tv News Al Jazeera April 10, 2023 2:00pm-2:31pm AST
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meaningful accent when i was east dice deep and uncovered minerals beneath the surface that could make the difference. people in power places the beef a dairy industry at the heart of the climate. imagine fate. the amazon, the most important place to work a special documentary, expensive shocking $1000000.00 climate change, denial campaign, and witness documents the fight through the eyes of the well renowned artists and environmental activate the climate crisis. a season of special coverage on al jazeera o fueling tension, a group of israeli settlers, including cabinet ministers, march through the occupied west bank to an illegal settlement. ah, israel's police commissioner admits video,
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all this ready forces, beating palestinians inside the alex and mosque caused a terrible impact. ah, i'm told mccrae this is al jazeera alive from dog. ha. also coming up commemorating 25 years since a landmark pace agreement, broken into the conflict and northern ireland. we have roger and got a weasel to you standing here and we're still fighting. oh, i georgians protest telling me governance, i want to look towards brussels. not moscow. ah, a group off is riley atlas, including government ministers, held
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a march from the occupied west bank to an illegal settlement. despite concerns at my fuel tensions between israelis and palestinians. the march started from a settlement that is not far from the palestinian town of who opera, where there's been a spike and violence between palestinians and israelis, settlers, and ended up in the if a yatta illegal settlements vessel acidic joins us now from occupied east jerusalem . and that much is pretty much all but over now, just how large was the turn out and do you know what point they were actually trying to make while they're trying to have an access to an all tools that was a really good sentiment. but it was evacuated by the decision of debt supreme court, so it was belonging to it is a private private property belonging to a palestinian. so that's understand a has issue the 5 to the supreme court. and after months of evolution and
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assessment, supreme court of israel decided that it's illegal on based on that decision has been evacuated. however, the hardliners in the israeli, most right, the government in his drives history or, or jacked him dad and they want to view open that for the ad that therefore the sap them. and so you can see that also in this case, that it's not only about escalate in the already existing passion, but also we can see the passion between these right government then israel supreme court as well because it's very sorry, a government saying that the supreme court has over empowered this self and it does interfere in any decisions of the government. and that's why they're coming up with a judicial reform. that is a loving the simple majority of the can. i said to override any decision made by the supreme court and also to appoint the majority of the judges. he supreme court and that's why it has been 14 beat that many israelis across israel and particularly in television art or pause in this judicial overhaul. so by these action, particularly the national security minister, it um,
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i've been given now was marching with his supporters before it actually not challenge in only this day, but at the year for that that will contribute to the passion. but also they are challenging to supreme court as well. okay, bristle a, don't go anywhere. we're going to come back to you in just a moment. on other developments in the occupied east jerusalem. including a israel police commissioner who has had images of israeli forces beating palestinian worshippers inside the alex and mosque last week have caused a terrible impact an adult. so that's it must be the lot follow. a thought they are all about jacobi shaped, i told is rarely media that police had to act. and the incident is being investigated and said we will learn from it more than a dozen palestinians and police officers were injured. and on monday, a 23 ultra nationalist, jewish groups made incursions into the alex and most compound, as palestinian worship is conducted morning for is early a hundreds of palestinian youths were prevented from accessing the compound for
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dawn prayers. we're going to go back to our results, so to for us who is an occupied east, jerusalem. and as we saw that video of israeli forces beating palestinian worshippers and al oxalis with their spiked outrage right around the world. but what's been the reaction out of israel while this is quite a ray of said, man, coming from a thought, his rally or official meeting with did not happen quite often here of over here, which will be cleared, that it's man, whether she is going to decide into action, or these value occupational forces and what they have done on well and last wednesday and thursday, against apprentices, worshippers. whether it is all of the worries about the image because it said that the image that was sent out has created a terrible impact. so here mostly people are seeing that everything that's happening right here in the alex a compound depends on the israeli forces,
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the israeli police or the actions. if they forcefully try to out you move the palestinian worshippers. the passion goes up. if they do nothing to fear, so it's cool. so mostly it depends on them. and now it's, we are getting to the last 10 days or for their own from them. and according to the practices that has been that the practice of that was blood recent years, only muslims are. busy allowed to get here, but the, the, the national security administer about givers. he says that what is the, is that he was the jewish passover and he's quoting on the government. i love the jewish nationalists also to get in that and this is being seen as a signal or re escalated that the passion here as well. and also we can see that there is not a unity. i'm of the valley government here. so it is government that's combined off the hardliners and more hard line are still hard liners, are try to deescalate why the more hard line is like the,
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the minister of national security. i is trying to escalate the tension. he, it was, as i said, it mostly he's going to be off to the actions of the occupation forces against the palestinian worshippers here. okay, thank you so much for bringing a subsidy that's recent city for us in occupied east jerusalem. or meanwhile, a 15 year old palestinian boy has been shot dead by israeli forces and jericho in the occupied west bank. he was shot on the head, chest and abdomen for others were arrested during a ride of the arc, but to javert refugee camp. at least 96 palestinians had been killed by israeli forces the occupied west bank and gaza. since the start of the year, nearly 20 of them with children. ah, it's been 25 years since the peace tree. he know it is the good friday agreement
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was signed. it formerly ended the conflict in northern islands, but the road to pace was difficult for many with more than 3700 people killed. violence broke out between communities in 1969. british troops brought and to keep the pace became the target of armed attacks themselves. the conflict was between manly protestant unionists who wanted the northeast corner of ireland to remain part of the u. k. and catholic nationalists who wanted to see islands united, the large scale fighting may be over that tensions remain al jazeera andrew simmons has more from belfast. ah, they're expressing gratitude for 25 years of peace. but those working to bring divided unionist nationalist communities together. believe reconciliation, msm log wales, i don't think that work of healing was ever done in drawing our communities together and in uniting our hopes for the future in our see,
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let me 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 distress 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 in the d u. p. and nationalists in shin fane have been at odds. right now the seat of devolve government at stormont is defunct, after the d. u. p walked out at a dispute about e, you trade laws and bricks it. alan mcbride is among those accusing politicians of
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letting their people down in 1993 and i are a bowman, belfast jenko road, killed 9 people. his wife sharon was one of them to we have a round of peace here in this country them and we don't have reconciliation. we sell have shenfield the d p at each other's throats. it's, it's very simple. i believe that we need ah more kindness and our politics and i think for far too long, ah beau shin finn and the dp have only ever really cared about. what matters to them? the big question. they still this. how can republicans and unis somehow accept their respective traditions, cultures their identities, when they're synonymous with such a violent history? on tuesday, the u. s. president joe biden will be visiting northern island. he's known to be concerned about the effects of political instability on the good friday peace
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agreement. andrew simmons al jazeera belfast. well, let's now go to andrew smith, who joins us from london dairy, in norton island. and andrew, a 25 years on just how solid is this agreement now? well as well as stablished, but there are worries about certain backdrops that are here right now, and one of them being political instability. now the u. s. president will be arriving. busy on tuesday night and on wednesday he will be at the campus of else to university, and it's likely he will make her a speech. a lot of people waiting on that speech, expecting to hear some criticism, perhaps of politicians. certainly the you k prime minister who's referred to 25 years ago, the political leadership being brave and using perseverance and political imagination. so it was a remarkable achievement,
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but 25 years on that political instability. and it goes like this, that the unit is at feel the post breaks it trade deals more or less cut. this northern ireland, part of the government looked at the self and the power sharing government cut it off from the u. k. so those are, some, were described as of a type of paranoia. others that are valid at worry that sir, a nationalism is winning over and that could be a united ireland within a matter of years. so that is a situation where the power sharing part of it all is at risk. furthermore, violence amongst dissident republicans is a problem is a tiny, small proportion of the population. but that is a, an issue already a senior police officer, early last month. i was seriously injured in an attack here in dairy, as it's known, but london dairy as it's officially called by the british. this is
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a really where many historians feel a troubles started and so called trouble started in august 1969 in writing in the box side of the tax between into communal violence that was going on. this is a situation here right now where we're seeing a demonstration by discipline republicans which is on authorized and also concerns about formal loyalist paramilitaries making protests and possibly moving forward with more protests because of that concern amongst you to this about post breaks trade deal. okay. thank you so much. that is andrew simmons for us in the london dairy in northern islands. well, just here a spoke to 2 young men born the year the deal was signed they, she had their hopes for the future. my name is joshua murray. i'm from a conflict background in northern ireland on the news every day he heard of ice, a bombing shooting, something dreadful,
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that was happening and this was something that was kind of interspersed for 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 at that point very much based on, on religion, between protestant and catholic. it was still very much a dark, dark place even kind of in those more rural. will you in term tranquil areas by the sea or 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
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sense of a new start of a change of trajectory 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 will ever really go away. i believe in northern ireland, i believe that it will have a prosperous future ahead of it. regardless of the difficulties that are there, that there is certainly cause for optimism and that hope i. so 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 conflicts build. so
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a lot of today's children are still growing up divided from one another. there is a growing sense of northern irishness across northern ireland. i think the census results actually reflects that 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 abnormal functioning, western societies. as i'm calling girl growing older, i realized actually there is more than the united divide this in terms of those 2 communities are here and probably will remain here. but thankfully, not being violent generally towards one another. and living in relative digital hainan is a professor of social policy at the university, belfast and northern ireland. she says the agreement revolutionized both northern iris society and politics. it is important to recognise the transformational nature of the good friday agreement. it is absolutely revolutionized
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a society and not mandate politics and northern ireland. it brought to an end. 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 paste, 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 for power, sharing an understanding of each other reconciliation and, and so what we are saying is that we need to go back to those principles and ensure that we can build a prosperous future based on the principles that those visionary leaders agreed 25 years ago. well, still ahead on al jazeera,
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we look at why west africa's signature jolla for us is becoming too pricey to put on the table. ah, frank assessments. justice means to give them the basic human rights, not only in the camp, but also inside the myanmar, informed opinions by the ministration are very concerned about this development especially, or what it means for china's power on the world stage. critical debate. now only both the legal report, what they see the progress in depth analysis of the data headlines inside story on al jazeera. ah, she a
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a group of israeli settlers, including government ministers, has marched from the occupied with bank to an illegal settlement, despite concerns at my fuel tensions between israelis and palestinians. the 5 kilometer much ended in the if you tar illegal, settlement must be 25 years since the good friday agreement was signed, formerly ending the conflict in northern island. hold on 3700 people were killed during the period known as the troubles. more than half the population of somalia is struggling to survive the worst drought and 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. katherine saw has more from mogadishu. we are at a camp for displaced people. here in the outskirts of mogadishu, thousands of you know, displacement camps. i. here are many people. thousands of them have come from
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different parts of the country just trying to get help. we have spoken to many of them who have very desperate stories to tell. we have spoken to women who say that they have lost their children on the way to get here. and we have spoken to um, aid workers who say that they are really of a wall because the money is not coming in as far as fast enough. now what we're being told of by the un and government agencies is that more than 40000 people have died because of the drought. i in the last a one and a half. yes. many of them are, you know, died in, you know, all these areas where they're coming to get help for. and we also know, ah, that the un secretary general, antonio gutierrez, is going to be in country ah,
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to ramp up efforts on monday terry ann efforts, he will be talking to the president. he will be visiting several idp comes as well. the last time he was here, it was 6 years ago, and there was another drought, as so we expect the message that he's going to deliver is more loss of the same. but then we have been talking again to somalis who said that they need or, you know, people need to break this cycle of drought and violence and they need to see more action. thailand's army is putting up temporary shelters for thousands of refugees fleeing conflict in me and my at least 10000 people have crossed into thailand in the past week to escape fighting between armed groups and the beauregard false. tale authorities have said they will send refugees back to me and my, when the violence stops. i'll abode with 400 people on board as a drift between grace and malta is reportedly been abandoned by its captain and as
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without fuel. the boat was discovered by the german in geo see watch as reported, the crew was told by the maltese cause god not to carry out a rescue. another humanitarian organization says some of those on board need medical attention. there has been a shop increase in the number of people attempting to cross to europe. protestors in the church and capital have demanded the resignation of the government and the release of opposition leader mikaela sir cast really. he is serving a 6 year sentence for abuse of power. the government faces mounting pressure to move away from. what critics say is russian influence. me cool, sim sharif reports. ah, they marched in the hundred's against and government they see is becoming less democratic. they accuse it of jailing open in silence in independent media and been influenced by russia. protest isn't tbilisi calling for the release of jail
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expressed in may can suck us. believe that to turn leader is serving 6 years in prison, abuse of power in aging. i will have fighting poor russia communist government here or this result. lucy, exactly the same way today. well, fighting for all put it is government and georgia. george, you applied for e membership along with ukraine, 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 same recent government actions hom, george's chances ledger years ago they did this from soviet union. that is why i wasn't here. oh, so id like for us. the most important piece at brothers there, please note you members in natal membership is a georgia and people are united around this day, hey, last month, once per pill,
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to expose 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. cricket say the bill was modeled on one introduced in russia years earlier to suppress dissent over model. sadly, the government controlled by the cravens, trying to turn the country into a russian province for the people who get that here to date, demand of 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 and p west and rhetoric after the u. s. ban b says for full judges, faith and corruption accusation. washington stephanie of stamps was an ally, comes up the concerns about georgia, shift, russia and the consumer sharif punches and infestation of
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a tomato bug has devastated thousands of his of farms and nigeria. the fruit is a key ingredient and west african christine and is process rise. one of the regions most well known dishes is affected. homogeneous reports from conner. jello rice, i west african delicacy and the center of a 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 router 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. even 10 percent of what they have invested in tomato characteristic this season. then frustration has cost losses in millions of dollars
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causing shortages nuts not only eaten into the income of pharmacy, but also hoteliers repairing nigeria. every dish is no longer g. the little we have, the presence also has to be affected. so it's that's how translated into an increase in the price of whatever food stuff. what of food we also make in our restaurants that are made to farmers association says this he has outbreak, has resulted in a loss of output by almost 70 percent. pushing to my 2 prizes higher by 450 percent the to me 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 high as 100 percent?
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pharmacy climate change is creating perfect breeding conditions for the bug. they say early detection will minimize 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 jennifer ice may never be the same again. i did rees algebra, colonel nigeria, that's all for now does more on our website, al jazeera dot com, which is next in and sad story, looks at rising tensions between china and taiwan. ah, with there are still some when warnings posted for japan's honju island and who cato islands. however,
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while we're talking about northern areas, here is southern areas of whole kado. this where the winds are what been up to about 8090 kilometers per hour. when's also an issue in beijing as while dragging some sand in dust from the gobi desert? meantime, we've got to talk about the wet weather along the yangtze river valley working its way across west to east. so were seen periods of rain from shanghai stretching into grey lin with a high of 22 degrees. now for india, that pre monsoon heat is building in a big way. so things have certainly quieted down right across the country as take a peek at the next 3 days and calcutta, i think this is gonna be the start of about a 10 days span of temperature is at and above 40 degrees. it's while above average . and oh yeah, the humidity bumps in as well. ok for pakistan. also seen that pre monsoon heat build in sin province, actually temperatures everywhere on this map are above average. we had some big thunderstorms light up the night skies in mecca, but i think the concentrated rain on tuesday will be around northern areas of saudi
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arabia. but more brain to be found along that western side. so i think that's going to throw a bit more cloud cover for us here in doha, but there will also be some sunny spells on tuesday with a hive. 32 degrees c later. ah. but those that know, do those that understand, teach cook a maverick school headmaster and post conflict. belfast determined to change the fortunes of an inner city community, plagued by urban decay, poverty and the legacy of sectarian aggression arms. as students with the knowledge of the ancient greek philosophers, protest veil your best. what a survey that everybody else is. young plato, a witness documentary on a jazeera, more chinese military drills off to taiwan. president visits the united states, the latest escalation between bay ging and washington over the island of the 2
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