Skip to main content

tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 21, 2023 9:00pm-10:00pm AST

9:00 pm
ah fit them, i'm not a jotted bit. and before we sat there enough, ah, this is an enormous emergency for literally billions of the worlds population, earth rise explores how different fades across the globe are rallying communities. we are actually focus caretaker's here in a mission to rebuild our broken relationship with the planet. if we can mobilize that huge proportion the world's population, emory got really great. the sco believing in change on al jazeera, ah
9:01 pm
ah, pillum is the whole rahman you're watching the algae there and use our life. my headquarters here in the hall coming up in the next 60 minutes. so dawns warring, sorry, it's agree to a 3 day cease fire to allow people to celebrate the muslim eat festival days of violence, half false, thousands of people to flee with been sued on 2 neighboring chat. others are trapped without food, water, or electricity. also the u. k deputy prime minister steps down dominic ra, a was under investigation and accusations of bullying. the lead on the occupation. we meets palestinians who say there is little to celebrate as a struggle with israeli oppression. i'm pull reese with the sports the brooklyn
9:02 pm
that saw only just hanging on in the n b a playoffs. and manchester united manager, eric and hardy says his play as black passion as a comedy of errors dumped them out of the right poly. ah, welcome to the news i. we began incident where the army has agreed now to a 72 hours cease fire. the announcement follows international please to pause the fighting during the eat festivities. the sudanese army and the country's largest paramilitary group. the rapid support forces have failed to observe several attempts to halt the fighting since monday. more than 400 people been killed in 7 days of fighting, victoria gave b begins our coverage. oh, the muslim holiday of ead, marked by soldiers on the streets of cartoon, cheered on by their supporter. 330 kilometers north of the capital. a
9:03 pm
merry people are hoping to celebrate the end of the fasting month of ramadan, as they usually would with large family gatherings. they too have been caught up in the violence that the army says it's now in control of the airport and the military base attached to it. i can the lad and god, the country is safe, the situation is stable and the shops have reopened. now we were able to bring the children to the market for eat clothes and hopefully we were able to make them happy. days of fighting have left many sudanese, desperate, and afraid tens of thousands of people have left the capital. many have already arrived in neighboring chad. a vast majority of these people are women and children with huge humanitarian needs. they lab seemingly, you know, overnight with nothing. and we know that the urgent immediate needs are what you wouldn't need if you had a clear house. ah,
9:04 pm
of course you, dan, there's a sense of unease and fear, but also resilience and little certainty about how things are going to move forward . victoria gates and be al jazeera. let's come over to hipaa vocal correspondence twos in call to minutes sci fi. every one hopes will hold hipaa but one that people have very little hope and so hale because this is the 5th attempt right now after the fire and this time it's supposed to be 72 hours and people in the capital have seen what's happened when they were supposed to be 24 hours the fire on thursday and friday and wednesday. and they know that any low that they get between the fight between the 2 side is the time that they should try to talk up on basic commodities. and the 15 is the time, but they should try to ask the hospitals if available or try to leave the capital. now, the sci fi that was announced by the sudanese army is not conditional. the army in its statement made it very clear that they will abide by the fire should the
9:05 pm
opposite side being the rapid support forces also by, by the necessity of the, of the truth and cease fire and not how not to make any military move around the capital to him, this has not been the case throughout the day. there has been intense artillery shelling in many parts of the capital, especially with the dental areas in the northern parts of the capital in the southern parts of the capital. fighting between the city needs army and the rapid support for the retail point, where they reach on the outskirts of the capital houghton going on to the state, which is where thousands of people have fled to escape the fighting. so, despite the fact that a sci fi was announced by both sides, the rapid support forces and the could, it means army. there has been shillings and have aren't hillary in various parts of the capital to me. and many people say that this is making it hard for them to leave their homes to get basic necessities, or try to leave the capital for safety elsewhere locals. so you touched on really my next question cuz it really does give the public a chance to decide whether to move to a safe location or stay put. it's
9:06 pm
a difficult decision to those that you've been speaking through to through the day . what is the opinion being while some of those who seek to say that they are relying on relatives who already been able to make out of the out of the capital to decide whether they should also leave or not. and that's because, depending on where you are, the situation could be incense, or it could be very quiet and easy for you to get out of your home. but then again, this is not something that people were preparing for just a week ago. people were preparing for, eat, preparing to gather and meet with the relative and they were going shopping. and that's what they were looking forward to the celebration. but right now with some of those who spoke to say the situation has changed and what they're living is something different than what they expected. here's what they had to say. i mean, i was how and this is the worst eat i've experienced because i'm away from my mother and father and see like there's no reason for that. the distance between us is 18 kilometers. i used to go to my town and come back on the same day. so there's
9:07 pm
a feeling of helplessness that the circumstances are bigger than you that you can't bypass than you feel restricted. and then for the bed, little book with diamond, i'm usually the pass and in my family who gets excited and encourages others to our new clothes and to enjoy it. but this is completely different because i am responsible for my sibling. i have been very tense. the past couple of days to provide stuff and find a safe place in the house. but i'm also hesitant whether to leave the house, then all the seed has been totally different. i haven't been able to do anything because what has been fighting started it's been forgive, he is a human rights activist and founder of the know to women's oppression initiative and joins me now on the telephone from cartoon. good talk with mr. gary on the telephone. how relieved are you that a cease fire has been declared? i do use that to say i didn't know it's
9:08 pm
i have an hour ago. we've gotten heat up. i think even before the 24 hour he's had it we cannot do as not to do it too as not to do it. we do instead is very bad. it still we can hear that. i think i know it is a big thing that you know what that we cannot go shopping. i'm not more times arch with them. i went out of work because it is no good to be because it is no game because i there is no it isn't is very that for the dad lying that live there is no. okay, mr. gave you that in terms of ok. i need to tell all the people i would try to that . indeed. he's crab. mr. gary. many people are telling us the same thing. let's talk about your situation at the moment. have you been able to leave where you are
9:09 pm
staying? have you considered leaving your building? i miss my i yes. when to do do look out for that part of my neck, but it's not what data we live there, but i cannot leave my yeah. why? i have to leave where you go to go. have you been speaking? have you been speaking to your neighbors or your friends to try and yeah, give you some help in riyadh we i gave i agree as we are talking today that we are managing to hear that i need somebody look at something doesn't sure. did you have to show your full, we are dividing our things, you see dividing, what part of the capital do you live in? north, south, east, west. i am living in and i don't know it's got got
9:10 pm
40 area. if there is a lot of lighting where you are all clashing in me, i am living in the school and that fighting is in the school at 6. the thing is here to me, that's a good divorce is a good building and it is a fighting then. yeah, that's what we've tried to get to parts that you might have all be near a strategic building that is being fought over by the r s f all by the military. have any, has anybody come to your front door? have you had any military or malicious people coming to your front? no, no, no, no, to tell you that. no, nobody came to my house. nobody came to my front door. so we're in the game in our, into our city. now we are in the early few minutes of this announcement of
9:11 pm
a sci fi, it might take a little time. if there is a cease fire miss for gary, and you get the opportunity to leave your building to look for food or water or for relative will you take that opportunity? i know. yeah. when, when, what, what is that you try ruin to see, to look photo that we are hearing the piping, but we need to it that we went, that is not maybe maybe now we start to be, he's, he's, i got another kid. but 70 minutes ago, we need to leave that fighting when we went out, not because it is nice, but we need to have board that we will die. mr. gary and so you and even that is up. i think we went out with my name, but it's good to to hear your voice and certainly for you to tell us that as far as you're concerned, the ceasefire is not working. but we will keep in touch with you and make sure that
9:12 pm
we know what's going on, and perhaps your messages of help will get through to the authorities, at least for the moment. thank you for joining us on al jazeera, 4000. so sidney's all scrambling to her scape, the violence, but aid agencies say neighboring countries are unprepared for a new influx of refugees into mother who has more people in cartoon are desperate to get out, gathering whatever they can carry their seeking safety wherever they can find it. many have already crossed into chat more or likely to follow. we would week next week the defenders and the people that there had just upset the property that you were were being led to deal names and the time to chat whenever you need me for. are they not available? no, maybe saturdays or nothing. chat has its own problems. conflict in climate change,
9:13 pm
i've left more than 2000000 people struggling to get enough to eat. and it's already hosting hundreds of thousands of refugees who fled conflicts in the region . agencies fear that won't be enough to go around. just this morning, we'll dispatching convoys of food date 410000 people only for 2 months or 20000 people one months. and it's very complex. we are boring for projects and, but we really support. we cannot continue like this back into down. the violence isn't escalating and both sides are refusing to talk. those leading the fighting have no way of knowing if or when they'll see their homes again. centered monahan, al jazeera feelings, migration agency says one of its stuff has been killed in the fighting in sit on the international organization for migration as a humanitarian work vehicle was hit by crossfire there obeyed full dylan is
9:14 pm
a spokesman for the iowa, and he gave us more details about the death of his colleague far staff member and his wife and a newborn child got into a private vehicle headed south to relocate to a safer place south of the city and about 50 kilometers outside of l by. they found themselves in the crossfire between 2 factions. the staff member was, was critically injured. despite his injuries, he managed to drive the car some distance away to the health clinic. but sadly, he died from his injuries. under the current circumstances, the safest places you know, hunker down in your residence, not, i mean, this is a, it's a very dangerous situation. not just in the capital and in points in dar floor, but in cities like the lack of drinking water,
9:15 pm
the lack of food electricity out in many areas, adding to the compounding the misery, experienced by civilians. last count we had 413, confirmed dead over 3200 people injured many of those civilians. and of course with the tax on health centers and the desperate situation for the doctors and nurses who are trying to attend to people. they are very real concerns for the, for the future. now, many children have been caught up in the fighting in sit on the human children's agency says at least 9 have been killed and 50 others injured. eunice that says it's unable to provide care for $50000.00 critically ill and malnourished children . the n c military agency for children is appealing for association of hostilities to keep children safe. james elder is a spokesman for unicef. he joined the cell from geneva virus got good, happy with us on the program. mr. elder, we just spoke to an eye witness just a few moments ago that said that she believes the cease fire that's been cold by
9:16 pm
both sides is not working. the fighting continues, so one wonders that the issues that children face in this sort of trauma of gunfire and bobbing must be quite immense. and quite a problem for you to try and solve. yeah. beyond the normal summit, the moment you gosh, we've got children who it's useful to take a step back. you know, a week ago before his crisis, there were millions of children boys and girls who didn't have a chance to go to school. today had one of the highest rights of malnutrition on the planet. horrendous and right about employment of a young, young people, millions and millions without access to st. water. now you draw families who can't get outside. we talk with happened. get water. who, you know, as you just who are being caught in the crossfire, we go, you know, large numbers of children in hospitals. there are any way that they are reaching because they're so severely malnourished. she is with
9:17 pm
a chill through their nose now are fighting gets new. that hospital and doctors and nurses have to play the psyche war then. so you go to the great risk of large numbers of children dying through these conflicts. if it doesn't stop, not because they're on the front lines of this fall and the new them. but because they're, they went into these conflicts in such a precarious state. and you're right to say that the psychological impact of these for boys and girls, again, who you know, being affected for years because of decisions, but the others made on their behalf. that has the beginning at the beginning of this conflict, we had martin griffith's on the you and the secretary for humanitarian as an emergency relief coordinator. i'm sure you know him very well. he was talking about the, the 60000000 people alone needed aid and see dog during this period. and before any conflict, i mean, or the need generally different for urban and rural areas. are they roughly the
9:18 pm
same? depending on you might say the medical facilities available will quite often in rural areas and is alyssa population density, but there's less services. now, one of the things you say it does very well for us to really mound our sugar is to get those mobile services around those children. so, you know, identify it. you can do external support. there are puting support for those children that, that, that is completely seized. so we're talking about tens of thousands of children who need that support, not necessarily in hospitals, but who can be really reached only remotely. we therapeutic food, which is a lifesaver. now in rural areas right now, what option to their families have they can't go to market the markets the but in the capital, of course, you have a great, a population density and a much more reliance on, on water coming through pipelines and that is being destroyed so it's, it's hard to oversight just what the boys and girls are going through right now,
9:19 pm
both in terms that physicality, but also in terms of what you alluded to, just that the mental strengths of what they've seen over the last year. and now to the bunker down in 40 degree, hey, at a time when, as we will know it and they should have a moment with their families to start writing, not to be cowering. when you talk about the mental stress of young people, i just say this past week, you can also look at the other side, the mental stress that young children have been experiencing for years. and one tends to think of areas like dar full, which is a rural area, which is also a come side for many refugees. what sort of vulnerabilities do they face and what concerns you about allocation like that? well, they've done it 1st and foremost is on a real easy that proximity fighting with without a doubt and some of the atrocities that have been committed. they are against villages and families. and remembering those moms and dads of those children who are so from the front line, trying to protect their children,
9:20 pm
trying to educate their children going beyond and be i'll be up above every moment every day to try and help them. but out great to these. they are, it just is humanly the thing to these boys and girls they, they coming to learn that the world to be a really dangerous unstable. i'm predictable place and unfortunately new to say, because we are in the hall, we are in yemen. we are trying, we are in syria, we know the long term impact that psychological impact, that emotional development, income generating capacity. they've got to become a good members of the community and build back into that. those sees, get ruptured so. so again, you know, as the secretary general has been saying from day one, this conflict has to stop. now a civil conflict. these children will just be something that literally is unbearable to, to them and their safety. james, i unfortunately we have to leave it. i'm sure that we will continue to follow events with you with your staff at to you to say thanks so much for your time.
9:21 pm
and ah, preschool president, is that to be extradited from the us to face corruption charges alonzo to later gave himself up to authorities in california a short time ago. and he's accused of taking more than $25000000.00 in bribes during his 5 year presidency. this week the federal judge denied a request to block his ex tradition. let's get more on this from marianna sanchez, who's in lima for us. so i did finally teddy himself and i'm, he's fought hard to make sure this extradition just didn't happen. that's right. so hailed too many years, actually he's been fighting a physician since 2018 and now he has a turn himself in and he will be taken to the county jail of san mateo in
9:22 pm
california to wait for things to be organized between the us marshall's and ruth, in took full officers, that will apparently will be flying to california to pick him up. and in the meantime, a little who had been finding exhibition for many years last night gave an interview to punish agency saying that he was going to tell me that he wanted to face justice. but he asked the peruvian judiciary to not allow the prison to kill him. he said that he was going to die in prison, but wanted to that one is to have 5 argument. but one to have the same for rhonda to ask former president to change people when another deal, but under how's the less for many years he will face at least 20 years in prison
9:23 pm
for for peddling and for money laundering in the largest case of of corruption by the former brazilian construction company only paid millions of dollars in too many officials in different parts of this country. mary, gaps and prosecutors said that they paid $35.00 millions to handle the legal something that he of course denied for will he will be brought to the 2 peru. and the prosecutor in that case has just said that most likely it will be in the next few days, such as that for cindy. but thanks for the update, mariana hudgens in his presence. that if an under says that he went to be running for reelection in october, the surprised announcement comes on the country face the economy crisis. inflation
9:24 pm
has sold to over a 100 percent and is expected to get worse. ongoing droughts of also cripple the agricultural sector and and as was elected in 2019 the u. k. has a new deputy prime minister all of a doubt and he's been named as the replacement for dominic rob, who resigned early on friday. rob had been under investigation following formal complaints of bullying, so you got a good husband from london to lose one cabinet minister if considered unfortunate to leave 3 within 6 months, presents a challenge for the u. k. prime minister research sumac. i mean, a swell of accusations of bullying and intimidation tactics is the latest exit government deputy prime minister dominic rob, who was also the justice minister and a staunch supporter of tonight from the get go. and his leadership put a 5 month long investigation into allegations of rob, over seeing a hostile work culture revealed to counsel misconduct had been up held. and as he
9:25 pm
said, he would rob stood down in his resignation letter. he pledged his continued support for the prime minister, but defended his conduct and called the inquiry floored, and one that set a dangerous precedent that would encourage spurious complaints against ministers. opposition politicians disagree. i don't know why dominic rob, in the middle of a cost living crisis, thinks that anybody wants to hear about his whining about having to reside. what i think everybody wants is strong leadership, but that's us being palpably absent here. reports of his behavior surfaced back in 2021. when rob served under boris johnson. and while he was foreign secretary, when he delayed returning home from holiday during the chaotic withdrawal of u. k. embassy personnel from afghanistan. but the man who was stepped into lead the
9:26 pm
country when johnson was hospitalized with covered 19, remained at the heart of government. but dominic rob now gone, the prime minister now finds himself without his most local political ally. and there are still questions of why it took so long. mister su not to address the issue of mister rob conduct. and if he had been warned before, hiring him as his deputy, the last of the prime ministers chief ally, comes at a particularly difficult time for tonight. months of strikes, soaring, inflation and energy prices have tested the result of the country and its leaders. after the high drama of the johnson years and less trust is short, but turbulent tenure as leader soon i promised accountability integrity and fashion elizabeth, with a claim he hoped, would convince the public in spite of questions that remain about the culture inside westminster. so i think i yeah, go, i'll just sarah london,
9:27 pm
the us assisting me think of western allies, ramstein airbase in germany to discuss further military support for ukraine. ukraine is pushing for more find to jets and munitions ahead of it's long expected spring counter offensive. washington is posing to support key for we close. as long as it takes our collective efforts have made a huge difference on the battlefield. and now in just a few short months, the contact group has delivered war than 230 times. more than 1550 armored vehicles and other equipment and nations to support more than 9 new armored brigades. we've also expedited our in one abrams timelines to supply ukraine with more armored capability in the coming months. and the m ones that the ukrainians will use for training arrive here in germany in the next few
9:28 pm
weeks. and all of this is huge. progress still had hiss on al jazeera. ah, climate activists call for days at protests in the streets of london trying to force the government to go green. and the muslim holy holiday of e. there's underway. but many living in to kiss earthquake zone have little to celebrate. also in sport. how a placid boat trip down the same is that to play a major part of the paris olympics, paul will have that story a little bit later. ah hello, we've got some pretty unsettled weather across much of the middle east. once again, a fair amount of cloud up towards the black sea through levant and a fair amount of class producing some lie, the showers there across. so saudi arabia always a possibility,
9:29 pm
see some at flash flooding as a result of these heavy dampers stretch their way. all the way into southern parts of a yemen. we are going to say somewhere where to weather still lurking there as we go on through our sunday showers pushing up towards us here in cart out. i think we'll see anything significant. having said that, the temperature is on the rise. $37.00 celsius is $99.00 in fahrenheit wanted to shower, is there a possibility to into, to care ace inside of the mediterranean, looking generally dry fine and sunny. and that stretches across a good part of egypt. when picking up their into well libya, one or 2 showers a possibility to sliding outs of the iberian peninsula across northern parts of morocco. plenty of showers, meanwhile, now gathering quite nicely the seasonal res, pushing up across west africa, joining up with some very heavy right out of cameroon into the democratic republic of congo. some heavier showers there too, into kenya. but further south it is looking generally dry. once again, for a time,
9:30 pm
although we will see increasing cloud gradually pushing right into south africa ah, with the law will. the law when with neither side, willing to negotiate is the ukraine war becoming a forever war is america's global leadership, increasingly fragile. what we'll us politics look like as we had to the presidential election of 2024. the quizzical look us politics, the bottom line. the soaps, i believe, to have migrated in the 6th century from the co pays the mountains in central europe to these forest interests. and they, germany, tens of thousands to live in this region. how far from the polish and check for us every year at easter latino hoffman tries to preserve to serbian tradition of painting like her answer. so she gets the ex different symbols. it's special back to just for good town, happiness and prosperity. the sort of self manage to preserve their culture for
9:31 pm
over a 1000 years, mainly because they live quite isolated along what ways dep survived doors to communism naziism and now that knowledge threatening native language. oh, i was like watching the whole robin to remind you of all top stories. there are reports and continued fighting in sit on despite warring sides. having agreed to a 3, they ceased to allow people to celebrate even more than 400 people have been killed in 7 days a fighting between the army and the country's largest power military force, the rapid support forces. let's go straight back to hipaa. morgan correspondent, in car tube and hippa, reports of fighting within minutes of that announcement of
9:32 pm
a cease fire by the all be what's going on? well look at a nice army, put out a statement saying that while it is a biding by the sci fi, it announced just a little bit before 7 o'clock local time around 17 gmc, it says that it was able to record a list of violations from the rapid support for the fight, including the attack on the vicinity of the general command of the army headquarters, which was the scene of in time fighting around the airport. also another location of piers fighting between the 2 sites over the past few days and around a gold complex. now that lives in the heart of cartoon. and it's one of the 2 major gold shops are market in the country. and according to the statement from the army, it says that the rabbit workforce is attacking vast complex to try to rob it. now this is of course, from the sudanese army side, the rapids support forces. and i'm bessie's fire just a little bit over 12 hours ago. and within an hour they said that the are the
9:33 pm
different needs, i mean was already violating back to the accusations of violation goes both ways. and while all of this is happening, there has been fighting on the ground with heavy artillery strikes, being heard in various parts of the residential residential areas in the capsule harpoon in the early hours of the morning into the late afternoon hours. and people think that they have no faith that this fi with all withhold, just like others. these 5 did not hold over the past few days, will continue to move to what goes on, certainly through the night to walk in the 4th in cartoon. thank you. more african countries look set to approve a new vaccine for malaria developed in the u. k. got legit already endorsed the use of the 21 job to move seen as unusual because the world health organization hasn't approved vaccine researches at the university of oxford. it's 75 percent said 75 percent effective. malaria kills around $660000.00 people every year. most of them
9:34 pm
in africa. this is a milestone for us. you know, it's been 30 years in the making this vaccines. i've been lots of kansas that we've over 20 years. we've taken into clinical trials or have not worked said well that's you know, from the outset from 2012 in pre clinical studies, 2015 in the clinic. this maxine has looked very promising so it's, it's fantastic seem to come through to the stage dr. thomas swinson and by is the executive director for the african center for health policy, research and analysis and joins us now from across. go tell me this on the program . so i was just when you, what you stand on the approval of this new malaria drug, what you make of it. thank you. i think it is good for us to have him for malaria to save a lot of this. however, we are skeptical because the vox hadn't yet received approval from w h.
9:35 pm
school. yes. so gathering data to analyze the key, see and safety on our children. this by the good news, we said about it, but still we haven't gotten any confirmation from the issue about all the necessary things we should know about the faxes. and the one thing is that gonna parties page into try out. and we don't understand how the n v can jump over the new each and the countries that are under the trial to approve of evaporation that we don't know of and that we've no heroes. so if the vaccine comes on to the market or is offered to hospitals in gonna do things, that medical stuff will be hesitant to use it or will they decide that they would like to use it because they've got the government's backing is not the government that should approve vaccine, it should be a competent body to get with
9:36 pm
w. h. s that you approve action for the use of our children will be happy to have the boxes. but if we don't really understand the needs and crunches about the boxing is city, we, the medical stop would not be able to apply or use a drug that authorities and those consent, those who are bucks and of all not approve of it. we need people who understand batson to be the lead people to advise the country. however, if you ask the societies he'll do that deal with bucks and none of them have much knowledge about the bucks and he does not have not tested the bucks in other countries. i've done, therefore there is no news about it and we know of skepticism using boxes. we know what happened during a coroner virus, and there is people are skeptical about buses unless it is well documented. and then people accept the w to approve the doctors and nurses may be hesitant. even
9:37 pm
patients and may not allow the awards to agree to take the vacuum and try like that in full. and then we'd melinda back from which is about 30 percent because he, he was a challenge to get it done. what about a button that has never been tried and gone is going to be difficult to implement in sibley. so tell us, in terms of god, how much of a problem malaria is for young children. i melissa is one of the leading causes of their children and it is hard in the country these economy out of way by parents. so it is a very serious disease in ghana and we really need something to say this. but we needed something that will really be approved by everybody, by the way, that it is safe. and if you could just for our children could get your input and your analysis. so dr. thomas winston and about thanks for joining us from across the k. less the activists have begun 4 days of protests in london to demand
9:38 pm
urgent government action on climate change. the extinction rebellion groupons and end to the use of fossil fuels. it's called on tens of thousands of people to join the demonstrations as me parker reports. the cooling at the big one afford a gathering of thousands of climate activists from dozens of organizations bearing a glaring message to the gates of parliament. the climate change is an emergency too big for governments to ignore. ah, we wind a few years, and this is how climate activist group extinction rebellion got its message out in cities across europe, walking roads and bridges, its members, gluing and locking themselves to buildings. mass arrests, maximum disruption, maximum attention, and it arguably works. the climate debate is now more mainstream than it ever was before, and the group is exposed. some of the filings and inadequacies of inter governmental
9:39 pm
climate action. but they've also enraged public opinion divided people's views on the group, which is why they've now decided to abandon their trademark tactics and try something else. we realized that some of our tactics previously would have discouraged certain people from being able to exercise that democratic right to protest what they believe in to the government. but there's also another reason for this change of tack new laws allowing police to shut down protest before they cause major disruption. and for those guilty of serious offences, possible jail sentences. i'm a civilized man from london on this morning. i have climbed up this cable more control and was arrested for scaling the you case largest motorway bridge last year, blocking traffic for hours. he sent us this message from prison before being sentenced to 3 years by caught on friday. oil and killing people. now,
9:40 pm
adding fuel to the fire, the climate crisis, and everything we hold dear. continue to campaign from presented by writing articles and speaking, at least i can do because there is not a creative on a dead planet. there are still other groups pushing for more radical action as seen at the recent world's new could championship and national gallery. and this incident involving a wax work of king charles and a couple of cakes. the forthcoming coronation in may possibly to tempting a platform for some protest, is to ignore the bulk of algeria london. though the weather agency says the world's glaze is disappearing rapidly and saving them is the last calls and its annual report. the world meteorological organizations as the melting of some european bases, has been in its woods off the charts. the last 8 years of been the warmest ever
9:41 pm
recorded as higher concentrations of greenhouse gases, of accelerated label warnings. please and canada. se cargo containing gold worth $3015000000000.00 has been stolen from truck to airport. it dropped on monday night and was in the holding facility before it disappeared. please haven't confirmed where the aircraft had come from or its destination. the highest is canada's largest in 3000 tons of maple syrup was stolen in 2012 folk, c. lackland murdock has dropped a high profile defamation lawsuit against the stray lea. a news outlet website. crikey, her the keys, murdock, his family, and company in feeling b. u. s. capital rise in 2021. murdock lawyer said the new sites had tried to introduce evidence from a separate defamation case against news. fox news. it was defense. this week,
9:42 pm
the network agreed to pay almost $800000000.00 to the u. s. technology firm dominion waiting systems. the false claims its machines were rigged. once the fox organization and the barracks had had to settle for $787500000.00 us dollars to the largest defamation payout. and us history. it was pretty obvious that that murdock locked murdock, going on to sue crockett. in australia. we've got to be a lost cause. well, still had here all the news i in sport, a football team in brazil leads the way of making sure autistic fans can play a big part in the match day experience pull will have that story after the free. hm . mm hm.
9:43 pm
with with mm. pool. oh,
9:44 pm
a things in many parts of the world are mocking e. those fitted with press and facilities. this was the see the mecca, the slums, holiest science. the timing of ease is determined by the signing of the crescent moon. in some countries, the festival will be celebrated on saturday morning prayers have taken place with lack symbol in the occupied. it's theresa during rather than tensions were running high, as was ready for conducted rates at the compound and prevented thousands of palestinians mentoring. 2023 is already proven. well, as the most difficult years, the palestinians who lived under israeli military occupation decades celebrate heath is not always easy for those and occupied territories. run the southern air reports now from nablus in the occupied west bank living in the old city of nablus
9:45 pm
for more than 2 decades. you sit onto is no stranger to read by sir eli forces. the grandmother says, trying to wash away had a grandchildren's fears, has never been hot, that the youngest now is not yet 2 years old, but towards like shooting and soldiers already part of head will capillary young push through unclean every other week or so there is a new street, niagara he had the shooting and cling on to her mother. that for you often make stories up on the say it's a game, so she is not as scared, but this is not normal. nothing about our lives and occupation is several weeks ago, 3 fighters in a house nearby were targeted and instead aly military operation. 11 elephants were killed in the worst such trade and occupied was bank and hears. since january sales forces have killed, at least a 100 palestinians, mostly invades in the occupied territory. they say the army says the targets those it considers the security threat. the effects of such raids go beyond those killed
9:46 pm
or wounded by fraley soldiers, palestinian say an integral part of the strategy is to show forth and instill fear when the aim of the carrying them from taking part in activities opposing the occupation. men here believe israel seeks to control more than just their lands to maintain its decades long occupation, extending that to almost every aspect of their life. ruined. what had, what had albert? did you go home? not knowing window, knock on your door, she walked the street. worry, don't read any minute. this is what terrorism. oh, alums heart of us. do i don't decide where to go or when i don't need nebulous because of the checkpoints, the occupation doesn't allow me an hour. ok so and for me that's important. i am. hi the me, hey, we can't plan at all a 20 minute drive can take up to 3 hours. things can change while you're at the checkpoint. such continuous oppression is part of palestinians every day. life's
9:47 pm
something analyst led them at work called brindle violence is under the law. over the years, a buildup of events has undermined ha palestinians perceived their present and future as individuals and collective with are these continuous waves of unseen, indirect violence that are bloodless and go and quietly has changed the course of lives and the way we embrace and think of them, what's possible and what's not muslims around the world are marking the end of the 1st thing, month of ramadan. in nablus, you stresses, there's little room for joy, this aid, but it's been a normal day with no blood spilled and no homes demolished. so this one is worth celebrating. danny is a bernie oliver's eda, nablus, well eat celebrations. her be muted in southern jer, kia and north western syria, many a still morning. those killed in february's earthquakes. at least 56000 people died and thousands more were left homeless. some consumer reports so from hearty province, took years worst affected region. o long in the simple prefabricated
9:48 pm
cabin in hearty people gather for prayer to mark the end of month of ramadan. and the beginning of the period of feast aid, they live in a container city as their houses were destroyed or damaged after 2 earthquakes. shoot southern trickier. in february, hulu, on the kaya families among 350 others living here. tomorrow says he pulled the body of his son from under robinson, 13 days after that quake struck being sun cannula. dimmer, sadness begins. when you bury your own child, the heartbreak never goes away. its fate and patience is the only remedy i beg god . to take me, not him. he says before the earthquakes, all his relatives and children used together at his home. this time only his grandson is here. the zillow is a chilled glove that will be stuff. we lost one of our sons,
9:49 pm
the other 3. today around the country and my son used to ask me to cook several dishes, now they get no one and i cried in the morning, the children left traumatized by the disaster, find comfort and games. months later, they're still unable to go to school. the problems of hot i was hit the hardest by the disasters that claimed more than 50000 lives. in 11 cities, people who are forced to leave or shelter in containers and camps, also remains devastated by dearth, quakes that struck in february. people have come to the cemetery to visit the graves of their loved ones, they loss to the disaster for them and many others. this youth, it will be marked by grief and mourning. this area of the cemetery has been left for those who didn't survive. the quakes that have been identified through fingerprints and dna matches and people are searching the headstones to find those
9:50 pm
they have lost and then tidy layer greys. they know they can't bring them back, but some find solace and prayer. scene anchor solo al jazeera hot. i southern turkey. well, it's time for sport or his po, sale. thank you very much. unacceptable and lacking passion. those were the words of manchester, united manager, eric, and hog following his teams exit from the rope league. they were beaten 3 now at severe a crash out in the quarter finals. david stark's reports. manchester united had been tulip and cruising in the 1st like at old trafford before too late. own goals handed, severe the momentum heading to spain, and it didn't take long for another united mistake or to hate a mcguire hammock was given it away. a captain harry mcguire, gifting a go to use if and misery which put severe in front manchester united. making massive mistake of the united created almost nothing in attack and after the
9:51 pm
break conceded again to jane, oh with the home. so it puts you up on aggregate and the humiliation was complete. 9 minutes from time with another united era. oh 2nd we have to face that we let herself down, let the fence down and i, if you want to win trophies, if you want to be successful or you need other character, but it's unacceptable because everyone can cheat that the demands in the standard has to be higher in, in cooper my says, united, united must now lift themselves for their f, a cup semi final against brighten on sunday. and then
9:52 pm
a crucial game against talk them in the race to finish in the premier league. talk for me more severe. he won this competition more than any other side, much on to play event us in the semi finals. they would stokes out a 0 off know play south hampton in the next few minutes, looking to get the english premier league title challenge back on track mecca. our texas team talk the league bike for points have given up to go leads in the last 2 matches, making much of a city favorites in the title race. very confident and twists and turns. part of anything that you do, especially in football, whatever the aim of the target it is and is now going to be always a linear progression and you have to know that and you have to be prepared for that and them the way the team reacted is work it was incredibly positive. now, one of brazil's top football clubs corinthians is leading the way in improving the much day experience for funds with autism. autistic funds often have difficulty
9:53 pm
with social interactions on communication. and it's thought up to 10000000 brazilians suffer from the condition where i hope our reports. watching football in brazil is one of the most intense sensory experiences in all sports. but what if you're a football fan and you suffer from autism? but those are those with the condition which includes social and language difficulties, as well as repetitive behavior. once you go back, can be a probiotic experience. it prompted this man to set up a group to help those supporters with the condition. another property that you up or soccer found group came from corinthians. we always watched the game that i li, diagnosis of autism sites create this movement. joining corinthians and autism given us some of the measures include i sensory room, complete with noise proof, glass walls, special lighting inquiry spread on multiple tables of toys and food. it's all designed to have a colleague effect the part airy work of the sal paula base club has led to 31 year
9:54 pm
old autism. so front lewis, pooty, they hide by corinthians as a stadium guide. well, there should yaki georgia when i got here to work, no one talked about autism might do, wouldn't something mean to exclude us? it's just wasn't a big topic for our society. it was a bubble. and thank god, that was his personal. and now this is a topic for everyone. according to the country's health ministry, as many as 10000000000 people are on the autism spectrum in brazil, the work of artists of albany gross play a bartel role. it is showing that everyone here in sock about sal palo, the child who joy, the people go ha, ha, ha, ha, how the 0 in the n, b a, the brooklyn net so close to going out of the playoffs. the philadelphia 76 has went . 3, nothing up in the eastern conference series after controversial when in new york, 76, a center joel and bead wasn't rejected for that. but james hardon was rejected for
9:55 pm
this. the officials calling it's a flagrant found harden was out of the game. and with the schools close in the dying seconds, the nets royce o'neill couldn't find the teammates. the antony melton closed out again filling the defending champion. golden state warriors have given themselves a chance in their series against sacramento, steph curry, school. 36 points is a war is pull the series school back to to one. at of the 4th game in san francisco and sunday devin book, a score 45 points, got 7 rebounds and 3 steels to leave the phoenix suns to 129124. when over the la clippers phoenix lead the series $2.00 to $1.00 defending stanley cup champions, the colorado avalanche leveled their playoff series against the seattle cracken going into game 3 elsewhere. the las vegas nights a level with the winnipeg jacks. jack, i call spanish, was a highlight for them and see his clever touch on the replay. the nice 15 to to the
9:56 pm
us house of representatives has passed 8 republican bill banning transgender athletes from competing in women's and girls. sports. it was approved $219.00 votes to $203.00, but he's likely to be blocked by the democrat lead senate president joe biden is also against it. support to say it protects female athletes who are disadvantaged in competing against those who are born male. there's a reason why there's men and women sports. there's a reason why there's a professional basketball for men and women. it's about fairness. the reason for this is simple. men have certain physiological advantages over women. such is more size and speed. and because of that, allowing biological males to compete against women or girls, rob's females of equal athletic opportunities. we have no right to undermine and threaten the lives of trans children. i stand in opposition to this mean spirited
9:57 pm
legislation because i'm a woman of faith. and i believe in the humanity of all children, extreme maga, republicans from the very beginning of the 118 congress, have been focus on banning abortion care and bullying women banning books about our history and bullying parents. and this week, they've decided that they will want to ben trance children from playing sports to tennis on the defending champion. carlos alcaraz has booked his place in the semi finals of the barcelona, opened the 19 year old superstar was up against fellow spaniard, alejandro davita rich for kina who proved to be a crouch please. it is a voice but it wasn't quite enough in either set. alcaraz winning 7664. i got a 2nd stay 2nd seeds. the farmer sits,
9:58 pm
he passes also into the semi finals. he beat alex to manon 6462. while in beijing we had a spectacular night at the birds nest. london gave us an opening ceremony with the queen, and now the parish olympics are going to take us on a romantic trip down the sen organizes of the 2024 games of announce that for the 1st time the opening ceremony won't be held inside a stadium instead, athletes will cruise on the famous potomac boats along the french capitals river. they sight, 600000 spectators, will line the route ending close to the eiffel tower. left to get down early so that our sleeping bags thanks very much. full and not towards the out there and isa . and paula myself, i'll be more news while london you sent all the other side of the break to stay with us. ah ah
9:59 pm
ah fit them i'm not a jotted bethany where we sat there enough. ah . cities home to millions and debate drive out of the climate crisis. city have more space in school to do the radical things. pledges the made about smarter. green,
10:00 pm
a lower carbon cities range if occasion is a growing process of equality and displacement. what are these promised utopia that every one or just to select, all hail the planet looks at where the green cities can also be socially, just episode 5 on al jazeera. we don't simply focus on the politics of the conflict . if the human suffering that we report, we brave bullets and bomb and we always include the views from our sites in 2018, a journalist lead 40 days of civic action against the armenian government, and president sockets yann's grip on power. i'm going to liberate this, where a new documentary follows his non violent campaign to bring down a corrupt regime, astonishing outcome with regard to a democratic government where the nation, i am not alone on mias velvet revolution on al jazeera.

87 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on