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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 28, 2023 10:00pm-10:31pm AST

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also global health care receipts on an online, at your voice. there is no right to dissent. 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, listerine anal, does error. 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 people need to be heard. and the story told, i couldn't tell them that i was a musician when i was supposed to be proud with exclusive interviews and in death to poor. each centimeter of this stuff represents a year of life. al jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and lives oh, to ashes break out at rallies across france on the 10th day of action against
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president my crumbs unpopular pension reform. awe on the bulk of this is al jazeera life london or so coming up at least 39 people die in a fire at a migrant detention center in a mexican border facility said to be caused by a protest over deportations. ah, nashville police release body can video of offices confronting the shooter who killed 3 children and 3 adults in the latest us school attack and their skepticism in israel over benjamin netanyahu. pausing his judicial overhaul as government and opposition parties begin talks on a potential compromise. ah,
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tens of thousands of people have been marching across france and another day of strikes and protests over dp deeply unpopular pension reforms. police have ramped up security and deployed 13000 offices, maybe half of them in paris. these are pitches form the last hour in the french capital, well has been violence between protesters and security forces. unions and workers are angry of the president for raising the legal retirement age from 62 to 64. without a vote in parliament is become the biggest crisis of a manual microns 2nd term. natasha butler reports from pass. some protest is, but bins and class in paris during a demonstration that was otherwise peaceful. thousands of students and public sector workers once again and st. angry with french president emmanuel, my horse pension reform, and his government's decision to foresee through parliament by decree was critical down among may be the government is finally starting to hear that many french
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people are against this reform and against makram for not listening. as the reform raises the retirement age from 62 to 64, which we don't want and forcing it to parliament proves that there is no more democracy in france. protests is one, the government to scrap the reform for my house as the changes are necessary to sustain the countries pension system for future generations. this is a 10 nationwide strike since the beginning of the year went to now it's hard to see the deadline. the trade unions are needing to pay, and the french government will end when a francis main trade union leaders says each time up to mediation, he form it when they need to suspend raising the retirement age to 64. thanks. what angers people most for one thing over the next month or so we should appoint mediators, what so everyone can say what they want to a plan swiftly rejected by the government office by the director more. we can talk
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to each other directly. the president has already said is ready to receive the unions. once the constitutional courts approved the new lo, michael had signed the building to law within weeks reforming the pension system was one of his campaign promises. but the changes have come at a cost as anger against them. is he subsiding natasha butler? don't you sarah? paris? at least 39 people have been killed in mexico after a fire swept through a migration detention center. it happened to the northern city of sir that horace, near the border with united states $28.00 of those killed were guatemalan nationals around 30. other people were seriously injured in taken to hospital, mexico's president says the blaze broke out migrants and asylum seekers set fight mattresses. of covering they were being to pauses these had to do with the protests that the migrant started because we ashamed that they found that they were going to be deported. a move and to protest,
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they put mattress at the door of the shelter and set far to them. but one venezuelan woman has been desperately trying to get information about her husband. he'd been detained out of the migrant center and was taken away in an ambulance after the fire. no, man, i'm the i want to say forget, we're human, we have feelings, but we're treated like dogs and we're not told about anything our relatives could die and we'd never hear about it. okay, well let's get the latest from manuel to apollo his life in mexico. city and manuel, what more do we know about the chain of events leading up to these deaths? leave, we can start with what we can confirm. so at least 39 people are dead. following that blaze in the migrant detention center and the city of c. that what is right on the border, just across from the u. s. city of el paso, texas. another 29 people who were entered were taken to area medical centers. that's what we know there still a lot of unanswered questions about what exactly the circumstances were that led to
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this detention center. this detention facility to not open its doors to allow these individuals to, to leave, to escape that fiery blaze that ultimately claimed the lives of a, of 39 people we did here earlier in the early hours of tuesday, from mexico's president and the discipline of lopez over to those who said that he believed that the fire was started by the migrants themselves, who may have been protesting overcrowded conditions. who may have been protesting that long wait time that they've had on the border trying to request asylum from u. s. officials on the other side, but again, we still don't have a full picture of exactly what happened. all we can confirm is that this is one of the deadliest incidents that we've seen regarding or, or related to a migrant detention facility. here in mexico, at least in recent memory ryder and as the investigation unfolds, is there any more information coming to light about the victims?
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so we did hear from a guatemalan immigration officials who confirmed that at least 28 of the 39 individuals who were killed in the fire are guatemalan citizens. that's what we know about some of the victims. we still are still trying to get more information from our sources on the ground on the border to try to identify exactly where everybody was from. it's our understanding that the people that were being held at this detention facility were migrants from central america and from south america. so wouldn't be a surprise to see other nationalities that within that list of victims. we should note here that this is not going to do anything to less intentions, that we're already sort of at a boiling point into that. what is leading up to this in just the past few weeks? there have been tensions that have escalated to the point where migrants have you been brushed the border of many of them complaining over long wait times related to an app that was created by us. border officials called c b, p one. that is the way that us officials are now processing asylum request by,
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by migrants on the border migrants have said that this app is slow, it is faulty, and it is. and by all accounts from of immigration officials from immigration, experts here in mexico. this is creating a sort of bottleneck effect, which is why we're see so many migrants piling up, sort of over crowding a migrant shelters in cities like that. what is, but again, this is a story that as you can see, you've seen from the images, you've seen that sound bite from that woman who's trying to get answers about her, her missing loved one. this is a story that's really shocked to country at this point. because again, it's one of the deadliest incidents that we've seen in recent memory or i am plenty more questions. so to be honest, manuel apollo live in mexico city. thank you. ah, police in the us have released a body comforted,
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showing the moment police confronted a shooter who attacked christian school in nashville on monday. officers shot and killed the attacker who was armed with at least 2 assault style weapons and a hand gun. the 28 year old who was a former student to the private elementary school killed through 9 year old children and 3 adults. people have been paying tribute to the victims of the shooting at a makeshift memorial set up outside the school. police have made a statement today and they say they do not currently know the shoot as motive. we've determine that audrey about 7 farms from 5 different local gun stores here. legally. she was under care, doctors, care for an emotional disorder of law enforcement, knew nothing about the treatment she was receiving about. our parents failed to, she should not own weapons. they were under the impression that was when she sold that one weapon that she did not own anymore. as it turned out,
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she had been hiding several weapons within the house. we also don't have a motive at this time. we feel that the students that were targeted were randomly targeted and john hendern has more from chicago. audrey hale was 28 years old, a former student at that school, and had amassed an arsenal of 7 weapons from different places and used 3 of them at the shooting. 2 of those were assault weapons. that's important because assault 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, but recently began using male pronouns. and we're learning a lot more because of the police camera video that was released today. we have 1st of all surveillance video outside of the school that shows hail pulling up in what looks like
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a van. and then unable to get inside the door, shoots through the door, shattering the glass climbs through and then we have police badge camera video that shows those officers. they appear to have learned the lessons if 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, the shooting at a school by 1027. that shooter was dead and police had cleared the entire 1st floor . we see this on the bed 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, pale dead to, we're learning a lot more we, we do know that there is a kind of manifesto that's how police describe it. that hail his written. we don't
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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. nobody's israel's rival political factions have started talks on the government's plans to overhaul the judiciary. on monday, prime minister benjamin netanyahu put a pause on the controversial new following, the biggest protests in israel's history. smaller demonstrations were held on tuesday, including a rally in tel aviv. netanyahu says delaying the judicial overhaul will allow for discussions with the opposition to avoid what he called a civil war opponent say, the proposed changes will give the governing coalition unchecked authority. we won't stop and tell what we said in the initial discussion until late stop it, not cars, but actually stop the legislation and have conversations under good faith. i don't believe i would imagine
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this is robin smith, this live in tell of evilness, bernard, given that the far right coalition and opposition say they begun talks what this is actually mean in terms of finding a consensus. so those talks started on tuesday evening. they've ended now and they've said they're going to go sit back around the table to morrow. you've got the opposition. on one side made up of representatives from the iowa, pete's party and benny guns his party. they were the prime minister in defense minister and the govern before benjamin netanyahu came back into power last year. and then you've got representatives from benjamin netanyahu. li could party. now how those 2 sides are going to come together and reach some sort of compromise is going to be very challenging because they've got such entrenched, entrenched views, one side, one. so then to it, one side wants the, the, the bill to go through parliament. now lupita party, they came out of the meeting on this evening tuesday evening and they said one
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thing they want is they want the bill to be completely withdrawn from parliament at the moment. it's still making the process through parliament is still being tabled is it can still be debated and it could at the stroke of a pen the next day become law. so they want it out upon withdrawn from parliament completely. there's no indication that he's going to happen, but will be one of the talks in one of the demands in the talks as they continue on wednesday, given, but at the pressure that netanyahu is on under both left and right. it does beg the question, what his options are. you benjamin netanyahu stuck between a rock and a hard place? he's not said he's going to withdraw this bill. he's just paused. it said he'll bring it back in the new polish parliamentary session in may. but he is options are really quite difficult because if he can persuades the fall rights to row back on some of its demands that maybe have to have
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a way forward. but they tend to be more tend to be less problematic or more idea logically driven. if he withdraws the bill than it would almost certainly mean the collapse of his coalition and therefore a new election and yahoo relies on the far right latest fall suggest that if there is a new election, he'll lose it because of all the trouble has been caused over the past few weeks, a one other option is to persuade the opposition some members of the opposition to join him and government so we can get rid of the far right. but then so many members of the opposition of have their fingers burned when dealing with netanyahu in the past that they would be reluctant to share power with him. again, that doesn't appear to be any easy way out for netanyahu, but he is a very famous political magician here and israel, but many thanks to the benefits live in television. a funeral has been held in the occupied westbank for a palestinian man killed by israeli forces o my lola died after being shot in the stomach during an railey raid in the city of nablus. last month. he was buried in his hometown at the bottom. it's ready forces
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have killed $91.00 palestinians in the occupied territories this year. so to come, this half hour south korea's population continues to decline despite the government pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into encouraging young people to have children. and they were allowed back only last year, but theresa already threatening the marine life of the bay made famous by the film, the beach. ah hello. it is looking cold, if not so wintry across parts of eastern europe, a fair amount, a cloud there all the way from to care, pushing up across the black sea right up towards the baltics. dry and fi, be some pleasant spring sunshine. its a central parts and then we got wet and windy weather streaming in from the
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atlantic. but at least those winds coming up must study direction. so it will be mild, 14 celsius in london, a 20 there in paris. better the sunshine down towards the south, west bit touchy $26.00 in madrid on wednesday off they noticed a little bit of wintry weather just around the alps. could be stabilized the slopes there where to weather coming in across the low countries, germany pushing back down towards austria as we go on through were thursday that wet weather continuing to just spill in from the atlantic. further east that went you are the starting to push little further east was just 6 celsius there for moscow and also into work he brightest guys a place to say come back into that southeastern corner with snow slowly but surely pulling away from to care. not a parts of africa and never had lottie far to drive a cool wind blowing though across the far north of egypt, northern parts of libya as well. one or 2 showers, scraping coastal fringes west africa.
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ah. oh ramadan. the time of spirituality reflection and gratitude raised the flags all the flu. every column with her al jazeera world, well how leo hau reveals the stories behind some of the arab world songs and chance for the holy month you'll need this song, touched the hearts of all arrows. full ramadan songs on al jazeera lou. ah, welcome back. a reminder, the top stories here on al jazeera,
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there have been more clashes, of tens of thousands of people marched across france, and another day of strikes and protests of a deeply unpopular pension and forms demonstrates as an angry president to minute micro for raising the legal retirement age from 62 to 64. without the vote and parliament at least 39 people have been killed. the mexican city of seo that far is off to fight swept through a migration detention center. 28 of those killed with wasa. mom, mexico's president says the blaze broke out the migrants and asylum seekers set fire to mattresses of just discovering they were being deported. police and the u. s. a release body count pretty showing the moment offices confronted a shooter who killed 3 children and 3 adults and christian school in nashville and monday, they say the attacker had bought 7 firearms legally. in recent years. 2 women have been killed in a knife attack on a muslim center and the portuguese capitol. lisbon,
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at least one other person is being treated for stab wounds. police have shot an arrest at the alleged attack out. he ignored that warnings and advanced officers local media space. he's an african national, and is victims with staff at the center for minister antonio. acosta says all evidence indicates it was an isolated act. pirates serv boarded a danish own ship in the gulf of guinea, near the west african coast or communications channels. with the oil and chemical tanka one jasa reformer are down. although the 16 man crew is believed to be safe inside an armored area, the ship was attacked while at anchor 250 kilometers off point know are in the republic of congo. as a region notorious for pirate activity, m 23 fighters have retaken the town and east and democratic republic of congo, contradicting early reports that they'd withdrawn. the arm group would agree to pull out of 4 different towns and villages last week on condition that government
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forces didn't return to the area. fighting has displaced more than 800000 people in the past year. m. 23 is widely understood to be backed by neighboring wonder which denies supporting the group or web has more from soccer in eastern d r. c. we've heard multiple reports has been fighting around and found them where so in the last 24 hours now this follows a series of withdrew when $33.00 said that withdrew from about 4 different towns and villages last week, including some villages to near where we are now, up in the hills 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, that they would only hand over to regional, east african forces not to congress. the government advantages they
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run into moved in when 33 moves out, but the burned into the small in number. they're not well results been reported by multiple residents in these areas. the m $23.00 still actually controlled the roadblocks in the area and also the group which occupied the hill much of the time . and congos army is accused of supporting congress denied that the fighters from those on grades have to move back in to some of these areas now in much further to the north where they've been fighting within the last 24 hours when i'm 23 pulled out last week resident told us that the armed groups came back in and 23. as for them, re taken the town in the new report, amnesty international as accuse western nations of double standards when it comes to human rights and universal values. the report says that in 2022 countries were
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swift to condemn russia's invasion of ukraine with sanctions imposed on the kremlin and borders open to refugees. while the international criminal court launched an investigation into war crimes in ukraine. the u. s. for example, welcomed ukrainian refugees but expelled more than $25000.00 haitian refugees under policies and practices. the rights groups say's are rooted in racism. the report says responses to arm conflicts in ethiopia, yemen, israel and the occupied, pasting in territory were inadequate. and fueled impunity and instability. amnesty also warms that freedom of expression is under threat as government crackdown on descent. highlighting china, egypt, iran and saudi arabia for ignoring criticism of their human rights records. it ease of robustness of the response to the russian aggression against the ukrainian people that highlight the poverty and weakness of the response to other
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crises. solidarity is owed to the ukrainian people so that it is all so odd to the people of palestine to the people of the retreat to the people of me and mom. and that did not happen in 2022. a political party of former me on my leader ang sushi has ceased to exist after being dissolved by the election commission. the national league for democracy party won elections in 199020152020, but was removed from power and february 2021 military coup. if failed to register under strict new electoral laws brought in by the ruling gender and as denounced the as yet unchangeable election as a sham. so she herself has been detained since the coon is serving a 33 year jail sentence. an orphan child from afghanistan as being reunited with her siblings and uncle in qatar, following a dna tests yard mohammed,
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nancy held his lease elisa for the 1st time in a year and a half a parents were among thousands of afghans who tried to flee cobble air force when the taliban took power in august 2021. they were killed in the suicide bombing, and baby elisa was separated from her surviving family. south korea's president who has called for new initiatives to reverse the countries plummeting birthrate. at a high level meeting, you sagal well said south korea needs to adopt an emergency. mine said for the past 3 years, is a quarter the world's lowest birth race. and this is dropping year on year and 2020 to the average number of children expected per woman fell to not point $78.00 down from northpoint $81.00 the previous year will last year. fewer than 200000 marriages were registered the lowest number on record. the united nations projects, the south korea's population will shrink to half the current $51000000.00 by the
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end of the century. unit kim reports from sol. ah, south korea's rapidly declining population trend is starting to show schools are closing even in big cities like soul and benefits like free subway rides for senior citizens are becoming controversial issues as local governments struggle to keep public utilities funded from donor. we're not asking for complete support from the central government. we're saying the extent of the fear increases can be minimized with at least some assistance. asia as 4th largest economy has been pouring hundreds of billions of dollars and subsidies and programs to encourage young people to have children. despite this, the average number of babies as south korean women will have fell further below one last year, 20.78. when 2 point one is considered ideal,
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the population here shrink for a 3rd straight year as deaths outpaced berths from didn't want to know drinkers all as the number of economically productive people falls. so lower national competitiveness. i'm worried about a big hole in our national security, as fewer people will be available to serve in the military. one study found that only 4 percent of women here between the ages of $20.34 viewed marriage and having children as essential about 13 percent of males in the same age groups at the same as far as who should take care of elderly parents. only 21 percent said that should fall on the children while more than double that disagreed with many young south koreans struggling with day to day career and financial challenges analyst are calling for innovative schemes to tackle the problem. the government will also need to strengthen social safety nets for the elderly forecast to make up 40 percent of
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the population by 2050 units kim al jazeera. so early was made famous by the hollywood movie, the beach, the now my a bang on thailand's west coast is under threat again. the piece of paradise became so popular. the authorities were forced to bank tourists to stop environmental damage. it reopened last year. but conservation is say, the beach is marine, life is now in danger again as victoria gates and be reports. for nearly 4 years thailand's maya bay with its towering cliffs and calm waters, had no tourists. the government closed it in 2018 because visitors had caused ecological damage. under pressure from tour operators authorities reopened. the bay last year. the conservation is say, marine life that thrived in the absence of tourists is now under threat again. we have counted the highest amount of activity of shock with wishes, 161 shark at
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a given time, and that is in november of 2021. and after it was re open for a year, we have an average number of around a $20.00 to $40.00 sharks per day. so it, we have seen an decrease in the abundance the re, plenty corals, the home to nurseries of fish, including juvenile shocks, strict limits on the number of visitors aim to minimize damage to the marine environment and swimming is banned. yeah, they have to save it. if you're wavered, let people go. so it we will destroy it. definitely. so i really appreciate the, the way that the close, the beats for the swimming probably does. because to save the meter, the boats that bring visitors to my a bay now have to dock on the other side of the island to avoid damaging coal reefs . and the $375.00 visitors are allowed in per hour. you can create and come up with the new emit up my gabby as on nature reserve as
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a strict nature reserve watch hock. i think that each actually going to bring new ah tourism scheme as well. and are we going to benefit from that? overall conservation is say, efforts to reverse damage have been remarkably successful, but they warn if not maintained the paradise tourists are coming to find could soon be lost forever. victoria gate and be al jazeera, a damage to russian space council is safely back on earth. after making an unmanned return from international space station, the saw you spacecraft departed the i assess under remote control for months after suffering a major coolant league. it touch down close to the russian space center in kazakhstan, several hours later. officials blame the league on a tiny, meet roy, the punch, the capitals, external radiator, the 3 astronauts who were supposed to return it are now staying on the i assess for another 6 months. ah.

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