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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 10, 2023 1:00pm-2:01pm AST

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political reality also homelands now led by the same military hunter, responsible for the crackdown that force them to flee in the 1st place. african countries have struggled to reclaim many of the artifacts taken by european colonizers and this is our experience of our identity. in the final part of the series, museums and collectors still hold precious assets like the new rooms. few have been returned, but there's still a long way to go. and progress is painfully slow. restitution africa stolen with pottery ation. arnold, missouri. ah ah. you're watching the news, our life from headquarters, and i'm getting obligated coming up in the next 60 minutes commemorating 25 years
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since a landmark peace agreement brought an end to the conflict. in northern ireland, the israel police commissioner admit the video of is really forces beating palestinians inside the mouth cause a terrible impact. fighting and me and mar, forces thousands of people to leave their homes and cross into thailand. an investigation is underway in the us after top secret documents released exposing intelligence on the war in ukraine and other american allies. i'm jeff ash, with fort john rome is the new masters of champion. the spanish gulf finishes a. ringback shot clay, i forgot to clench his 2nd grade to phi. so green jacket, ah
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hello, we begin this news hour with the historic deal that formerly ended the conflict in northern ireland. its been 25 years since the peace treaty known as the good friday agreement was signed. but the road to peace was difficult for many with more than 3700 people killed. violence broke out between communities in 1969. british troops brought in to keep the peace became the target of armed attacks themselves. conflict was between mainly protest them unionists who wanted the northeast corner of ireland to remain part of the you came on catholic nationalists who wanted to see ireland united the large scale fighting maybe over, but tensions remain al jazeera xander seminar has more from belfast. ah, they're expressing gratitude for 25 years of peace. but those working to bring divided unionist and nationalist communities together. believe reconciliation is
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a long way off. don't think that work of healing was ever done in drawing our communities together and in uniting our hopes for the future in us, seeing that the other is know or shoot me. no threat that we can co exist in the way that many communities across the world managed to achieve the hatred and distrust was born of a 30 year conflict. $3700.00 people died more than half of them civilians. paramilitaries from the irish republican army wanted the british army out. protestant gunmen mounted their own campaign. it ended with what some observers called the political miracle. power sharing was the central prop, but the main players democratic unionists and the d. u. p. and nationalists in shin fane have been at odds. right now the seat of devolve government at stormont is
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defunct, after the d u. p walked out to the dispute about e. you trade laws and bricks it. alan mcbride is among those accusing politicians of letting their people down in 1993 and i are a bowman, belfast shinkel road, killed 9 people. his wife sharon was one of them. we have a relative piece here in this county them and we don't have reconciliation. we still have found the d. p at each other's throats. it's very simple. i believe that we need more kindness and our politics. i think for far too long potion fan and the d u. p. have only ever really cared about. what matters to them? the big question is still this. how can republicans and unionists somehow accept their respective traditions cultures their identity when they're synonymous with such a violent history?
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on tuesday, the u. s. president joe biden will be visiting northern ireland. he's known to be concerned about the effects of political instability on the good friday peace agreement. we cannot bring in anderson and he is joining us from belfast. so andrew, 25 years on how solid is this agreement now? will it's established. it's well established. it's have the effects it want, they all wanted, particularly the political leaders and richie sooner or the prime minister of you. cake has appraised those political leaders who managed to sign up that deal as being brave. and having persevered and having political imagination and amazing achievement. however, there are concerns that are, were, is about the political instability, as i touched on in that report. and it is going to be the case that when a prime minister, when the president joe biden addresses the else to university on wednesday,
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which is his main engagement bell foster that whether or not he will touch on on that instability and make any calls for more pressure on the leaders of northern ireland to actually get their power share power sharing machine going again. now it has to be said that the brick sits at the post bricks it a trade deal with the european union is a, is a pressure points a with the unionists. and that is a spiraled to a point where by the don't take part in government and nor to sion fain. and that is a major issue. also a pressure that could lead to areas of violence that has to be said. and no one can certainly rate the violence as being that serious is that much of a threat, but it could relate to political events. so, for example, here in dairy and london dairy isn't sufficiently cold by the british, but dairy by the locals here, where in 1969 on the battle of bog side,
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where there are a riots and clashes between the 2 communities, where many historians feel the so called troubles began. there is some tension right now because there are dissident republicans on north unauthorized march in an area, a cool the kragen that's taking place later on. also, there is a worry about forma loyalist paramilitaries because they are upset about post wrecks. it deals so the us president is going to have a lot to look at whether he'll say a lot isn't the matter. all right, thank you so much and your simmons reporting for us from belfast. well, i'll do 0, spoke to 2 young men born the year the deal was signed, so they shared their hopes for the future. my name is joshua murray. i'm from a conflict background in northern ireland. on the news every day you heard of ice, a bombing shooting,
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something dreadful. what was happening and this was something that was kind of interspersed from northern ireland. that was something that sort of affected life in every way. my name is zachary hutchinson and i come from a protestant background here in northern ireland. still quite a divided society, especially as i point very much based on on religion, between protestant and catholic. he was still very much a dark, dark place even kind of in those more rural. will you in term tranquil areas by the sea? there are still still atrocities that occurred. the agreement creates new institutions, the northern ireland assembly to restore to the people the fundamental democratic right to govern themselves. there was a sense of kind of hoping optimism they, on the 10th of april and 90, that wasn't there in previous previous years. that sense of a new start of
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a change to jack 3 of of hope for, for northern ireland, for the older generation. there is that history of violence and therefore the history, the kind of suspicion almost that each side will have towards one another. it will probably be lesser and lesser as time goes on, but i don't think it'll ever really go away. i believe in northern ireland. i believe that it will, it does have a prosperous future ahead of it. regardless of the difficulties that are there, that there is certainly cause for optimism and then hope that northern ireland with the divided neighborhoods with the divided scaling system that exists here remains very much divided. i think only 13 percent of peoples in northern ireland attend integrated schools. that means that 87 percent go to an exclusively protestant school or an exclusively catholic, phil. so
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a lot of to those children are still growing up divided from one another. there is a growing sense of northern irishness across northern ireland. i think the census result actually reflects not as well that more people are identifying as northern irish. rather than irish or british, there's still a way to go, i suppose before northern ireland resembles the normal functioning western society . as i've called girl growing older, i've realized actually there is more than i divide this in terms of faith. those 2 communities are here and probably will remain here. but thankfully, not being violent, generally towards one another. and living and relative face lets us me to do training, who's a professor social policy. it also university belfast, us in northern ireland joining us from there. welcome to the audience. they were news hours. so, you know, many people say that there was an agreement that took enormous political courage and vision to achieve but 25 years on how fragile does disagreements remain.
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well, i think in the 1st case it is important to recognise the transformational nature of the good friday agreement. it is absolutely revolutionized as society and northern and on the politics and northern ireland. it brought to an ann what we thought was an intractable conflict, were over 3700 people lost their lives and many thousands were injured and had life changing injuries. so i think it is important that we don't gloss over the fact that this was a huge moment in our history and something that many people would thought they would never live to say. it is true, however, that it is been an imperfect pace that peace in northern ireland has been fragile and volatile, and that our government, for example, we agreed many principles in the good friday agreement. those principles are immutable. those principles are rind, respect, power sharing, an understanding of each other reconciliation. and so what we are saying is that we need to go back to those principles and ensure that we can build
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a prosperous future based on the principles that those visionary leaders agreed. 25 years ago. right. and we have the visit of the u. s. president joe biden are coming to a northern island because of course the u. s. did play a key role at the time and brokering that agreement, how significant is his visit and, and what will you be looking out for? well, i think his visit is usually significant. we are honored to have such interest from the us. and in particular, this irish precedent, he who uses his irishness, he wears his irishness on his sleeve, but he has deeply interested in the island of island. and this is not a basin thing. this is something that has marked his presidency, but also marked his political career. i think it is hugely significant that he has decided to spend time to come and visit us. of course i'm delighted that this visit is happening on our new 350000000 pine campus in the center of belfast
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campus that we couldn't have drained off 2 decades ago. and so he is coming there and we're hoping that the focus will be on the future. we're looking at a very different backdrop that we were 25 years ago. yes, we have that relative pasted stability. now what we need for our young people is prosperity hope, and we're in northern ireland is crying or it at the moment is leadership, leadership and ambition. we need our politicians to get back into government to understand that there are a generation of people who feel that they've been failed by the spirit find a agreement, but what they want as cost parity, the hope of a stable future. yeah, and of course a governance has been paralyzed there just allow me to jump in for a 2nd. the government to has, has been paralyzed and that was a role as a result of a dispute over trade rules. so when you look at the issue of breaks it and what's happened in the past few years, how much does breaks it pose a threat to the agreement?
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well, i do have it posted straight to the agreement, but it was quite clear when the e u. r. when the u. k, decided to leave the ear that would have the stabilizing effect on this island, that we are the only part that shares and we part of the u. k. the chair to frontier with the e. u. so there were many warnings a bite. i this could be stabilize a fragile piece process. in fact, john major 20 barrett came to the city of dairy and said that, you know, what would we do? but the irish border and warned that if we left the european union, the pieces of the constitutional chic so would be thrown up in the air and no one seemed to know where they would land. those warnings were largely ignored and the difficulty is breaks. it means borders, borders are big, into breaks it. and of course, people realize that that would have a destabilizing effect on, on the fragile piece process. so post breaks it, we know i have the windsor framework, and we want that window framework to work because it allows us to access to the
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e u and the g b market, right? we also have an all the problem and so it really gives us a unique opportunity to look forward, bring inward investment and bring the prosperity that was promised 25 years ago. thank you. so my state are here for speaking to us from belfast. plenty, morehead on the auto renews our, including thousands of people have come from different parts of the country. and basically they half lead from routes we're alive from a common somalia. that's where hundreds of thousands of people are struggling is the region experiences it's worth drove in decades. liverpool wound blow to arsenal . title chances you have action from a drilling premier league game coming up in sport with jump ah.
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but 1st, a group of is really settlers, including government ministers, are all marching from the occupied westbank towards an illegal settlement, despite concerns that it may feel tensions between israelis and palestinians. that's the life picture right there. the march started a short time ago from a settlement that's not far from the palestinian town of water, where there has been a spike in violence between palestinians and is really settlers. the 5 kilometer march set to finish in the area are illegal settlements. let's bring in ritual sardar, he's joining us from occupied in jerusalem. so those were the pictures we were showing from the occupied westbank or so. i wonder if you can 1st tell us about what you're hearing about that march. well, that is a reaction from the hard liners in a them morse, right? being government in his rails history. so been, it has been given. the minister of the national security is one of the leading figures representing that the hard liners among the hard line or so that's why now
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he's could it size his government off had been solved or could not, from responding strongly to what's happening alex um, alex, a compound so, but he's on that to consolidate. he is and he get his bays and his supporters, he decided to march to word and out forced an illegal settlements. that was a big created by decision or this supreme court here. so that that area belongs to is a private property belonging to a palestinian and the israeli settlers had illegally build their supplement, their but the palestine, ian a citizen. he has issued a file to the supreme court. and after months of evaluation and assessment, the supreme court decided that it's illegal and it has been evacuated. so that is why now on the other hand, in parallel, the see that the israeli government is trying a judicial over the whole as well. they call in that as
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a judicial reform that's going to reduce the authorities of the supreme court because they say that the supreme court is too much powerful and into put an end a decision made by the government, particularly when to come to illegal settlements. and simply that the reform package is proving poor, poisoned dead in dead that the government is going to be able to super majority class. it is going to be able to override any decision made by discipline court. and also the government is going to appoint the majority of the judges in supreme court and that's way forward $144.00 weeks in a row. we have seen that israelis across israel, particularly in tel aviv are protesting against his reform as well. right. so did now, israel is run by the more serene government in israel history and some bank, if it is a lead, if you get among them. and now why the passionate was a little bit call me down here is much into where that area to open that for the result. ok. so that's what's happening in the occupied west banker will stand by for just a moment because we'll tell our viewers about israel's police commissioner who has
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come out and said that images of israeli forces bitty, beating palestinian worshippers inside. there are mos last week of cause a quote, terrible impact. so koby shove tie, told is really media that police had to act. and the incident is being investigated and we'll learn from it. more than a dozen palestinians and police officers were injured. on monday 23 is really groups made incursions into ups on last compound justice housing and worshippers. conducted morning prayers. earlier, hundreds of palestinian youth were prevented from accessing the compound for dawn prayers received back with us to tell us what you're hearing about the situation. right now, and also we were mentioning the video of the israeli forces beating palestinian worshippers in the compound last week, which has really sparked outrage school. so tell us more about the reaction that's come out of israel. well for now we have seen just said yesterday then is
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rally top officials speaking to israel. immediate said that the images that were sent out from last week had created a terrible impact. so many people here have regarded as, as a criticism toward what israeli occupation forces have been in alex our compound last be. but it is at this moment, is still not clear whether he is criticizing the action of dorky patient forces, or whether he is a could he, that he's worried about the image that has been sent out. so it's difficult to say that these rallies are still responded, but as of today we have seen that there are been more than dead 20 jewish groups of the god that by these rad occupation forces. and they have encouraged him to did the alexa compound. but one of the critical issue was he swore that he was there. whether these are the occupation forces as they did last week, are going to forcefully removed their palestine in worshipers or not to day. we
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have seen that they didn't interfere the finest in worshipers, and that's why that hasn't been a confrontation between the palestinians and jewish. and the occupation forces here, however, at so will did the redness. these going to be the eve of jewish pass over here. and they said that the minister of the national security, it's somewhat been given that was now much in, in an outpost. and he's calling the government to, to, to, to a low the jewish groups to get into the compound. but according to the practice of the recent years in the last 10 days or from event, only, muslims are love to be there. okay, so thank you so much for so santa reporting from occupied east jerusalem. while a 15 year old palestinian boy has been shot dead by is really forces in jericho doctrine the occupied west bank. he was shot in the head in the chest and the abdomen for others were arrested during a raid a hobbit to job refugee camp. at least 96 palestinians have been killed by israeli forces in the occupied west bank and gaza. since the start of this year,
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nearly 20 of them are children. thailand's army is putting up temporary shelter, as for thousands of refugees who are flee in conflict and me and mar, at least 10000 people have crossed into the highlands in the past week to escape fighting between armed groups on the border guard force. ty authorities have said they will send refugees back to me and mar when the violence stops. toni chang is monitoring the situation from bangkok. thousands of refugees from me. i'm. i have fled across the board, trying to escape from fierce fighting around the border town of chicago. the fighting is taking place between forces of the ethnic curren groups who are opposing military rule on the board. a guard force, a career force, but allied to man mas, military government. and this seems to fit a pattern of fighting that's happened in this area, particularly around the town of mess up as career forces,
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try to force out man mas military. and that could all be a big problem for the ty government. they've offered temporary sanctuary to these refugees, but they're very keen that they don't stay any longer. and they say that the soonest ability returns, they'll be invited to go home. tony cheng al jazeera bank. oh, let's victor nikki diamond, who's an exile burmese, human rights activists. he's joining us from constance in germany. welcome to the news our. what are you hearing about the situation for refugees who are, who are trying to cross into thailand and, and how, how large is this cross border movement? yeah, i hear from my friend in the bought a car more than $10000.00 residue on time yellow border. but there will be more than we expected if the fire can continue at the moultrie, the inlet, the movie on to never stop f striking in bowman in that area. so we are expecting
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more than $10000.00 more and more daily basis. so our refugee and i be in that area, they are experiencing every day love to go, and every deal ask for i won't be by the military. so i think right now, time authority in time government should realize their responsibility in the international norm is, how much can i just ask you how much access to reporters and activists have in that area? because according to reports, they're not being allowed access so. so how are you able to get this information? yeah, people, i mean local pupils who have relations with the refugees. so they are now living in the temporary, like an animal farm chicken bomb in the border area. even tar military, providing temporary shelter,
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but they are still waiting for refugee. they are now currently on the board to become a cross the border and also already called the border in living the animal. so some of my colleagues in front mayfield and that area. so they are providing some kinds of the bus, a little assistance be organized, but you any, didn't, the entire tory be should mean they have a more capacity and they be, have to do. they have to how much more assistance is needed, how much more assistance is needed to those not only on the board or right now, but once they cross into thailand, what sort of assistance is offered to them right now, they should have all kinds of temporaries chilled you and i mean they need a food clean water for everything. type of business need to survive off your deal right now. i don't, i mean, coming la photo and video all their social media. i don't see and they are literally lucky. ringback all these basic needs and i mean in, in,
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in that area. all right, we'll leave it there. thank you for speaking to us from germany. more than half the population of somalia is struggling to survive the worst droughts in the country's history. around 800000 people have been internally displaced by extreme weather conditions. families from rural areas have moved to the capital to look for food and water. 5 rainy seasons have failed and a 6 looks likely to follow up. and so he's joining us lie from the dia, combat for this place. people in mogadishu, katherine talk us through what you're seeing why the un and other aid and humanitarian organizations are saying that thousands of people already died in the last one and a half years. we are, i to come for displaced people here in mogadishu were told and 1000000
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people have come to this comes, they have come from different parts of the country. we have been speaking to aid agencies who say that they are overwhelmed and joining now with me and is jaffar. ah hassan, a humanitarian worker with mossey cops. thank you. i just, how bad is it was not just in mogadishu by the rest of your overly i think the situation is still dia, despite or positive frame, such as gender centrally. we are over half of the population. so might have been affected by these totes close to 8000000, and around 1300000. been displaced by your total on. so we are seeing a lives of people come in despite the all the situation. so the situation is still there. yeah. and you have me, you said that it has been raining, we have seen this rains, but then these has also brought with our other challenges as well. yeah,
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dreaming has come a lot with some flush flood, swear by this. displace gums are most vulnerable to on their house in sort of a mixture of houses, how occasionally washed out or been affected by the winds that accompany this range . additionally, in other different areas, you have seen successive excessive flooding that ourselves, of course, new lives of displacement along those areas. and what are the needs right now? i think the needs is to cover the basic needs of this report, including food, water, shelter. those are the top 3 priorities, food bin, number one. so i think that's the key priority. as of now, in somalia, we are also in the middle of a crisis a conflicts. how do you balance all these priorities? yeah, i think her, the conflict also are part of the and part of the contributing part of the displacement. apart from that, i think it's a bit challenging and the sense that we need to are
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a lot of people are coming and the available sources that are not able to cover all of them. so these causes us to prioritize the most vulnerable. that does not mean does that you're leaving behind also well of they're just not that bad than data. so that's the thing. and we close lower. could the government are security operations gone? government is helping us in terms of ensuring that securities i will to be accessing in these areas and able to provide that security. and we're thankful for that. how about their finding data gaps? they are currently according to the humanitarian response plan. we are required or we require about 2600000000. so my dollars to cover the current needs of almost $7600000.00 people that are targeted that are most vulnerable. so for i think the funding, our donors have done a good scholar, but i think with our i will of the rings. we still want to see sustained the funding. ensuring that because arrival of the room does not mean the for the. busy
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crisis or other crisis will be immediately resolved. remember i value as to harvest will be 3 months down the line even if they're in scum. so we have a still a long way to go. okay, thank you very much for your time. and so, and then secretary, un secretary general, i turn your gutierrez is going to be in country on tuesday. and to wrap up, you know, humanitarian efforts. he's going to be meeting the president, he'll be talking to i d p. m as well. and you know, the last time he was here, it was a 6 years ago, and there was a drought. and so he will be the met, his message will be more or less. this message will be more or less a seaman. similar, we have been talking to a somalis here who are seeing that they what they want to see is more action. or i thank you so much, katherine, sorry, reporting from mokesha. still ahead on the al jazeera, who's our ah,
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we have russia got a week to stand in with, oh, really, georgians, protests telling their government, they want to look towards brussels and not moscow. we look at why west africa signature jolla price is becoming too pricey to put on the table. and tennis is tennis star wins her 1st title of the season. that's coming up in sports. ah ah, we've got summer and winter back to back in southern europe hip want let me show you so in seville, full on sunshine, $34.00 degrees that is closing in on
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a record for the month of april. other side of the mediterranean winter light temperatures and its stumble, 10 degrees we've got bouts of what weather there. these winds are going to dramatically dropped the temperatures in bay roots and ramallah. there is some cloud cover, round central europe, but also sunny spells as well. so where that suns out, temperatures are going up. budapest, bucharest, same for berlin as well, with a high of 17 degrees periods of rain across the islands of ireland in britain. and we've got some pretty gusty winds on either side of the irish sea there that weather moves into western northern france and a low countries its wall. what do you say we go to africa? temperatures running well above average. sure. for this eastern side, from cairo to end jemina. but look at this batch of what weather around that southwest of molly that's creeping close to the border of mauritania. as we dipped toward the south for south africa, we could see some severe thunderstorms, abrupt around limpopo, how tang, and puma longer provinces, up, but not too bad in the western cape province, sons out in cape town,
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it breezy at times with the high of 18 degrees on monday, okay, i'm out of time. bye for now. with the 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. 5 administration are very concerned about this development especially, or what it means for china's power on the world's days. critical debate is dark only both the legal revoke your they see this with in depth analysis of the days headlines inside story on al jazeera, those that know do those that understand, teach cook a maverick school headmaster in post conflict, gulf fust, determined to change the fortunes of an inner city community plagued by urban decayed poverty and the legacy of sectarian aggression arms as students with the
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knowledge of the ancient greek philosophers. hottest valle, your fears, what a survey than everybody else is. young, plato, a witness documentary on a, j 0 lou . the hello again. the top stories on the al jazeera news our its been 25 years since a good friday agreement was fine, formerly ending the conflict in northern ireland. more than 3700 people were killed during the period known as the troubles. group of israeli settlers, including government ministers, are marching right now from the occupied west bank towards an illegal settlement.
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and that is despite concerns, the action may fuel tensions between israelis and palestinians. the 5 kilometer march start to finish, finish in the a car, illegal settlement sidelines army is putting out temporary shelters for thousands of refugees fleeing conflict to me in march. please. 10000 people have crossed and to tie lines in the past week to escape fighting between our groups and the border guard for the u. s. department of justice is investigating how dozens of top secret military documents ended up on the internet. the files appear to provide a detailed assessment of russia's military capabilities in the war and ukraine, as well as classified information on the middle east and china. my counter report from washington d. c. the publish documents proposed 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
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allies, including ukraine's military and political leaders. the leak that was 1st reported by the new york times includes details about ukraine's military strength and its casualty comes 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 and can intelligence 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 rosie 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 the very good it's attempting to target strategic intelligence sharing
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between the united states and ukraine. and try to, you know, create a bad faith relationship there. the documents also appeared 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 also working at reassuring those allies that the u. s. is able 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 auto sierra washington protest as in georgia or demanding the resignation of the government and the release of the opposition leader may fail successfully and he is serving a 6 years sentence for abuse of power. the government is facing mounting pressure to move away from our opponents called russian influence,
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and we consume sharif reports. ah, they marched in the hundreds against government. they see is becoming less democratic. they accuse it of jailing open in silencing, independent media and been influenced by russia. protest isn't tbilisi calling for the release of june expressed in mckenzie sack us believe that to term leader is serving 6 years in prison, abuse of power in aging. i will fight for russia communist gobbled with hero this result. lucy, exactly the same way today. well, fighting brought put it is government and georgia. george you applied for e membership along with you praying. and moldova days after russia invaded ukraine last year in june. the e, you called on tbilisi for political and judicial changes to gain membership open and say, recent government actions hom, george's chances led to 2 years ago. don't juggle, they go from solid, you know,
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that is why i wasn't here. oh, id. like for us, the most important piece advisors there, please note you membership and nathan membership is a georgia and people are united the wrong day. hey, last month. once per pill transposed the government to abandon a controversial building, it would have replied, any non governmental agency receiving money from abroad to register as a foreign agent. critic say the bill was modeled on one introduced in russia years earlier to suppress dissent. old lib, liberal model is, but sadly, the government controlled by the cremeans trying to turn our country into a russian province to the people who gathered here to demand the european future of our country. we won't get tied in this fight. the government says it remains committed to georgia as you and nato membership bid. but leaders have stepped up
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and p west and rhetoric after the us band be says, for full judges, faith in corruption, accusation. washington stuffing of stamps was an ally, comes up the concerns about georgia, shift, russia and the consumer sharif punches. either. let's speak to anton mikaya, who's a journalist with real politics, which is a georgia and online news platform. he's run, ask them to believe, see welcome to the news hours. so if you compare the most recent protest taking place the past few days with the ones that happens in march, how big would you say the protests are today? well, 1st of all, hello and thanks for having me. well, the person that was held yesterday was organized by the biggest opposition policy in georgia, which is do you not to national movement, whereas the person thought we had a lot more grass roots organized. so the difference and also there was
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a difference in numbers. i mean, i cannot give you the exact number of yes demonstration, but i can tell you that it was significantly less than la small. right? so how organized would you say the protest movement actually is? and, and do the people who are coming out on the streets share the same goals. well, i would say that they more or less shared the same goal, which is the european integration of georgia, more than a 2 percent of georgia. i think that's georgia became part of the european union and united small as the majority of georgia and political parties and civil society actors. well, another thing is that a letter, a lack of cooperation, or lack of trust among different actors, beads, political policies or civil society actors. what's been the government's response
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so far? about yes, base or you mean yeah, more. well, the government says that it was a small purchase organized by the united national movement, which is the main competitor to them. and they basically ran on and, and saw you and them platform even though they are in they are in power. currently they still say that we are here to not let those people in office, so nothing new in this regard. they still go on to demonize their main opponents, right. so what does this mean going forward and what does it actually mean for georgia prospect for your candidacy? well, it allows depends on the government of calls and, and the european institutions and the european mamma, states and brussel besides,
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i think that yes, base purchased all broadband significance in regard of calls. it will be decided in police, the ads lawfully by what the government will do in order to fulfill the reforms whole scene by the troll recommendation because issued by the repeal commission. and that will make it possible for georgia to get the candidate status. like you probably moved over there last year. okay, thank you so much for speaking to us from tbilisi. thanks me. in yemen, oman is leading international efforts to bring an end to the 8 year conflict. hundreds of thousands of people have died. millions more have been pushed into poverty, almighty mediators, my delegations, and the whole the rebels on saudi arabia in the capital on sunday. the, the say any peace talks must respect demons, territorial integrity,
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has somehow better has reported extensively on the conflict. and he explains what saudi officials hoped to get from the deal. the want piece. 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 every year 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 in to saudi arabia or the join us 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 settlement, though the hope is,
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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 coaches is ha, ha, to be your many lead yamini own. it has to be between us the isler party and the different components of the human society. we don't want any international interferes, but ultimately the host 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 say. this is a complex political landscape. the americans failed because it's very complex. the european tried the 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, one sided ravia could be on a collision course with united out of emma's particular. when it comes to the secessionist, the sessions are saying that we are breaking away. we're no longer part of this yemen. this deal stipulation 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. the mayor of the friends city of se, says there are still hope of finding survivors officer a building collapse on sunday. at least 2 people were killed when an explosion brought the structure down. sarah, hi, ross reports navigating narrow streets of my se, emergency crew of face with a difficult task of removing bubble blocking entry into the cops residential building. also, we think there 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. with smoke escaping the building. those living on the same street were forced to leave their home and being put top in local schools and it's safe to return. the full story block down parts of the building on either side on sunday. no,
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absolutely. our top priority remains the search for survivors in the rubble. you know, there's a concern that some people may have been caught in the 1st collapse and were faced with persistent fire lasting several hours now and really high temperatures. we have to protect our firefighters and sniffer dogs. even middle guns. witnesses say it all started when they heard a loud explosion and smelt gas in early hours in the morning. next week, we heard an explosion between midnight and 1 am a very strong one that made us jump. we looked up the window to see what was happening and i saw a rebel smoke and people shouting me. 8 people were killed in law say in 2018 when to the doctor they to buildings caved in. agencies reported at the time that 40000 people in the port city were living in substandard structures. bond city officials, rules out structural issues in this latest collapse. so the height of algebra
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and infestation of a tomato bug has devastated thousands of hector as a farms in nigeria. the fruits is a key ingredient in west african cuisine, but its prices go higher. the quality of one of the regions most well known dishes is being effected. terese reports from cano joseph rice. i was to frequent delicacy on the center of debate as to which country prepares it best. nigeria gonna send to go all the claim. it's orange analogy and taste. here in nigeria, this dish may soon lose either its taste or affordability. it's all because of this bug that damages the dishes main ingredient to to upson return, or the tomato leave minor, is a stubborn pest. that sofa has put several to made to farmers out of business. the farmers are no good,
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even 10 percent of what they have invested in tomato continuously this season. then frustration has cost losses in millions of dollars. course in shortages, not not only eaten into the income of pharmacy, but also hoteliers repairing nigeria, several dish is no longer cheap. the little we have the presence also has to be affected. so it's that translated into an increase in the price of whatever food stuff. what of food we also make in our restaurant with me to farmers association says this is outbreak has resulted in a loss of output by almost 70 percent pushing to measure prizes higher by 450 percent. the commit to leave my lease about 260 eggs and when they hatch, they avaricious eaters they feed inside the leaves this time and flowers of the plant, then target. what ever food that survives losses after the infestation can be as
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high as 100 percent? pharmacy climate change is creating perfect breeding conditions for the bug. they say early detection, well minimized losses. what for now, all known pesticides, they say how fail to eradicate and until a solution is found, promise losses will continue. and the cost and taste of nigeria st. joseph rice may never be the same again. i did res, algebra kennel. nigeria still had only al 0 news. our will hear from the new master's champion, john won paths coming up and sport with jump. ah ah
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ah ah ah
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ah hello again time for the sports news her is gemma. thank you to re and we saw stats august, the national wet john rama became at the fall for spanish, gopher to win the masters. and fittingly is victory. it came on. what would have been the $66.00, buff day of the country's greatest ever player? savvy about us, darrow's rom, finished on a 12 on to paul for shells clear of ivan, i lead up brooks and caps and a 3 time moss as champion of phil mickelson. a couple of other former when is jordan speith and patrick reed with 4th while defending champion, scotty chef that was tied to the 10th full on the rom. it was 2 shots behind it. this man kept go when they teed off the final rounds. but a couple of babies from the american soul rama these to the top of the leaderboard inside 6 home. and from that, the spanish
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a stayed out in front after calling his only baby of the round out the night from made it back to back buddy on the 13th and 14th, who opened up a full shop advantage roms. final t shot found the trees, but it's built into 18 and found the green and landed 30 feet from the home rom made the pop up to post $300.00 to $69.00 and clench another major title. i'm the fax number one in the wrong thing. last year when it's got the chef la presented wrong with the green jacket as he became the 1st european when both of them office and the u. s. i never thought i was going to cry when a golf tournament, but i got very close on on that 18th hall and a lot of the because of what he means to me and to spanish golf. right. as friends, 10th major war player, doing the masters with my 2nd when right. my like
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a major when it's it's pretty incredible and to play the way i did to them on sunday. only one bogey on difficult conditions and coming in with a margin for explain, you know, a lot, a lot of pride still really hasn't seen thing yet. and i'm looking at the scores and i still think, and i have a couple more holes live to, to in, and can really say anything else. you know, this one was for savvy. i know he, he was up there helping and help you did. so rom, finishing for clear of live golf as brooks and phil mickelson, 52 year old and nicholson is now the oldest player to finish it, run up. i forgot that he went round in 7 under palm matching his best ever rounds out the master's and the american was just grateful that plan on the saudi arabia, back live to we're allowed to compete. very appreciative that we're here that we're playing the majors and i thought it was exciting that this tournament rose above it all to have the best players in the world here and lost all the pettiness. and
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you're bringing the best players again to play against each other. here in the majors and that's what it's all about and that's what the game of golf should be. i mean, there's always going to be and should always be a place for historical events like this. but it's okay to have a little bit of different variety of in the, in the game of golf. and so i had to golf as a 1st masters memory was tiger with this famous chip. and at the 16 pole in 2005, while the american channeled his in a target here to do something very similar at the same hole that helped him to finish and his 1st appearance at the tone now. so again, that is the ryan, the prevailing title, race that why ice and as often less to go lead slip to drill to, to with liverpool. also know, looking for us when it's on field and since 2012 and they started well gap rout my study things my head hates and it's in patients mosley then tend to provide us up
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gabriel. daisy to give off know as soon as he's off the 28 minutes left in liverpool, i pulled it all back before half time. how much fella with the finish off? no, i gave away a penalty early in the 2nd salary stepped up, but he missed the cake on the week life never put dominance off to the break paid off with us. i mean, i made it too late in the game. it could have been was awesome. had not been for that goal, keep ramsdale you made a couple of great saves and stuff each time to ensure his side would walk away with a rule off those leaves over manchester to see now down to 6 point and he half played a game mesh. when you can see that the end always dropped to point because you have it and you s o friend and my alliance at the moment that they feel in it. we should have done it by being fair to our. so for b change, they could have a score on the mid dependent and i would have to look ourselves in the mirror and
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then, and we should have done much better in the 2nd half. the look better, the more ready and the smallest to, to fight back is what we did and send copy should have turned a game completely round. but the chances we had was all least the point is ok. now one of the assistant referees in the match has been accused of elbowing liverpool. it's andy robertson, the official was approached by the offender as the half time with the blue and appeared to catch the player. the master is being investigated by the body which governs referees in english football. get over some has a little for sure. the golden state warriors books are placed in the n b a playoffs on the final day of the regular season. the warriors sco to record 55 points in the 1st quarter against the portland trailblazer steph curry finished with 26 points from 22 minutes in a dominant 157 to 11 when golden state to kill sick seed in the west, and faced the sacramento kings in the 1st round, the files elephantine clip as
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a secure, the other remaining cloud spots. and on the women's at 10 is tall, almost above one have 1st title of the season. the tennessee and finish runner up in charleston last did. but in 2023, she's going back them until the 2022 final unit it was about. he took the victory defeating interventions for that is available for now. i'll have more later drink. we'll see later. drama. thank you. and thanks for watching the news. our analogy 0 toma craze up next he'll have much more off the dates. ah with we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no
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matter, i'm glad you called and al jazeera will bring you the news and current affairs that matter. t. al jazeera on challenging the cost, will opec losses decision to talk oil production make inflation was the u. k. agreed to join the asia pacific trade block as previous palma field breakfast boss . why has africa received only 11 percent of the brians required employment funding . talked to the cost on al jazeera in celebration of us day al jazeera showcase is a collection of climate focused programming. rise meets the people calling for systems change. is the production process that has to go or hail the planet, covers the forces at play undermining meaningful action. when i was east,
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dive deep and uncovered minerals beneath the surface that could make the different people in power, places the beef a dairy industry at the heart of the climate. imagine see the amazon, the most important place in the world. a special documentary exposes a shocking $1000000.00 climate change denial campaign, and witness documents the fight through the eyes of the world renowned artists and environmental activist the climate crisis. a season of special coverage on al jazeera o fueling tension, a group of israeli settlers, including cabinet ministers, marched through the occupied west bank to an illegal settlement. ah.

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