tv News Al Jazeera April 10, 2023 2:00am-2:31am AST
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i want the whole world to know that check if you are not headed. it stretches all this. resist with the powers that be this gene on al jazeera, yours from al jazeera. on the go and me tonight, out is there is only mobile app, is that the eve? this is where we dissects analyze, and you have to find what thing. and i guess now it's only a step from algae. there is mobile app available in your favorite app. still, just set for it and tapped are made a new app from out is even need at your fingertips. ah. the guy chasing a cease far in yemen. saudi and amani delegations are in san off for talks to end and nearly 9 year long conflict that's killed hundreds of thousands
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ah, on carry johnston. this is al jazeera, alive from doug, also coming up u. s. justice department investigates how top secret documents on the ukraine war i've been leaked online. people are living in this kind of conditions. it has been raining in some part of the country. we report from a camp for displaced people in somalia as a country faces it's worst as a drought on the politics of sports. ukraine threatens to boycott the paris olympics. russian and below. recent athletes are allowed to participate. ah, who begin in yemen, where there are international efforts led by a man to forge an end to nearly 9 year long conflict. the war has claimed hundreds
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of thousands of lives and pushed millions more into poverty. and hunger or delegation from saudi arabia is now in yemen and has joined representatives from a man who arrived on saturday. they'll hold talks with who thies, who control much of the north of the country on the capital san up. as a precursor to this on saturday, a prisoner exchange was carried out who these received 13 detainees in exchange for one, saudi prisoner, or talks come after re add in. tehran agreed to restore diplomatic relations last month as part of a deal brokerage by china. while the head of the who thes met the money and saudi delegations earlier in santa in 2022 warring factions in yemen, agree to a 2 month cease far. the 1st extended truth in 7 years. you and the broker deal largely held but was not extend it who the representative say any peace talks must respect humans, territorial integrity,
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or hashem aha. barrow has reported extensively on the conflict. he explains what saudi arabia wants from the deal. and the challenges all parties face reaching an agreement, they want peace, they want stability because they have loss or massive transformation of saudi arabia. they're rebuilding many parts of the kingdom. they are about to start a massive project in the capital re yard, rebuilding a new airport. they would like her area to become a leading her career in the region. and therefore they want some sense of stability for that to happen. they don't want to see any similar scenario like their buckets flying into saudi arabia or the join at after targeted oil installations. to do that, the hope is are saying this time we're not looking for quick fixes. we did something which is going to be permanent for that permanent thing to happen. they wanted the truth and then they wanted the political settlement on the political
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settlement, though the hope is, although i've been talking to some of their own people to day and they are very optimistic. they say when it comes to the settlement with cautious is ha, ha, to be your many lead jamini owned. it has to be between us, the islam party and the different components of the human society. we don't want any international interferes, but ultimately the hurt is what they won't tell you why wishes they all the us, whatever happens to model, they are definitely going to be the ones to have a bigger. so this is a complex political landscape. the americans failed because it's very complex. the european tried this in work. the united nation has been struggling for quite some time to bring all those parties to come together to negotiate a political settlement. this could be a moment, by the way, when sarabia could be on a collision course with united out of emma's particular. when it comes to the secessionist, the secessionist are saying that we are breaking away. we no longer part of this yemen. this deal stipulates the, the m and has to stay united with the health is having a bigger say, you have this law, how this assessment secessionist. this is why when you talk to the health is about
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the potential for a final settlement. they will tell you it will take some time. well, every year the un launch is an appeal for yemen and says this year, the help required is around $4300000000.00. diego to rear is the you ends deputy humanitarian coordinator. he says, lack of funds forces a closure of life saving aid services we have received blends is amounting about $1200000000.00. so far. this pays in comparison to what we received last year, which was close to 50 percent at about $2000000000.00 out of the 4 that were requesting. this is really the generosity of the donors and we present a plan to them. and we tell them that this is, these are the needs of the people in this plan is crafted by the united nations with partners about 200 national and use international use and you, in agencies and we present to the world. these are the needs of the people in order
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to bear to survive. i mean, not to develop themselves, not to when i'm talking about resilience recovery or people returning home or just talking about bare minimum survival. here is a food water. nutrition has a center and the different services that we try to we try to provide if the funding is not provide, it means less services. it means transfer connects that have to close. it means are pumping stations for water. stop pumping, pumping the water in schools that do few schools that remain not the number of schools that remain at that function even less way than they do. so we now have about 215000000 children that are out of school in yemen. and this is the result of the compound impact of 8 years of over 8 years of conflict in that has destroyed public services. and that has brought the economy very much to a old and has impacted millions of people. the u. s. department of justice is
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investigating how dozens of classified intelligence documents ended up on the internet. the alleged secret files reveal that the united states spies on its allies as well as its adversaries. they also paint a grim assessment of russia's military capability and ongoing war and ukraine. my counter reports from washington dc. the publish documents report to show the degree to which the ukrainian military is struggling in the conflict. but also supposedly show that the u. s. has extensively penetrated russian intelligence units, and is also spying on close allies, including ukraine's military and political leaders. the league that was 1st reported by the new york times includes details about ukraine's military strength and its casualty. counts along with those of russian forces. the times report says, one senior us official called the leak, a massive intelligence breach, made worse because it lays out to russia just how deep american intelligence
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operatives have managed to get into the russian military apparatus. blue. but some of the details in the documents appear to have been altered to present a rosy, a picture of the russian military fueling speculation that they're being used in a propaganda drive. there are some aspects of the document that i have some authenticity to them, but they're also indications that this may be a russian disinformation campaign, which they're very good at. it's attempting to target strategic intelligence sharing between the united states and ukraine, and try to, you know, create a bad faith relationship there. the documents also appear to revealed us national secrets about the middle east, china, and even north korea. the white house is working at damage control with its traditional allies, many of whom are believed to have been angered at the reported extent of u. s. espionage. it's all working at reassuring those allies that the u. s. is able
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to keep it secrets and what the white house most needs is concrete information about the leaks from both the pentagon and the department of justice. mike hannah al jazeera washington or glen cow is a former deputy national intelligence officer for trans national threats at the cia . he joins us on skype from boston. usa welcome to the program. so firstly, how authentic do you think the information in these leaks are? well, i heard one of the previous speakers note that the russians are very good at this information. that's absolutely true. and they do extensively far more than anyone outside of an intelligence service realizes that said, i have not seen the 1st hand documents themselves. i've read a number of reports about them, but they do ring quite true as an accurate survey of
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a number of american intelligence reports about the idea of spying on allies. that's not so new. is it? well, i mean that here i can, can contain the chuckle. it's like the famous line from casa blanca, where the, the police steps into the back room of the, of the saloon says, my goodness, there's gambling going on here. as he takes a payoff. there's no surprise whatsoever. everybody knows that most everyone spies on most everyone else. that's the, the rate on that. the reason for exist to exist over the intelligence service. the problem is that when this becomes public, then it creates real political problems and decrease intelligence problems too, because it reveals what the country knows where it doesn't know what it's seeking to know how it goes about doing it. all of which can lead to massive political
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crises, but then deaths to people. so given what you say then overall, how would you assess the damage from this as far as the american intelligence agencies are concerned? well it's, it's pretty bad. it is a bad series of leaks, so say series, because i don't know if it came out in one batch, but it's a number of different topics in different countries. and therefore, touching upon different us intelligence agencies and capabilities at any time what you know, don't know, comes out. it presents golden opportunity for the other countries about who you are, the country you're reporting on to do a counter intelligence operation. i find out who has the information, what information is the can on how to stop it. so from the us perspective, this is
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a really bad, a bad problem. and when you look at the content, obviously extent, does it make russia look a stronger or weaker when it comes to the, the war in ukraine or to my reaction has that, i think, a pretty standard one for an intelligence officer which was not quite to yawn a lot of the information, one should assume that most of these topics are keen interest to the united states or to any other country. and the conclusions made the fact presented are pretty run of the mill, which doesn't mean they're not significant. but it's what one would expect, does it make russia look worse or weaker? i don't think so. those wishes and paying attention have seen the damage being done to the russian military, the disarray, the court tactics and training and so on. but. ringback to have this spelled out
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with more reasonably verified assertions, if you get quite a fax, because we don't know exactly is informative for all of us, that doesn't make it runs the worse we've all known they are in effects right now. then can we very much appreciate your time here and i'm just there. thank you. time more than half of somebody as the population is struggling to survive the most severe drought in the country's history. 5 rainy seasons have failed and a 6 looks lucky to follow. katherine sawyer reports from august issue. so we are all come for this place. people here on the outskirts of a dish to thousands of people have come here from different parts of the country. and basically they have fled from drought and they say that the situation back home has been unbearable. many people have died. we have hard from government officials
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who say at least 43000 people have died in the last one and a half. yes. so this situation is very dire. we have been talking to we have been talking to aid workers who said that they are overwhelmed and their money, you know, donna money is not coming in fast enough. so people here are saying that they don't have food. we have talked to a woman who stays that to a hot children have died one very, very recently i. so i fled from home because of lack of water and food. all on the most died. my children are sick. i don't even know how i can rebuild my life. you people are living in this kind of conditions. it has been raining in some parts of the country. but you know, these has come with its own devastations because people are saying that they don't
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have enough to cover themselves and water is pouring into their houses. we know that in some parts of the country, several people have died because of a torrential rains. others have lost their homes, and many others are coming here. and, you know, when we talk about the range, you know, someone would ask why then this id piece not going back home by so difficult. many of this displaced people come from their pharma. so they come from areas where they have been planting, but it was very difficult plan, so they are here. so right now the situation continues to be very bad because like i said, they have not planted. so aid workers are saying that we are going to expect more bad consequences when it comes to this drought. it's not over. they say
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marcella had hair on al jazeera. why a warehouse far in germany's 2nd largest city, triggered a health warning and roaring back in numbers. and how one countries tiger conservation project is causing fear among some communities. ah, with that quite a strong wind blowing out the atlantic across florida is going to prompt some pretty big showers, i think. and they will give you fairly strong tidal rips in. for example, the carolines off shore, but coming in to the western side of the u. s. one scanned into canada, another active sister which means rain coming in to seattle. and then down through the american coasts, northern california. and where that works is where you were in tuesday now,
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you'll find it turned into snow quite readily on the higher ground. it's 26 degrees in l. a nice and warm. taken a well come back up again to the sunshine should be enjoyed and it will last in to choose. as you can see, whereas in florida, things do improve somewhat for the south and throughout the caribbean. now the breeze is not strong, but you come just the north. so, hispaniola cuba, you could ampligen mexico. this all looks potentially very wet with big thunderstorms rather than by what we've seen flooding already in the dominican republic. and in the sudden constant south america, there's been fighting recently in the northeast of brazil. now it is usual, get heavy rate at this time yet. nevertheless, this is excessive. as you might see, it, it will be there, i think, for at least a day or 2, causing landslides at his worst. ah
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frank assessments, justice means to give them the basic human rights, not only in the camp, but also inside the me and map informed opinions by the ministration are very concerned about this development. especially for what it means for china's power on the world's day critical debate. now all the boat will leave you a proper in depth analysis of the days headlines inside story. on al jazeera lou ah, watching al jazeera reminder of our top stores this sound, saudi and amani delegations of arrived in yemen, capital,
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sauna for talks with goofy officials. and negotiations are part of international efforts to end emmonds nearly 9 year long conflict representatives say any peace talks, most respect emmans territorial integrity. u. s. justice department is investigating who leaked dozens of classified intelligence documents that surfaced on line. the alleged secret files, detailed national security secrets when crane, middle east and china, old and half of somalia population is struggling to survive the most severe drought in the country's history. 5 rainy seasons have failed. rising food prices deepening the crisis. at least 4 people have died and 9 others injured and an avalanche in the french house. it is auster could name all blank in the southeastern france. authorities say off feast scares and guides were caught in the avalanche. several
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people are thought to be trapped under collapsed building in the french city of mos, hey, authorities are investigating the cause of the explosion that made the collapse happen . sarah. hi, rat reports navigating narrow streets of moss se emergency crew are faced with a difficult task of removing rubble, blocking entry into a copse, residential building, seeking fossil guilt. we think they might be between 4 to 10 people under the rubble. the fire is still going on as i speak. it's very hard to access it because the rubble is blocking access to the fire. and of course, we need to get rid of some of the rubble for safety of the rescue team and with smoke escaping the claps. building those living on the same street were forced to leave their homes, are being put up in local schools until it's safe to return. the full story block wrote down parts of buildings on either side on sunday. not look like we did up studio. our top priority remains the search for survivors in the rubble. you know,
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there's a concern that some people may have been caught in the 1st collapse were faced with persistent fire lasting several hours now at extremely high temperatures. we have to protect our firefighters and sniffer dogs spotted your mil gas. witnesses say it all started when they heard a loud explosion and smelt gas in the early hours of the morning, or announce engine exposure. we heard an explosion between midnight and one a. m. a very strong one that made us jump. we looked up the window to see what was happening and i saw rebel smoke and people shouting me. 8 people were killed in law say in 2018 when 2 dilapidated buildings caved in. 8 agencies reported at the time that $40000.00 people in the port city were living in sub standard structures . bart city officials have ruled out structural issues in this latest collapse. sorry, height of al jazeera people in the german city of hamburg have been warned of possible toxic fumes or to fires broke out in the warehouse near the city. 140
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people been moved to safety. while the fire department is advising residents to stay in doors with their windows closed, or a challenge has more the, a major fire and a major response in germany, 2nd largest city. the from before dawn, firefighters battled the flames, conceiving several warehouses in an industrial area, south east of hamburg center. german media reported that containers of hydrogen sulfide were involved, a toxic chemical with an unpleasant odor. so far, cruise and police, or breathing losses, that few would have been here since 4 o'clock in the morning. resident reported the fire was initially a bird, only a warehouse with had sped to the warehouse for a reason and a cloud of smoke is covering half the city. we sounded our warning system, a police spokesperson said it isn't possible. get to assess how dangerous the
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situation is. people in hamburg have been advised by mobile phones to close their windows 10 off ventilation and air conditioning, and avoid the area. the plume of dog smoke also halted long distance trains between hamburg and other german cities. by mid day, the fire department had reduced the threat level authorities. they know injuries have been reported. yes, we tenants out is there thousands of people have taken part in easter peace marches and dozens of cities across germany in many calling for an end to the conflict in ukraine. they want the german government trying to keep that bus and has more from one of the routers for over 60 years. healey, easter march is being held here in germany. the slogan has always been no more war, offered a terror of nazi germany. but the war and ukraine has divided the peace movement.
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these protests here are urging the government to stop sending weapons to ukraine and start to push for peace negotiations. most again, that's why i really want a peaceful solution and not just the sending of weapons. also just think about what comes next. it can't go on like this and people are dying on both sides. god gave us deutscher we as germans should never st weapons. as germans, we have to take responsibility and from the start should have put for diplomatic solutions. all over germany, more than a 100 of these piece marches are being held. julia is the weekend. but this happens have been criticized for being too naive and even accused of playing into the hands of russia. since the start of the war and ukraine, germany has been decided on sending military support to the battlefield. but recently germany has decided to send combat tag something here. people worry could lead to the escalation of the war. stop, placid. i'll just era and funk for
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a new order. ukraine's government says it will boy call the paris olympics if the russians and better re sins are allowed. in this soft international committee recommended that participation of athletes from the 2 countries turn the hall us. but to athletes in keith who've already been affected by the war world championship and olympic bronze med list. spending 7 hours in the pool daily with one aim in mind. gold in paris in 2024. if they get the twin synchronized swimmers, florida and marina alex eva, will do so against the old, displaced from their home in her cave, their former training facility shell, to rebel. it is not just the destruction of war that stands in their way. but the politics of international sport for us, it's of course not the low russian russian anywhere ill.
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first of all, or if you are the new guidelines from the world olympics body could see athletes from russia and bella. ruth, competing as neutrals international olympic committee does, in fact that russian and better russian athletes faith the next is really big games and then it could cost many trading. government here is threatening to banish athletes from taking. it means competing with the enemy. ukrainian athletes have already paid the highest price. the war has claimed 262 of the country's brightest competitors and destroyed hundreds of sports facilities. the sisters are adamant, their dream must not be jeopardized further. what would you say to you? we will do everything in our power not to allow them into competition because this is an immoral position in the sport is about peace and that can
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be no peace with russian and by the russian athletes. competing to kathleen followed me. andrew shook had a glittering career ahead of him. his best friend demitra says vladimir was widely tipped for olympic success next year. it was, says demetrius, his drive to win that led valadez to join the army. for all athletes, a very strong people, if they don't have character and will, they will not last very long in sport. and it is that which makes them go to war, to fight for family. loved ones and country followed him. it was killed in eastern ukraine in january, another blow to the countries olympic hopes which his fellow competitors are determined to keep alive. jona whole al jazeera keith. the sultani cough is a specialist on the russian foreign affairs. he bodies politics should be left out of the limpid games to allow russia by reason, athletes to compete. do you remember what a piano dick could dump dandy?
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ah said them all day olympic movement won't give under was on the ra fallen bicker allan bicker olympics actually rain stating olympics you said that the the sports should be all of bob politics. so i think that the, it is not fair for roster in the garage to laugh. it's actually to stay away from the olympic. so, and this is the position of ukrainian athletes of the i think that, ah, there should be the opportunity to compete with only athletes. school, we are training to us, but dissipate that thorndike. so i think that there would be guide else should be resolved and should be a going ahead. india, as seen an increase in the population of the bengal tiger. there. now, more than 3000 of the big cats in the country, nearly doubling the population since conservation efforts began. but this has created a problem. i was very lim, ahmed reports. these majestic wild cats have long been
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a source of fascination for many people around the world. even from a distance you can sense the power of the royal bengal tiger in this reserve. in india's maha roster state for years they've been under threat of extinction because of habitat loss. hunting and poaching. since 1973 successive governments have made them mission to create a safe area for the critically endangered tigers. and now their numbers are growing . a set up of buffer zones and reserves has led to a flourishing wild life. but the growing bengal tiger population is coming at a cost for people living nearby with the animals rami, out of protected areas. local communities depend on the forest for their livelihood . they need firewood and pick them up or flowers every year to sell in the markets . but now is become too risky. when julia says a bengal tiger killed her husband, well go me. they went looking for him to the edge of the village. when they entered
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the forest, they found a basket of flowers scattered. there was a plastic bag, water bottles, slippers and flaws, but he was not there. they found some blood. the villagers came back, they said something bad had happened. a lavine little. the tigers in lepus killed at least 53 people in this region last year, according to authorities. they say it's the highest number in a single district. one of the major reasons for conflict in this landscape is because there is a lot of intrusion into the forest by local people for various reasons. and then there is presence of large graduate and most lead they are the are dispersing sub adult gobs that then to get into conflict, which have grown up in no human dominated forests. so they'd then to go closer to a field and probably do not fear people as much as they should. the feel director of the need to reserve suggests there needs to be more measures to control the growing .
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