of past residence, rowing, i do not have citizen shape in their home country, men mar and also and recognize as indigenous. they're only issued with so called national verification card, identifying them as bengali muslims. but most ringo he left all their possessions behind or their homes were burned down or looted. so that cannot produce such proof of former residents and rights groups say, myanmar has done little to support ringing of citizenship to instill confidence in
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those wanting to return home. john v trogie al jazeera cox's bazaar and eddie shone oil tankers been boarded by pirates self. the shores of the republic of congo, the ships, owners, se armed men, voted the vessel. a 140 nautical miles west. upon was saturday. all 16 crew members on the mon, just out of form, has sought refuge in a safe room, but communication with them has been lost. home see yourself. it's been confirmed as cotton's new 1st minister, you've been sworn in on wednesday yourself, replaces nicholas sturgeon, who resigned after 8 years. that in barber reports from edinburgh. he's got the backing of the scottish parliament, that's the easy part. but as hums, a usage settles in his scotlands 1st minister, selling his vision for the nation may be tougher at all. i've always believed that leadership is about running towards and embracing challenges. rather than shying away from them, we might not be able to achieve everything we want all the time and all at once.
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but every day and office as an opportunity to make things a bit better than they were yesterday. just down the road from parliament, john carlo de soto runs a fudge making business with his brother. the firms been in the family for 3 generations. john carlo would rather scotland stay in the family known as the united kingdom. and he wants the scottish government to focus on countering the hom, done by bricks it trying to make it easier for people even just to come over like make it easier for businesses and should be like less sanctions on things like 20 important goods of businesses. i think we suffer from these things, yusef said he's going to concentrate on things like improving child care and public health services. this couple are expecting their 3rd child as supporters of the scottish national party. they agree, independence can wait. you know, of the western star scene or their st. pete yet about as independence and you know,
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they're let another thing slates. i think maybe if we get other things in place fashion, they're mc and belton and for independence, step away from picturesque parts of the capitol. like this and you'll get an idea of the challenges facing homes the use if, for example, a recent survey showed 4 percent of scottish households use the food bank in the year to march 2022. that's more than anywhere else in britain, apart from northern england. not surprising then that the 1st minister has said the cost of living crisis is his top priority. but even here in working class, leave some people say independence should not be relegated to the bottom of the pile top of that class catholic as yes, michael assert and couldn't do it. i've never done business diver trying again. as i and ali stops us, yusef says he'll need to convince many more people. independence is a good idea. some may be beyond convincing and the happy the any. and then i just professional liason. of course nobody is predicting scotland will break away any
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time soon. but the government hopes improving the economy could prepare the ground for another go at a referendum. the team barber al jazeera edinburgh canyon authorities have ordered hundreds of people in the north rift valley to leave their homes. the military says it's planning to raise suspected armed groups in the area, better slim and taylor is one of those who's been told to leave. i give you linda. my name is beatrice lemming. tilla i currently live in was saw in some barrow county. we moved here from port village with my family. we left poor because of attacks by bandits at my area, hallway, missouri. i who would love to have one thing. we arrived at the center village, but it is to congested our. we set up shelters which are easy and cheap to construct, but life is very hard. we came here because there's a police post where government rangers help. we share whatever food we have as we leave here. the bandits came to that home and to cattle,
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oregon. they're taking anything from a homestead, including 41 cannot stay with even a goat or a cattle eli because they will take them all. i got like a big mcgruther w rather they do with all life at poorer was initially very good because part of the place we have leaved with our livestock. and we also farmers. we lived peacefully until recently. we had a market where different communities would trade law. the talk started after a preston from a neighboring ethnic group was killed in our community. and that started the conflict. what we have lived with them as our neighbors. but now they come to kill us. we're been our homes and still our lives stop in a little bit of a you're not at the band. it's want to take our land and that is why they're causing so much trouble. they want us to flee from our homes when dis attacks begun the government to some dis, leaving us with no weapons to defend ourselves and on
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a lot of one left with anger. yeah, i guarantee we're praying to god to help us. we have suffered for so long. we pray that the bandits in the caves are defeated by the government forces and we will go back to our homes and may be we can coexist as neighbors. again, the librium anywhere might the us officials are accusing the founder of the now bankrupt crypto currency exchange after yeah, of conspiring to bribe chinese officials, some banquet fried has been charged for directing payments to unlock his frozen accounts in china. the cans held more than $1000000000.00 of grip to currency. the 31 year old already faces multiple charges including steam, billions of dollars when f t x collapsed last year. artificial intelligence is changing the world as we know it, and that means is going to likely change the job market as well. a lot of attention has turned to generative. e i systems like chat g, b, t. i can do everything from producing songs and images to writing
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e mails and even cracking test codes. in fact, that chat bought alone reached more than a 100000000 users just 2 months out of its launch. now it's exciting technology, but it also poses a threat to the labor markets. a report by goldman sachs shows about 300000000 jobs across major economies could be affect it. but there is a financial silver lining. find a suggest. this technology could boost the global g d p by 7 percent over a decade, or going to bring in george's patropolis. he's a researcher at the initiative on the digital economy at massachusetts institute of technology. he's joining us know from cambridge, massachusetts. so thank you very much. indeed for being with us on al jazeera, what sectors are most likely to be affected 1st? i think up we, we are in them that there it's so far innumerable lucien that is based on that official intelligence. and it is fascinating to see that the lot to language model of like tut cbt, had been so successful and inflation. so that means that the certainly there will
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be a major disruption that will also affect the labor market. i expect the fairest occupations that will be affect the are they, why are they so called t jobs in their space? anything ones that have to do with the delay. so i'm not a ward prosy typing and but i feel that the, that there will be a much broader impact that will also factor mainly more a capacious or we may start to fish shorter and displacement effect. some jobs will be displayed because these technologies can have the potential to displace from a label to some extent, but the longer on only see also the benefits. so want to see that ice of productivity. as you said, they did the b berg copy that can increase because of this that acknowledges and then i was curious, can be much more efficient in their task. they are,
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are they have to do by using a lawyer and we say i can have a competitive advantage to a lawyer without a i the same applies to many high school job. so i believe that the longer it on the implications of the super efficient technologies will be on the productivity side will be more positive. the forgive my ignorance on this because i'm still way behind the curve on this, but we're still talking about eyes reacting to in put them in the can pull together text and i and images, but the can't have the original idea. is it fair to say that the people who are least likely to be a factors are the ones perhaps, are going to get secure jobs? are the ones who are going to be able to take control of this and know how the system works. i finger a i s, at technology has said particularity, and this particular at the is that by doing a specific, thus they can improve. they learn how to become more proficient,
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and they started with images. they started with voice recognition. they started with symbol dusk, but the us, they, their gap abilities increase. we expect to have also more it's in our school more broader, broader scope in the provisional starts and combining different task with each other. and i think the larger language, more of those who are discussing right now, going to that direction. however, this is not something necessarily, but because they feel this is april. they will bring it in, in the provision of a specific services can also be of help award gets in, in order to become more productive and become more successful in their carriers. are we likely to see an exponential rise in program talk about moore's law. for example, the like the are in and financing which allows a eyes to, i don't know to respond almost on a gradual granular level to almost any input do. is there
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a point at which they could be taught so well and so much that they would be able to act as, say, i farrah pissed, or a counselor something that would normally require a human interaction? i know warmth of human interaction. i think we are far away from that point i. i believe that the human interaction right now, it's very hard to be replaced by in the i system i. i believe the jobs that they are based on human interactions can only be been defeated by ai because on each job has a specific task, some task has to do the human interaction. some task is probably some more team aspects of that job. so like preparing some documents for example. so i would see in these kind of give patients a i to show the individual to be more prepared for the human interactions and the
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meetings have with other people on being able to place human in these interactions . i think we are far away from that. really interesting to get benefits expertise in this georgia post office. thank you very much. indeed, sir. thank you. pleasure to be with you. so i had on al jazeera in sport, a big recommendation by the international olympic committee. details coming up ah ah, with
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with mm. pool. ah ah.
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is showing are you staging, want to reach is biggest fashion shows almost a year to the day since the city of 25000000 people was placed on de locked on. foreign slurry has the story. the chinese fashion industry's most glamorous event is back in full splendor. the shanghai fashion week is where the who's who of control come together to showcase the best of the country's design and dressmaking talent as her you keep alive, hold her in. this is the 1st year after the pandemic. an economy is recovering all women and very confident that we find whole class was here. a used to rely mainly on the overseas mafia so much below your risk. yes, we made adjustments, and now we focus more on the chinese market. the national exhibition and convention center has been transformed to host a 1600 brands. nearly all of them local. it's hard to imagine that just over a year ago, this building was a very different place. construction crews walked round the clock to build
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isolation wards. in a matter of days ago, it was transformed into a quarantine center and hospital with 50000 beds. it was one of more than a 100 quarantine facilities in shanghai last year. when cove at 19 infections searched the whole said he was placed under one of the strictest, locked down in the world, which was only lifted after 2 months since then. shanghai has wrought back to life scenic sites, such as the bund or waterfront, i once again packed with people and so much on their so young, high experience are so much last year. it's a international cd. tourism is a big industry for shanghai this year. the economy is still on its way to a full recovery. what to be honest, i think it's only about half of what it used to be the 3 day fashion fair. the 1st, at full capacity since the pandemic is not just a display of shanghai is fashion industry ambitions. it's a sign. the city is back in business. florence louis al jazeera,
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as divers ford here. sala, thank you very my, to rob. while the international olympic committee has recommended that russians and better russians, that would be a out to compete as a neutral at international competition. there are band due to russia's invasion of ukraine last year. now you see who's executive board a met in those on on tuesday, said it's advice, does not concern the participation of athletes and next year's at paris games are russians and by the russians have been competing as new tools in some sports participation. i'll fail fleet. so with sir russian and paler, russian passports in competitions and international competitions works we see to most prominently in tennis, but we see it also in cycling cur, the we see in some table tennis or competitions. her we
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see the nice. okay. we see in and paula we see in football and in i know for the sir for competitions as security incident. her been happening. we haven't been informed. and tom still has a got started in his new job as by munich. a coach, the former chelsea manager takes over from a union. now, guzman know who was recently dismissed from the barbarian club. to, holl isn't taken over by a team in catastrophic, but at the club are 2nd in the bond is legal. one point that behind daughter and they're also into the quarter finals of the champions league. the new president of rugby africa says a mindset that change is needed to ensure his continent gets the backing it requires gonna have to and then sat was elected earlier this month on the continent
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is home to well champion south africa. no other african nation has ever won a game at the world cup. i believe that with the right support, more african countries will be able to compete. i think in the level rugby is the 2nd largest sport in the world, and it is such a wonderful game that provides an opportunity be toll short or whatever else may be changing. the mindset of governance is, is, is a big thing. and then face changing the mindset of world rugby, i think africans always thought that whether it is economically socially of being the place that people disparage. i'm not saying that well, rugby does that. i'm saying that our government bodies, but we do have to get their focus and their concentration of the fact that for the last 20 something years, this is the way that africa has been looked at. other schools are looking at africa differently, the m b, i understand is investing millions of dollars per year in africa to try and
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encourage and develop the game for football, we've just seen the president in cantino luanda involved in something with a massive program to invest in academies that use the development of where it's from, and we really need world rugby to do the same. if we can convince them that a stronger african means stronger rugby, stronger rugby means more people will watch the game or people watch the game is more. revenue comes in ultimately for the governing bodies. it's a mindset for us here in africa and for the donors outside to really look and say, we haven't done and it's time for us to sit up and do more. the dallas mavericks are still in there with the chance self clenching a playoff spot in the n b a western conference you cut down to to finish with 25 points. and 6 assess, include in just an incredible pass across the with healthy court to his teammate, jaden, hardy or the maps went on to seal
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a much needed when against the indiana pacers one. yeah. and, and you surveyed the landscape plans with craig. i think he saw me at 1st. i mean when he saw me, i think you'll be able to get it to me but he did. so i was, i got and knocked his down. well, i got him out the door so it was a crazy pass. so that's a spot for me. i went back to rob donna, thank you very much indeed. leave walker is going to be here in a couple of minutes with learn all these stories. don't forget the website, of course all the 0 dot com. i will bothersome. stay with us. ah ah. and i
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imagine a mosque without pres. oh, without a family country without people people without that country. imagine fasting, without if tow rift on without gatherings imagined compassion without action. oh, imagine ramadan, without giving me millions of refugees are still up rutted from their homes, struggling to afford even their basic needs. now imagine what your donation can do . every gift counts. join the debate, the you know that the sector seems empowered by this gina, government, and stained by the government. today they are the government africans how security is also global health security. on an online, at your voice,
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there is no right to defense. there is no right to protest, we can't just keep relying on aid. there has to be some work toward a sustainable economy. at the end of the day, it is ordinary objects that are paying the price. this tree anal does there. when the news breaks, some buildings that had already been damaged, have been further pushed over to one side. others that were close to collapse when need to be heard. and the story told, i couldn't tell them that i was a musician. while i was supposed to be burned with exclusive interviews, an in depth to each centimeter of this stuff represents a year of why al jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and lives. ah, trash is breakouts at rallies across.

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