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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 24, 2023 4:00pm-5:01pm AST

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global ex, facts in discussion. the idea of it being did come to been established in democracy . it was bound to explore an abundance of world class programming. of it least pollute yet is unlikely of impacts designed to inform, motivate, and inspired. you are now to sierra oh i hello, i'm serial van. yeah, it's great to have you with us. this is the news. our live from doha. coming up in the program today seems of devastation in a neighbourhood near cartoon sedans, army and the rapid support forces. blame each other for the violets. a rush to leave a battered nation, more civilians and foreigners flee the sudanese capital canyon. police bigs out
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more bodies of cult members who were told to starve themselves to death. and we report on the plight of fishermen in the eastern philippines, whose livelihoods are threatened by chinese military vessels. allow a ra, perfect. i will have all the sports, including the stages set for the f. i come 1st ever all march the fargo off the authority, right, right of hans of their place against rival city. ah . and we started sudan where the humanitarian situation is worsening by the hour. millions of people are trapped in their homes with no access to food, water, or medical care, with the fighting. now in its 2nd week, both sides accuse each other of committing war crimes. rapid support forces says the air force is indiscriminately targeting areas in khartoum. while the army says the paramilitary group is using civilians as a human shield,
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the use talk diplomat is calling for a quick political solution. in touch with the 2 generals i do run and now this is fire. stop those over. we have to continue bushy. politically, people settlement, we cannot afford that, so that which is a very populated country in blows because it will be sending shug waves around to full africa or thousands of people have been forced to flee the country. they are desperately seeking refuge in neighboring countries. the chaos in sudan has also triggered the evacuations of foreign diplomats in their families. the u. s. u. k. france, germany and others have pulled their people out. at least 420 people have been killed in 10 days of fighting so far. the recent law has not calmed fears that the situation could still get much, much worse, or healing mohammad or force. after nearly 2 weeks of fighting for dan's most
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powerful paramilitary patrol the streets of hard to field commanded say their forces control areas in the southeast of the capital. but it's difficult to verify information. the battle has intensified around hard tomb airport and the still being contested by army and paramilitary troops. and the fight for inflammation has become just as crucial here. the rapid support forces, or r s f says it maintains its presence a is on to all those listening to any false rumors that are so far control of the general command or the airport. we are now inside. both facilities are divided the data. but so don's army denies giving a power with another should lead was not yet. as you can see from the green square up to this point, there is nothing but the army personnel. they now combing the area only for our say, thought i, the army release video of what it says are rapid support forces fight is
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surrendering. and i'll 1st got also gra, in the southeast. ah, and the general meeting troops in heart to wash earlier in the day and as strike hit several homes and calico south of the capitol to dance off this committee is wanting of dozens of casualties. the rapid support forces is accusing the army of directly targeting civilians, but the army says the iris f troops, a hiding in civilian areas and using people as human shields. 5 the conflict has led to a major humanitarian crisis. millions of people in the capitol are trapped in their homes with power outages, no running water, lack of food, and an internet blackout. when the chaos has spread to state prisons where hundreds of inmates from kobe and national prison have reportedly escaped, others from sober prison were captured by r. s f paramilitary troops. while the fighting wages on those who can are trying to
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flee several countries including italy, france, germany, and jordan, are the latest to pull out their diplomatic staff and foreign nationals with no one to rescue them. sudanese civilians are taking matters into their own hands to find safety. some travelling by boss to cross into egypt. ah, getting out of costume was definitely the most difficult part of this entire journey. i'm having to go through these checkpoints where you don't know whether you're going to be robbed or killed or i'm just holding my mother's hands looking into my gramma's eyes just all holding each other's hands and praying that it all goes smoothly. there have been more international and regional calls for mediation . if european prime minister is appealing for both sides to talk to glenn man, what do i ask? my brother albert han and my brother, him id see to start the fighting immediately and adopted dialogue. but the 2
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warring sides appeared, determined to fight on as to don, enters a new phase of war and a deteriorating humanitarian situation. really, mohammed al jazeera ever morgan, his live in khartoum withers. huber communications become a little easier in the sydney's capital just in the last hour. so what has that allowed you to find out from your contacts about what's happening there? while many of the people who spoke to in the northern part of the capitol as well as the southern parts of the capital, say that there have been intense artillery strikes as well as airstrikes by both the rapid support forces, amber sudanese army, now in the east and part of the capital there were reported airstrikes by the sudanese army against arisa physicians. and the people who spoke to say that while no residents were heard, several buildings have been destroyed in that airstrike. then you have in the southern parts of the capitol in the city of canal, for example, as strikes led to the injury of dozens of residents of that area as well as the
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death of one civilian. that's what people are telling us. and they're saying that access to medical facilities is becoming challenging. they say that they do have people who are injured, there are hospitals, but the hospitals are overcrowded. and there is a shortage of medical staff. now others still others yet who was pulled to say that they've been trying to get out of the capital. but the breakdown in communications have forced them to stay back home. they were not sure which was the safest route to leave the capital. and they've heard of many people who have been trying to make it to egypt or to the eastern city of ports of them, but they still remain standard is transit in bus stations. so many people say that because of that communication breakdown because they didn't know which was the secure way out. and because they were able to hear fights at jets and the artillery has strikes. they stayed at home, waiting for a little lunch in the fighting. so that they can be able to leave their homes and try to seek safety elsewhere. hebron morgan in khartoum. thank you very much. joining us by phone now from the sudanese capital is civil activists. dwaa to rica . thank you for being with us. i'd like to 1st ask you how you're doing and what your current situation is. i'm actually,
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it's the same situation yet the day we've been able to provide food. we didn't have food for kit for 2 days. now, the internet was completely shut down last night. when am it just got back partially in the 2 d, sometimes c d in only one network i did on 51 p m a couple of hours ago and down. 9 there is still people company from the lack of drinking water, letting walker no hawk because yeah, are you able to leave your house for now? no, because since yesterday the. 9 had come to my neighborhood, i mean it's hard to and i was behaving very heavy shooting and hitting the aircraft and the anti and crappy, it's kind of like even more dangerous to leave the house. now, when you say with a little but i'm going down to wednesday and thursday,
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but we did come to take work with the committee. but yesterday they were supposed to be a marsh inside the neighborhood, but we couldn't because of the shooting. you wanted to organize the march in the neighborhood. ok. when you say that fighting has come to my neighbourhood, what do you mean? and are you able to tell you said there were you said that there were air raids still happening? artillery? are you able to tell what that is targeting? it's it's, it's so much the call to is deleted by the forces they've been shooting, were not to the shooting act, but they, they, they should heavily when the air crafts and their cross flights over like 5 minutes a week when they are, which is when minutes away from my house, we can hear the, the shooting, it was, it was done. and sometimes the craft, so it was very close. some of the eye witness accounts that i have got 1st hand or
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2nd hand, tell us about some of the fighters using taking shelter in people's homes. have you seen that witness? that i actually know, but i've heard from the grocery shop in my down my house with a few soldiers that they would try to take shelters inside the neighborhood. so they were very tired. they were wounded, they were trying to keep the floors, so he's been getting a lot of like this in the neighborhood and, but i didn't put us in it. yeah, i understand that's a 2nd hand then account. but do you know if people spoke to those fighters? i mean, and maybe that maybe that's a silly question, frankly, but maybe not because they're in close proximity. yeah, i know like the because some of the glossary shops inside the neighborhood saturday, still working. so these people encountered the soldiers because they basically said
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in the do you know, do you know what those exchanges were like? i actually know on the surface we heard they were like, one of the soldiers, tired and hungry, looking for luck and food. and as soon the people are very generous and they kind of like the people of the shop, give them water, some food so they can move on. sometimes they feel when they see them, so they have to give them everything they want. of course, what about yourself for food and water? what's your situation we suffered from the lack of one for today and we were surviving on the minimum left over that we had. 9 yesterday the members of the neighborhood committee, they were going to take people and they provided us with some food in afford a week. at least you know, the head of the recess, him at d, as he's known, he has been portraying himself as on the side of the people. do you think that he's
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somebody that you would be able to deal with in a, in a me not now obviously, but in a situation in a hypothetical, where the fighting is over, i actually know all of this happening for 4 years, and lucian, now we are very clear, we demanded supposed to be the civilian rule. we chose our way a method which was known by peaceful resistance for 40 years and the to the to 4th in the military and the militia. joe was the you, the democracy demand you the violence and mean a lot of people died. 5 the number of people died within the 1st 2 days of the fight. more way more than people died throughout the 4 years of, of, of this. and so we want to be clear as never committed that this was happening, had nothing to do with our demand of illusion, or the will of the people and the, the, the, the, the need for this is just the militia and the out is if the war is not
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a people were do a 3 civil activists joining us from cartoon. thank you very much. and dr. siad, mom of dallas, president of the sudan doctors union candidate division, he says doctor's on the ground are under huge strength. they need the personnel, medical personnel because those who are really been working, they have been reacting for for many days and they have been exhausted and they need to be replaced. that's the parents on. but unfortunately, there is no guarantee that they can reach safely. the 2nd thing is the, they do the outage of electricity. i have been talking in 2 days ago with one of my colleagues. they are sometime operating using the lights of their mobile phones. and they are using very primitive ways. do this impact like these, the cleaners and everything. and so they need everything. you can
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imagine they need clean water or electricity. they need the medical personnel to replace those who are working. i'm by the way, i appreciate what the, the, the, the great with my colleague and all the medical stop doing, despite all these, their situation and more than 10000 people have fled to fighting and sedan and crossed into neighboring chad. the world food program says that number could rise to 100000 and the refugees are in dire need of essentials, including food, clean water, and shelter. and there's plenty more head on this news hour, including appeal denied, a suspect in the explosion that killed a russian military blogger is ordered to remain in pre trial detention. bringing out the big guns, the world sees military spending skyrocket to the highest figures in decades.
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ah, at least 60 people have been killed in an attack in northern burkina faso authority say about a 100 men wearing what looked like military uniforms rated the village of karma india tango province. no group has claimed responsibility because hack is covering this for us from synagogue, capital de carr nicholas. this was a horrific attack by all accounts. the details though, still coming into focus, tell us what you know at this stage. well, serial the attack took place on thursday morning at 7 30 am in a region of wiggly where there is us. there's a big contingent, brick enough houses armed forces. and so men in uniforms wearing the uniform of bracken foster's forces encircled this village,
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close to eager. yeah. people thought they were there to celebrate the muslim vincent festivities of ede. they cheered, but in fact, the men in uniform attacked them. so either this attack was done perpetrated by burkina faso armed forces or it were, it was that men armed groups perhaps linked to al qaeda or i. so where are the uniforms or burkina? faso is armed forces. either way, it was a terrible massacre. according to the eye witnesses that we were able to contact were talking about 400 villagers, men, women, and children running in the field trying to escape the attacks. according to one eye witness, half of the men were all killed, shot down in what was what they describe a horrific and unprecedented attack in what is an ethnic mossi village? did you know there was a military coup in brickman last year based on at least partly based on this idea
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that the country was losing the fight against arm groups? is this winter turning things around? well, in fact, there is a coup every time. there is such a massacre that really shakes people in burkina faso. now the news of this massacre is filtering down to the capital of walker walker do group. and already over the weekend, a group of coalition of civil society activists were highly critical of the young captain, captain abraham char ray, in his inability to stop these attacks. now, these attacks have really increased in the last 7 months ever since he took power ever since the french, the former colonial power, who used to help them with troops on the ground ball. so aerial aerial help. well, they've stopped the military cooperation. the united states. no longer cooperates with them, so they left there are left alone to try to fight these arm groups. meanwhile,
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these attacks are increasing not just in bertino fossa, but right across the border in mali, just a few days ago in the region of save r a. there were arm groups attacking a major airport there. now we know that both burkina faso ends and molly and forces are doing more joint operations in the region. but the military, a military solution alone will not stop the attacks. what people want is more dialogue perhaps with these armed groups to bring an end to these to this violence back to use because hack reporting from the car. thank you. 9 more bodies have been found in easton, kenya, on land owned by the leaders of a religious cult. it brings the total number of victims found by police to $58.00 authorities say the people starved themselves after being told to stop eating in order to meet jesus. the pastor is in police custody. a g 7 agricultural ministers have called for the extension of the ukrainian grain export deal is agreements
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brokerage by the u. n. and turkey. last july allows keith to export grain from a number of its black c ports. russia has indicated it will not allow the deal to continue beyond may. 18th, it says conditions to facilitate its own exports have not been met. and those tensions about the grain deal come just as rushes. foreign minister, sir gay lover off is about to chair a un security council meeting that is said to begin in under an hour in new york. we will be monitoring that members will be discussing the principles of the un charter. which moscow is accused of violating with its invasion of ukraine, australia has launched its biggest defense shakeup in decades. it is looking to transform its military, which the government says is no longer fit for purpose. it is flag the long range. precision weapons is one of his priorities. the defense review says intense competition between china and the u. s. in the asia pacific is raising the potential for conflict. this represents a document for to die. and to morrow it is the most significant
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at work that's been done since the 2nd world war looking in a comprehensive way at what is needed. it demonstrates it in a world where challenges to our national security are always evolving. we cannot fall back on old assumptions. we must build and strengthen asked security by seeking to shape the future. rather than waiting for the future to shape us military spending across the globe, a sword turn all time high in the steepest year on year increase since the cold war . last year, the world spent more than $2.00 trillion dollars on defense. the us, china and russia account for more than half of that you're spending went up to 13 percent largely due to russia's invasion of ukraine. that is the biggest rise in 30 years. ukraine spending has jumped by 640 percent the highest every year on your
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increase for any country since records begin. meanwhile, in the asia pacific china and japan lead the charge there, the region as a whole spending 45 percent more security than it was a decade ago. the non 10 is a senior researcher in supreme military expenditure and arms production program that put together that report that he says, the increase in global military spending is worrying it really points to the un security perception that european countries see on russia. and that actually, this has been justified in russia's actions in 2022, such that europe is looking for security through military strength, over negotiations, or dialogue. first of all, a, from a central and with european perspective spending really thought to increase after russia annex a crimea 9 a, 2014. and there was a response really to really a built up the european military's in response to russia's threats. and of course, if we look at more from a east asia, also
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u. s. perspective on china us have open looking to modernize it's military since the early, 2000 and hence. and this will continue to all the way to the 20 forty's is simply very worrying that the region as a whole is increasing its amens, spending a large countries, even the, the smaller countries such as indonesia, singapore viet nam, and or increase spending as a response to china's increase and it so it's rather worrying that countries in the region are essentially increasing as allocation to the military over let's say more dialogue towards peaceful settlements on negotiations off the, the south east china. c, filipino fishermen are increasingly coming up against chinese coast guard vessels. in their traditional fishing grounds, where the u. s. military gaining greater access to philippine military bases, china says it will not guarantee the safety of filipinos living in taiwan. barnaby low reports from civic bay,
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a busy weekend for these fishermen. as they work against an impending fishing bad, the philippines and u. s. military's are set to hold drills in waters nearby, but they say they've got nothing against the americans, the real threat to their livelihood. stacy, our chinese vessels are done on the china. the chinese are constantly petroleum. if you try to enter the shoulder, it's more fishing, bullets, the robber boats will cicily. bonita, what audi? a commercial fisherman is referring to the resource ridge, scarborough shoal, into disputed, south china sea. just 120 nautical miles or about 222 kilometers from where we were speaking. due to the lack of fishing opportunities. if these commercial fishermen are forced to sail beyond coastal waters, the bas scarborough showed kilometers away where the risk conference patients with chinese coast guard vessels that control the area. these clips shot in november by
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marauders, his crew show at least 3 chinese vessels blocking the entrance to the lagoon. one of them clearly marked the chinese coast guard. the form that used was provided to them by the philippine coast guard, which has been patrolling parts of the south china sea within the philippines. exclusive economic zone more frequently says president ferdinand marcus junior took office will always have to involve the united. marcos is also agreed to allow us forces access to for more military basis to go 3 of which are close to taiwan. of a move that prompted china's ambassador to manila juan cdn, to quote advice the philippine government to oppose. i want independence if it genuinely care about overseas. filipino workers are always double use in taiwan remarks that many filipinos didn't take lightly. the message of this action is to lead the point for a very calling of their ambassador, one because of the problematic statement that he had, he should,
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which had the effect of threatening or issuing a whining through a 1000 self. always w is currently deployed in by one. it was all smiles, however, between president marco's and chinese foreign minister, teen gung, when they met in manila last saturday. in a statement after the meeting, marcus said that recent statement spoke, both countries might have been misinterpreted, and the chance visit was useful to be able to talk things through. barnaby low al jazeera, civic b. the philippines. moscow's highest court has rejected an appeal against the arrest of a woman charged with a bomb attack that killed an influential russian military. braga logger, 26 year old daria trip of a is accused of using an explosive concealed in a statuette to kill vladin to tar sky in a cafe in st. petersburg. dorski was a supporter of the war and ukraine who filed reports on the fighting from the front lines. jojo shoppable over reports from moscow. diary a trap,
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a lot will remain in jail. the moscow city court has made a decision to leave her behind bonds at the detention center, recognizing the legitimacy of arrest. the court was holding a close hearing on the appeal filed earlier this month by diary of defense team. at the beginning of the meeting, she said that she regretted that the tragedy had happened and wished to see the recovery to the big things of the block. she didn't say whether she pleaded guilty or not. doria trip about he's accused of committing a terrorist attack. that killed a military blogger and staunch support from ration in ukraine. loveland petoskey, you know, his real name was maxine full mean. and the blogger died on april. the 2nd following, an explosion of a cafe in the sense of st. petersburg, where he had been meeting his supporters and social media follows 40 other people. when did that? and as we know it's touch who had given petoskey, as
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a gift exploded in his hand. the explosive device was disguised as a golden box to the blog. actually, it was hidden inside the bus, and according to investigators, it was brought to the to the cafe by daria trap. yvonne who was living in moscow at the time of the tara thompson with a change the very next day, and a restful to mom. there's some relief coming from the severe heat that's been scorching much of southeast asia. jeff has those details in your world whether update daytime heating storms, really the name of the game across endo china high again. so that's gonna help lower their temperatures. for example, in bangkok at 36 degrees, it has also been particularly hot at night as well, but tuesday night. finally, a bit of relief from this heat here will dip down to 24 degrees in bangkok after china we go. most of the rain will now start to swamping concentrate itself across the pearl river valley, but it's straight down cooler air and one g problems, for example, gray lin, just 18 degrees for you. so with rain for southern japan,
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we're talking about q shoe, southern honju island. it's just going to clip the korean peninsula wall and spread some showers there. so we find our way back into se asia. let's talk about on borneo island, west central areas of calum antenna. that's where we've got our biggest downpours looks like a wet day across sumatra and java islands as well. for australia really active tor w way. we've got a cooler feet of air here, some showers, but look at the difference in south australia adelaide at $27.00 while above where you should be for this year. will in this weather report in new zealand. it's a windy pitcher across both islands and we're getting clips with some weather for the southern tip of the country. on tuesday, see later. the still ahead on al jazeera o t s t, as in bangladesh, pressure fashion, giants and governments to do more on workers safety. a long trek by migrants in
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mexico aims to highlight unsafe conditions in border detention centers and showing off on the slopes. some of the world's best skiers and snow borders do what they do best, and that is in switzerland, and that is made of the south ah, may on al jazeera, a year after a jazeera journalist, sharina barkley was murdered despite international outrage of multiple investigations implicating israeli forces we ask why justice has not been served. fault lines examined the ramifications of julian associates publications of us state secrets, and what the case against him could mean for press freedom after leading to a key for 2 decades. reggie pie you into that is facing perhaps as toughest election yet as a red coalition of opposition park is focused on seats in nigeria is to hold its 1st census in 17 years, an exercise likely to view ethnic tensions in africa's most populous nation. the
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united kingdom celebrates the coordination of charles the 3rd as his crown at westminster abbey may on al jazeera frank assessments. this treaty provides this with this hopeful moment where countries could come together and stop putting in place. the rules will allow us to treat this global commons with the attention it deserves inside story. on al jazeera, hulu. ah, you're watching al jazeera, a reminder of our headlines this our, the rival sides in sedan, are accusing each other of committing war crimes. the rapids support forces says the air force is indiscriminately targeting areas and cartoon. morally,
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army accuses it of using civilians as human shields. meanwhile, the humanitarian situation is getting worse. the fighting has cut off access to electricity, food, and clean water for much of the population. thousands have been forced to seek safety, neighboring countries, and the chaos in sudan has triggered the evacuation of foreign diplomats and their families. the u. s. the u. k. frowns, germany and others have pulled their people out. in the past few days, many countries are focused on evacuating their embassy staff and nationals from sudan. meanwhile, there are continued calls for restraint from the international community. the un secretary general antonio gutierrez and his special envoy to sedan have condemned the violence and called for an immediate end to the fighting. the african union is pushing for a cease fire and for negotiations, and the arab league is urging all sides to protect civilians and prevent any further escalation. as talk to james moran about this, he served as the european union's ambassador in the gulf and north african regions,
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including in libya. and he joins us now from brussels. you worked on your fair share of conflicts or, and conflict resolution your, your honest assessment at this point given where we are right now in this round of fighting between the army and the r s f. do you think there is room for diplomacy? there's always room for diplomacy and of course it has been going on to some extent . for example, we saw that mister borrow the foreign policy chief in organizing while helping to organize the evacuation of the un. this is over the last 24 hours was in touch with both the journals. you can call that diplomacy at this time, but in terms of the bigger picture right now, it doesn't look as though there's a lot of space given that both sides are so entrenched. ready seem to want to fight it out how they can be pulled back is not immediately evident. for example, i mean, you can talk about some sort of military intervention. i the unlikely i don't think
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any anybody's about to try to do something like that. no, you can talk about sanctions. well the sudanese government has been under sanctions from the you and the you and, and others are quite a long time. in fact, many, many years and i don't think that's going to make much difference to either side either. so i fear for the next few days, it's going to be a case of fighting, fighting, and more fighting, but the time will come for diplomacy. for sure. in the meantime, we have a real problem with foreign citizens, the europeans and others who are still trapped in the country. and of course you've got this massive build up of refugees yet another build up of refugees are going over the border and internally. and saddam too, which is going to cause a lot of trouble the surrounding countries in the region sometimes. and you just touched on this, sometimes the belligerents are just not ready to stop fighting yet they are not ready to negotiate. and if i read between the lines of what you said, that appears to be where we are right now. they're not ready to stop fighting. i
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feel for the moment it doesn't seem to be a way of getting these 2 generals around the table. let's not forget that. been around the table before. we know each other intimately. now that there are each others throats, but they did work together before following the 2 in 2021. now prior to that as well. so it's not as if there isn't an experience of working together. it's just the right now. you've got a real power struggle going on between 2 walls until one or other side is exhaustive. it's very hard to see how a breakthrough can be achieved. so i wonder whether this resembles any of the conflicts that you dealt with during your career and if so, what the possible scenarios might be right now? no, i don't think so. i've been involved as you're saying a number of areas of the middle east in north africa, both in israel, palestine in libya and so on. and each and every conflict is rather different.
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and i don't think we've seen anything quite like this, where you've got to military factions, not a civilian versus military, and you've had in many countries during the our pricing's a decade ago, or in the militia. you got to fully armed our little military factions within the same country fighting each other. and i think this, i can't think in modern times, if we've seen anything quite like that, we have seen it in medieval times and i feel this is more of the nature of a conflict that anything else. james brown, thank you for joining us on the program. today, thank you. have a good day and it abraham joins me now from ramallah in the occupied west bank where she is covering a gathering. i'm not sure if it's now or a little later it's expected today. gathering in supports of cutter, a not a palestinian who is currently in administrative detention and is on the day 70
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eights of his hunger strike. me to tell us more about cut or non historian why palestinians are rallying behind them. hold it eyes, man is a prominent leader in this law make to had party while this is his 87 day undergoing a hunger strike. this is not his 1st hunger strike may be. we're talking about 5th or 6th as person who has spent more than 8 years in his re jails. he has been going through under several hunger strikes. and what is interesting is that he spent 67 days of hunger strike in 2012. and at that time, he was kind of the pioneer of using hunger strike as a way to kind of get palestinian prisoners to get these really present service to meet their demands, particularly when it comes to detention without charges. because this isn't israeli practice. now we're talking about a $4900.00 palestinian prisoners in israeli jails,
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but more than $1000.00 of them are held without charges. so either it's a secret file or so the person themselves do not know what they're being held for, and they can be held and extended in jail indefinitely. so he was kind of the person who was parked that wave of protests. now we're hearing a voices behind me by some protesters were gathered here under i'm a law in solidarity with him in support of him. he's prominently that a father o 4 and it many palestinians think that he's an importantly there. but still we haven't been seeing a lot of protests when it comes to supporting palestinian prisoners. many say that this is related to the general frustration of the palestinian public. and they feel that there is not much hope that they can do when they're protesting on the ground against these really forces arresting palestinians. and i know you're also monitoring a raid in jericho earlier today where one,
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palestinian was killed this in the west bank. what happened 21 year old palestinian was announced that he was killed by the palestinian health ministry. this is the announcement that came from health. mister now he said come to his wound after is ready for this. i have taught him earlier today in just a few g. com, which is near jericho. now, the aim of those is really res, usually is to arrest rela, simians are confront those palestinians who have weapons. and so it's in areas like engineering at madison. we've seen the job, but it have certain people carrying weapons. but as palestinians would tell you that these are ready to read usually happen regularly, they're becoming more deadly than usual. it's already april and israeli forces have killed one other than one, palestinian since the beginning of the year. and last year they've killed
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a less than half of that number. sorry, less than $200.00. all in all and already last year was supposed to do that in 15 years, is that gives you an idea about the high number of casualties, the fatal tease, the palestinians were being killed by israeli forces on a regular basis knit abraham reporting from ramallah. thank you. very much now israel's foreign minister has spoken out after the arrest of a jordanian member of parliament, emma and one who was detained on sunday, accused of trying to smuggle weapons and gold and to be occupied with the bank on twitter. you like o and said the smuggling attempt by the jordanian m. p. as a serious incident, he must be brought to justice and must pay the price for the mistake that he committed of him on this. let's speak to. mamma jumped to him. he's in west ruthless most for us mohammed. what do you know that about this alleged golden weapons smuggling was 0. we've seen
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an interview with that. the foreign minister here, eli cohen gave to a local media outlet in which he was quoted as stating that jordanian member of parliament at i'm at i'd want, had been arrested sunday morning at the allen b crossing that's between jordan and israel, that he had had more than 200 pistols and rifles in his position in his possession that it was, he was suspected of trying to smuggle those weapons among other things in to israel . and that he was caught as a result of intelligence information that had been received by the israelis now mister cohen said this was a very serious incident, but also added in this interview that he did not want to blame the government of jordan. the big question right now is going to be, if israel will release mr. i had one into the custody of the jordanians, the relationship between jordan, israel is an important one. that's what make this that's, that's what makes as a particularly sensitive matter. and mr. cohen was asked in that interview, what israel might demand from jordan going forward. he said that israel's basic
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requirement would be to bring mr. that are the one to justice. he also said that talks between israeli security services and the israeli foreign ministry were ongoing. and that no decision was going to be made on this matter until after it had been fully investigated. all of this seems to indicate that the israeli foreign ministry does not want to get into a diplomatic crisis with jordan. as i mentioned before, this is a very strategic and important relationship for both countries or israel and jordan . cooperate on a variety of different matters among them. of course, the palestinian issue. also the issue of the alexa mos compound. jordan, of course is the, is the custodian of the alexa mos compound. so it's a very important relationship up. there's a lot of questions right now as to what exactly is going to happen next. requests going to have to wait and see, but i will just add that there have been reports out there that jordan's ambassador to israel is attempting to meet with mr. larry one at some point today in israel, cyril and mohammed john jim reporting from west jerusalem. thank you. protests have
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been taking place in bangladesh to mark the 10th anniversary of the collapse of a factory which killed more than a 1000 people. the aid story ron plaza, on the outskirts of the capital docket, suffered a sudden, structural failure were than 3000 people were inside the building. at the time. the government made some reforms to protect workers in the aftermath of that. but activists say that it hasn't been enough. time, vio, chaudhry is at the site of the former factory. the walker say the look not enough has been done in terms of wages comfort in the factory. although this has the largest green factory in the world in this sector. but the wages are very minimum sense. append due to high inflation and the living costs going up. many of the workers say that we need at least $200.00 a month right now. they're only getting very little $95.00 a month. very may go to live up to a living wage in this high inflation era. many of the big factors are not within
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the range of that called an ally. and whether they actually violate of hard to say, depending on the inspection. but if you don't made that comply and spend that you will be fine and you will be shut down. so there is a danger, much has improve, i must say. but the government's manufacturers are saying that look, it's a supply chain rep responsibility. many of the big international global buyers do not pay the adequate amount or cost of production. sometimes they have to work on just break even production costs, which hardly makes money and said, we'll be willing to pay that way at a higher rate and better condition. but the international buyer of the responsibility because up competition around the was longer, there's been the 2nd. 5 largest governments, manufacturer and guys, they economies updates. this is a garmin manufacturer to pay as i'm going to do this production as little as possible. so much needs to be done in that area. also end up supply chain.
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thousands of people back in central london to join the final day of protests by activists of the extinction rebellion. they are demanding a ban on fossil fuels. china whole joins me now from the protest in london, jonah, but it is, as you say, the final day of a 4 day series of protests that have taken place here in central london. the big one, tens of thousands of climate action demonstrate is from all sorts of different organizations . been here demanding action, demanding change with a message for the government and m. p. 's back in the house of commons today behind me that the climate emergency is simply too big to ignore the atmosphere. peaceful, calm, the police by not keeping a pretty low key watch on things. and i'm joined by zoe cohen, who is a spokesperson for extinction. rebellion, one of the principal groups of course, represented here. so we tell me how it's gone over the last 4 days. an enormous group of people, quite disparate background,
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certainly different groups with one agenda. bang sony. as you can see, it's a glorious day here is a joyful, joyful, dine. it's a combination of full, incredible days. the big one extinction are by the end. together with correlation of $200.00 grades. this target got 100000 people from the u. k. on the streets and we've certainly, if not, why exceeded it over these days. it's been a demonstration of actually so many people in this country can got people from so many great from trade, union based science teachers don't because many, many, many great children who, you know, you know, people are being at home and i've been around to ready among the people in this building licensing new fossil fuel projects, but among the institute emergency citizens assembly great people select from across the country by random selection to represent us to make sure that we have a safe transition out of this puzzle fuel world into a better future and so,
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do you get any sense that that's likely to happen? you put a deadline on it. well, if possible for months is anything to go by no jaina, which is why we're also talking today that the hash truck for today is to your future. it's inviting everyone to order these organizations which represent millions of people across the country to step up in the way that they wished. and that the 33 at 3 many, many options support picket striking workers. absolutely so. so striking work is because the cost of living crisis is the flip side of the, the climate sizes in the addictions, oil, people keep us addicted to. so that's just the striking workers organize locally. whether that's been thinking or by the know, you know, for great to have to fight climate, social justice at a local level and that the people who want to, they can get trained up to take part in civil disobedience. those are the 3. let me just ask you, this is very noticeable that the atmosphere is quite different here to other extinction. rebellion protests. we've seen this, nobody chain to anybody else,
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is nobody, superbly to anything. it is very common. it is very peaceful. that's a real change of tactic. and yes, and now i would say that all about in demonstration though, i've always been calm and peaceful. sometimes if i despise the elements of arrested illness in them this time not, i'm not intentional decision to be as a welcoming anything please. if there was brought a check synagogue or not, of people wanted to come and it has enabled many more people buy from say that the street. and that's really important because what, wherever we all are in your life get through, by the way, as i always say that people are watching that you know, we know everyone concerned to take caption, don't just sit on your sites that come on the street. if you can, right, you do what the next thing is, be a, that's what it needs. these people in this building need to know that we conversation is only going to increase because the climate emergency is accelerating. and we're celebrating to thank you so much unite to survive,
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stop the divide. those are some of the slogans we see on the streets the central under today, the full day protests wrapping up with a demand that m. p. 's acts not a great deal of hope that they. ready will not today back to you day for, for joan. whoa, thank you for that interview there. in central london. a more than 3000 people are marching north through mexico. they are one of several large groups of migrants trying to reach the us border or also demanding justice for migrants who died in a fire at a detention center last month. andrew, on vague reports, ha, ah, they had walked long distances through some of the harshest conditions in the world . no matter how difficult they journey these migrants marching across mexico, say they determined to stop only once they reached the united states. marble that the new york alegretky way we don't have any other alternative than leaving from
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here and to keep moving forward. we won't give up. all of us won't get to the united states, to fight for a better future for my daughter here. and another one i left in honduras, ah, clean violence and poverty in central america. thousands of migrants walked together for safety to reach mexico each year. i go on 1st, we have to move and keep him for our dream because i left with a dream. my wife is 4 months pregnant. this is my dream to arrive in the united states and give it all to my daughter. this group has mostly venezuelans who flew to panama or costa rica. then it's the long journey north on foot. they're aiming to reach mexico city in around 10 days. ah, but this is not just a search for better opportunities. these people are angry about a fire at a detention center in mexico last month that killed 40 migrants. now they carry crosses and banners to remember those will never see the u. s,
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but i see him on fighting a fellow who's a little one. now we have decided to move forward in his journal because of to, for, to people who died there, who were set on fire, waived officials are murders, but they don't want to migrate from our countries. and we want justice. ah, even if they make it to the us border, entering the united states is not easy. tough immigration policies are making it harder for my grants to claim asylum. and after spending days and weeks on the road, these children and their families may well be told to go back andrea on bank al jazeera. still ahead on al jazeera action from the premier league, including a humiliation for donna, that's coming up with. we're all in sports. they did so ah .
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with whole ah
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ah, your sports coverage with raoul was joined us. thank you very much. the final in england will be a man, just a dobby for the 1st time in the 142 year history of the competition magazine article, pie madge of the city on june. the 3rd is off the antarctic base price on penalties and sundays, semi final on the march miss brought and $7.00 spot kick in a shootout. off an extra time had finished dulles, and united swedish defender of victor. linda lost seal the place in the farm for the match, the team against their local rights a slightly b manchester city. i in distant half of course,
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had the feelings from the men united friends about it and how we will do everything i took it in it. now majesty and archibald next be in action on thursday as i go to talk them in the premier lake space. probably still in a state of shock after sundays, 61 humiliation at new castle will going into this guy. both things were battling for champions the qualification, but on this evidence. first looked to be in free fall. they were 5 nail down after just 21 minutes because eventually going on to win the game $61.00 the result season. my cars go above maddie, north the, the 3rd. and they let well place to secure a champions league birth for the 1st time. in 20 in spain, the leaders ball florida ended a 3 game winless streak and took a step closer to the title there. thanks till one know when at home to our connecticut, who had been on a 13 game or baking run. boston, now 11 points clear of roberts red at the top and on track for their 1st title in
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full years is i largely, anyone will start the runaway leaders, napoli in italy, they scored, i stop each time when i give vent, says jacobo ross. but dory coming off the bench to farm athletes. 17 points clear. they could seal their 3rd. sorry. i title next weekend. 30 years after that the i got my daughter in spar charms back in 1990 on as in tina river place have gone 6 points, clear the top of the perimeter division as he killed barcode with the pick of the goals and a to they'll high when are the independent a if applied to now on a set of match winning streak in the me that the boston celtics, it just went away for reaching the next round of the n b a playoffs. they beat the hawks in atlanta at $129.00 points to $121.00, jason titan and jaylen brown. each scoring $31.00 points in the process and now lead the 1st round eastern constant series. 31. the next of also opened up a $31.00 lead against the cleveland cavaliers. genom brunson scored 29 points. as i
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took away one or 2 to 43, the series are head back to cleveland. on wednesday, the guys in the west, the minnesota timbales kept themselves alive against the top, seated denver nuggets trailing sway nothing. they won game for 140 to one white in . oh that's i'm anthony edwards with the 34 points. the market still lay 31 bar, and i will get another chance to wrap the series up back. i'm in denver on tuesday . and as the family childcare, golden state warriors just edged out the sacramento kings in game for of their series, steph curry wrapped up 32 as they won by a single point. have a look at the basic level things up to a piece of very much in the balance. next game is on wednesday in sacramento. all right, to tell a sunday to young writing styles of the men and women gamed. calif, alcaraz and eager, sham tech birth time. total victories on sunday. men's world number 2 alcaraz the friendly successfully defended his barcelona open title saying of several of city
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pass in straight sets the 19 year old current yourself and champion is 123. our is $25.00 matches this year. i'm a buffet. alcholay out with injury, a teenager could well at the french open to his collection. next. meanwhile, the women's well, number one, eager from tech is hitting 4 ahead of her friendship entitled defense. the paul was up against been a russian at either sub olenka who is the world number 2 in the stood got open follows from tech, winning in straight sets to kind of 2nd part of 2023 having one here in doha back in february. now to a golfer who collected her trophy wearing a dressing gown, american lydia, vo has won the 1st women's golf major of the season, the chevron championship, their fellow american angel yin miss a pot to win on the 18th and then made this mistake at the 1st extra play of how, as you can see a bull coming up short and farting the water that opened the door for though she
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hold a birdie decline. what is her mate 1st made to championship? and then she and a caddy celebrated with the traditional leap into the pond. thou from a one day by christ to or once i saw one by but it's not with the golf tournament. this is the round the world ocean race which takes roughly around 6 months. the 4th leg is now, i'm the way 5000 nautical miles from a to die in brazil to rhode island on the east coast of the us should take them around 17 days to complete. the by 3rd team have the early laid. that's after a couple of their competitors were called back to the starting line because of a full stop. are we going to leave you with some absolutely amazing pictures from switzerland? there are some of the wells top big scares of snowboard has got together for described as an informal jam session on the slides of the but i is out for each athlete needed to man both a technical and style trick. i'd, as you can see, they did not disappoint amazing work while driving up right to their gretchen
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after him. but that's also not for me actually, bro, thank you so much. can't get never those pictures. all right, we're back with more world news in just a minute. ah, i talked to al jazeera, we ask who is really fighting this all russia isn't wagner, or is it the russian or military? we listen, we started talking to me on my own so that this via yours, he does it. he shook to get him back. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matters on al jazeera. notice in paris, why are electing
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a new president on april, the 30th foreign policy matters and the fight against corruption have dominated campaigning? the governing party has been in power for more than 60 years. could this be the moment the opposition had been waiting call? follow the paraguay elections this month on out in the climate has changed every year for millions of years, decades of talk. but little action is all about distract, create confusion to crate, smoke and mirrors. the shocking truth about how the climate debate has been systematically supported. the oil industry was a main bank roller or opposition to class action. the campaign against the climate . do you think that's a bad thing, more shooter, and that was for sure. absolutely. on, on, jesse, this is a region that is rapidly developing, but it's one also that is afflicted by conflict. political upheaval. some of those
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who talk to elsewhere is saying that they fled after hearing that other villages had been attacked. what we do in al jazeera is try to balance the stories, the good, the bad, the ugly, tell it as it was, and leave the people who allow us into their lives, dignity, and humanity. ask you to tell their story. ah, scenes of devastation in a neighbourhood near cartoon sedans, army and the rapid support forces, blame each other for the violence. a rush to leave a nation under siege more civilians and foreigners leave the sudanese capital. ah, i'm 0 then. yeah, it's great to have you with this is l 0 live.

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