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tv   The Stream  Al Jazeera  April 27, 2023 11:30am-12:01pm AST

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left the water low in the 2 artificial legs that served canal, about 6 percent of global shipping passes through the water the way it it, the annual renewal this year has been the hardest they have seen in terms of drought. it has been difficult for the fishermen for the locals because those who bring their cargo across the lake, you know, have to carry it on their shoulders. i will in the low states, the drinking. what is the 1st responsibility then comes the commercial activity. and so there is a balance in the canal, a ministration works to maintain commercial activity and comply with a social responsibility such as drinking water. ah, let's take you through some of the headlines here. now, there are now a faltering seas, 5 between sedans, army and the power of military rapids. support forces is scheduled to end in the matter of aus. i gad all is a regional african block. it's pushing to extend the truce by 72 hours. hipaa
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morgan reports from cartoon. this is not the 1st attempt to extend a ceasefire that is already flood faltering here in the capital cartoon with fighting between the rapid support 4th and the 3 news army in various parts of the country. but what is significant about this is that this time there will be talks a huge shift from what both sides were saying at, during the beginning of the fighting. 15 days ago, the army commander labeled the r s, have a criminal and disbanded and that is the dissolved paramilitary group. and now the rebels and that they will be no talks. that's the same statement we heard from the commander of the rapids support forces that there will be no talk. tens of thousands of people of managed to flee sudan to neighboring countries, such as chad. but the un is warning of a humanitarian crisis. border towns don't are enough food or temporary housing for refugee. the us will send nuclear submarines to south korea,
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part of a deterrent flag in the face of a threat from north korea. the announcement came during south korean president unit, so kill state visit to washington dc. ukrainian president of mesa and skews named the new ambassador to beijing house, or a phone call with a chinese leader. the call was the 1st time sign scan. she's in pain at spoken since russia began its invasion of ukraine last year. so then sky described the conversation as long and meaningful. she called for talks between moscow and key if samsung, electronics is reported, it's worth schools of the province in 14 years. down 95 percent from a year earlier. the south korean company says consumers spending less due to economic uncertainty. it's also blaming a global downturn in semiconductor purchases. it's the stream now.
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those his empowers lie are electing a new president on april. the 30th foreign policy matters in the fight against corruption have dominated campaign, and the governing party has been in power for more than 60 years. could this be the moment for your position had been waiting for, followed the paraguay election this month on out 0. did with high on for me. okay, thank you for watching the stream at the moment. there is no shortage of political analysis on what is happening in the conflict in sudan to warring general's fighting for control of the country. but on this episode, we are focusing on the people of sudan, how they coping not coping. what is that humanitarian crisis? ordinary civilians really have no stake in this conflict. and all they're essentially being used as pawns or as human shields in what is basically quite
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literally a personal dispute overpower between 2 generals. they're willing to do anything and everything to win. and that's at the extent of sunni civilians. and the result is an absolute humanitarian disaster that the world can see for their to their own eyes. right now. personally, the past few days have been pretty difficult even though i'm not physically in sudan at the moment. my mother and my siblings are back home in clifton where i grew up. and over the past few days, i've held my breath as i followed their efforts to bacteria popcorn. join us to discuss the humanitarian crisis from hall to out his english correspondent heb morgan. in london, dalton, i to sara abdulla lil and with us from bell fossil carter's, he dan county director for the region refugee council. feel watching right now. you're on you. chill, you can be part of this conversation as well. how are people managing ames to down?
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what are your insights, what you experience, but it right here in a comment section, i am curious, guess, what does a sci fi and mean? are we in a ceasefire situation? hipaa? well, we've spoken to some people will and obviously room to room and the answer is no, we're not. you can still hear the sound of the artillery strides. you can see the fighter jets. there's the launching airstrikes. people still can't leave their homes. they can't access basic necessities, the so out of water out of power and men and residential areas. and people still don't feel that it's safe for them to go out there. so arms, man, whether it's direct to support forces on one side or whether it's the student is on the other side. people don't feel that it's safe and offer them the idea that when there's a cease fire, you know we shouldn't be able to hear the sound of the airstrikes. we should be able to hear the fighter jets. we can hear the artillery stripes we shouldn't be seen armed men on the streets and all setting up checkpoints and because it's not
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happening, you can see that there's a ceasefire, especially when you see plumes of smoke continuing to rise. ah, almost all over the capitan. well say 5 for the and i'll say are you, are you in a ceasefire situation? you have a little bit of a pause to do some work, but no pauses. i mean maybe for a few minutes before it's are in there for it's broken. i mean, these are new political initiatives, beds a needs to reach people, regardless of whether there's a cease fire or not. and you know, that's not happening at the moment. but yeah, this strikes those open warfare. people being displaced this ethnic conflict, again, bubbling and awful. but apart from that conflict, now we've got, you know, essentially as a states the market systems are failing. people can't buy bread foods, waters not being pumped, 2 thirds of hospitals out of action. it's knows the 1st crisis of the conflict and now, you know, it said she had failed state coming to be, but no,
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i couldn't say that this is a sci fi where it's operationally allowed humanitarians be them, sudanese or internationalists to respond effectively. dot dot. so we take for granted that in many parts, well we can just go to the doctor, go to pharmacy, or go to a clinic. but in a situation like we're in right now in sudan, what are you hearing? what are you seeing regarding medical capabilities for people who are injured or just regular medical conditions that they need help with? what's happening with at the moment is a nightmare. it is to killer lisa cities where there is conflict. so it is not safe to go for the to bring your baby, it may not be safe. if you have a heart attack to go to the hospital or you needs an operation for the sick to me. and the risk of being shots are high risk. even if you're staying at
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home and that's for doctors of my clinics inside sit down and outside sit on the 16th april. we have started to help by tele medicine so that we can provide some support at home for some of the. so i'm going to let you just fix up your efforts cuz your ipad is also your microphone . i'm going to go over to him and then come right back to you. just feeling some perfect stories. hipaa and she for people who are even able to get online. things like this. i'm just gonna share. this is that i st. posted my family spent so much time arguing about who should escape our team and who should stay with my immobile grandmother. nobody wanted to leave without the others that then now all stock. what does being stock mean? it means being under the sound of class, them gone, gone fire. it means not being,
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not being able to access medical facilities because again, like well said, 2 thirds of them have been damaged. it means should you need medical assistance for your family? any family member, there is no ambulance and we're talking about the medical sector that was already in crisis, even before the slides in between the 2 generals now and it's actually much, much lores. they're not ambulances. there are no supplies in the hospital. one doctor i spoke to says that they're recycling surgical, it's because they don't have that anymore and they can't re supply because of the ongoing fighting. they can access their facilities where they are reese of lab results from the so so that's what it means. you know, to be sought, it means you're at home, you can go to the market because the arc has been destroyed. you don't have the cash on hand. banks have been closed since the source of the fighting. and people were not prepared for this. and you wouldn't be able to move you,
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you can go to neighboring states. if you don't have the money, we need to arrange for an apartment or a house there. and that's always guaranteed, especially in house cash on hand or in your bank account. people haven't earned their salaries on this fighting started. it means your mobile, you know, you, you go handle. yeah. so, i mean to add to that it's, you know, it's a family to face with impossible choices. do we leave on the air strikes and no nope, and warfare to try and take our chances. but to where do we stay and live under the will just come fire, but h no food or water? no power. it's a pretty terrible situation. and haughty means to be a place of safety, where people came from, you know, from around xi dong from the conflicts and the fours and other civil wars and also from other countries. she was very generous, had over a 1000000 refugees, most of whom lived in hard team. and suddenly it's turned from somewhere which was a bit tense and repressive to some way, which was now you know,
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it to her effect that we'll see where nothing is working. so when you go so little information, so a few reach to safety, which is such a tough situation that, that crush about where do you go? where i see people from sadangos. if you are chad, egypt, i just want to share some stories from, from refugees who went to chad and what they met there and this situation. and let's have a look new my see that alone, i'm into that. there is no security. we fled from sudan to chad. we want to be safe . there is no security in sudan. we came with nothing. we need so many things to survive. we are very tired. we came during ramadan with no food or water. we rely on you and hcr to take us to safety. any no water, no food,
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no mattresses to sleep. some of us are sick and need medical attention. we are tired and hungry. we cannot go back because it's not safe. they took everything we have shot at us and burn houses, and other thought to say what is on them at stay all go what, what choices are members of your family making? yes, so 1st of all, about their previous technical less though, i should get you back to think. yeah, yeah, we are all in, in, in a dilemma with just as duck those but as in about additive, but just going back that, you know, we have been trying to give some advice by lots of our families. some of them are contacting, and you know me from godaddy if either from or to other an on from different parts i, but mainly from i'm, you know, the 80 of the conflict and the questions are very basic. these questions that they can, you know, house from the primary as center health center,
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but they can reach the primary health center and then comes, the problem is where can we get them to medicine? they need a policy to him. all they need that i had a lied to, i'm so i need to go back and find where are the community pharmacy that are open and hopefully with the neighbors a day can share some of the medication. so at the end that when this it's, you thank you. you does feel you want to cry because i've done nothing. i but for them between a lot because it prevented them from going to the street. my relatives, and it's a split. some of them moved to a la da 0 in the center. others are going to the east and other decided not to leave, and others are going to the nurse. and i, at some points, we lost contact with some of our representatives. and why we went marduk shimmy? because we, we expected the worse. to be honest. i child. what else to tell you in touch with the now? did you find them?
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so i thought they came back to us, but it is, it is the nightmare. anything can happen, so today as i'm speaking to you, some of them are on route, either east or north, and therefore we are like, you know, sitting i just praying that everything would be fine. hey mike, i had well, sarah brought up something quite interesting when she said, you know, we rely on neighbors to try to get the basics like medicines or sets long. that's something that, you know, it gives you a glimmer of hope and it kind of raises your spirits in the journey. lisa dart time seeing how communities and neighborhoods and you know, people who usually just me on the streets in the morning to say good morning or maybe during, you know, community events. they've come together in a very impressive way. the little that they have thought they try to bring it together to teacher, give it to those who need it the most and ever, ever been quite impressed in only his stories of you know, i was running out of flower and my neighbor gave me a flower so able to make bread,
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i'm running out of medicines and people. you can sit on the internet, sharing the medications that they have, that they've stopped and same. this is what we have, and this is where i am a senior buy a new and need some of the get from the or will try to meet of somewhere. there is obviously security risk of not leaving your home, but people are trying to break that a challenge to that, to be able to learn, to deliver the basics. and as much as it's quiet, heartwarming to see that it's also interesting to see that these people have joined the wrongs of you and it's aaron organizations and it's, it's where the human inter, arab musicians need to step up and we understand, yes, the security challenge is in terms of movement, sh when to see the neighborhood communities, the small, small groups of people challenge the security risks and willing to risk their lives to be able to deliver some kind of assistance. because they know that there's a person who's desperately named that could be a matter of life and death. ah, it's, it's, it's, it's impressive to see that the youth and the people coming together to stand with
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each other during these times. will i wanted, i wanted to pick up off this back of it, but come and play the something 1st. oh, and it's really a challenge and a question to have monetary organizations picking up from the challenge that hippa kind of put out that this is dahlia. she escaped from how tune and ended up in port sudan, but she also really important question he she has and then will immediately off the back of dahlia, please jumping. there's going to be another crisis that no one has envisioned and no one knows how to deal with it. and i think the international community, mr. gold and golden chance when the a back to way to the foreign nationals that they could have gotten in some supplies, anything to type things over. they didn't. so we are left with no security, no hope that these 2 men will actually see east all the clashes those he's all i know fighting. and we have no food security,
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so basically left to fend for ourselves with her with nothing. yeah, that say no, it's, it's pretty powerful and bleak to be frank. you know, i think these criticisms are fair in the sense see the hope that hippa mentions and i've seen sudanese hospitality cannot just for sudanese people vote for refugees from other countries who they've not sheltered and shared food with and there's been a massive focus on century and evacuation effort from many of the international community everywhere notation, other organizations we haven't left a majority of our management staff, international staff as well are still in sudan just relocated out of her team and new places such as where dr. cyrus, family, part of the family is going to imagine what we're doing assessments. so we're trying to stay and deliver, you know,
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is at risk staying. we were really worried about what we can deliver. now we can't purchase things from the local market, calling it money, and through the banking system. fuel supplies are out. so it's, you know, it's, it's tough and what really need next is needs to be a sustainable operation. here it can be through heart many more. we have to get supplies and personnel in and we're also dealing with the fact that it's not just a conflict, but of a failing stage, a failing market system. so it's as tough and now we need resolve. now that some organizations have stage for sure the need to step up now in the special community . these refocus on how we get this logistically. we started in a very complex and dangerous operating environment. 58 workers were killed in the 1st few days and i'm sure many, many more as well. so it's not, it's not straightforward and simple. you will see what happens, hutchison hot soon,
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but in other conflicts affect parts of the country as well. oh no, it's not a sudden change that has been conflict off for has been destabilizing. last 2 years since the peacekeeping mission left, we already had 3 quarters of a 1000000 people displaced from a conflict nearly in the last 2 years or so. so it was getting dangerous and i was sort of dropped off a cliff edge. i mean, we have to bring it back up. but i agree, and i'm always marvel by the solidarity of sydney's people. it was, but it was unable for and now they've got nothing really to share in the systems out there around. so yeah, i mean, to go, we echo the court to get, you know, the session community to get their act together. we part of the trying to look at alternative approaches, try to figure out how to procure and get supplies in. but none of this is simple. fortunately, the by layer because i've been following on on her story as it is that i was.
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and i'm deciding where she is talking and where they are today, where they moving to. and it was very as well, very stressful to hear her story and what's been going on. but at the same time, i think they did not show community should not be surprised. that extension will be happening for us to see it is they should be 20 years to date, but not sure the completion of what happened in the 4th and the expectation they should expect the worst. so the, they, we weren't expecting as, but he's asked for that these evacuation aircraft with carrie, at least medication for the people who sit on or any, some photos of a that we have reached out. but you know, nothing has happened. they have a question itself for those who are going to be the country was really very, very stressful and very much it for some families leaving behind some moving and
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have to choose a pick. and that's what example you have doctors working in the u. k. but they're not british, but because they don't have the nationality. it is just you feel like the concept of humanity is just lost then you most to what's happening in the borders. and for us, we feel like we have to be there for those who are staying across the board, the feeling sick. i've said a very dangerous journey and some of them are collapsing. they're not. how can we do that? i mean it's, i mean, it, these are difficult, difficult, dangerous circumstances really and, you know, speak to too many of you know team including ones that know beginning the response in parts. but yeah, yeah it's, it's as dire and we see the destruction and hearts him for this,
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the situation for people who also haven't cross borders to leave both new residents of sudan. but also that, you know, over a 1000000 refugees as well. we also see coming back to, to different camps. so having to go back to the same places that they said from and so, you know, speaking to some of our teams have been to maddening and to, to, to, to part such as air in the last few days and try to figure out how to test to step up despite everything i said, no, it's bleak. there's, there's just so little there to do. we see no schools and buildings, you know, with, with, with, with, with adding put up. but there's the re, little sued of water. and now the markets are beginning to, i'm thin caches moving. so it's, you know, it's, it's doubly traumatizing for many people, right? so it's available on, so we'll adopt. so i'm just going to take a post that i want to bring in some of the voices into this conversation. and then also go to youtube paper. i've got some questions on youtube. i know that you will be able to answer or least give some insight on some context for afterwards her
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watching right now. but 1st of all, to people from sudan who helped us kind of build a picture of how people are managing or not managing. in this current conflict, let's have a look. i still talk to them. i see a lot of problems with the already water in their homes for over a week now. and then many people are facing schwartz's food supplies, almost all the stores and homer pools speak for people in cartoon, where there's no access to fuel. a friend just was desperately looking for a solution to get her father to the doctor to find an ambulance and they couldn't find fuel. and in the end, when they reached the hospital, he passed away. he was so new to i've got 2 comments. i want to share with you this
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1st one is from run jello. and she says i flew out a hall team on the 7th of april. would never imagine what happened one week later. when i saw the al jazeera videos of passengers lying down on the add port check in hall and plains on the tarmac, i could not believe it was the same place i'd walked through a few days earlier. however, your generally see, believe what you see your reporting on it, but you'll also have family in sudan. how would you describe these last couple of weeks for you in terms of a reality check? we because i've been reported on sudan and have been covering it politics and along with other series we saw the warning signs we knew it was coming. and i remember um i was speaking to my mom. i think it was like 3 days before this happened. i told her we need to be prepared for something like this. but my mom is it's a fickle sidney's mom. she just, you know, she, she downplayed it,
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she really said even when it's thought fighting, she really when the fight and started to read dan plated. but i haven't seen my family for 12 days. i. i evacuated my family from front to when i was involved was sacred by. i don't know, and i went to be able to see them again. i don't know how long this is going to mass and it's, it's been a reality check in the sense that in a we we see or no science, but we don't always necessarily act on it. and i don't know if it's because we have family members. we're trying to assure them because they're in denial themselves or men because they don't want this to happen. but these past 2 weeks have showed me that you know, politics is it's, it's politics. yes. but that having the military involved, you know, the demands of the people when they started this revolution, they said they didn't want the monitoring politics. and it's kind of, you know, it makes to see why they didn't want that. because this is one of the things that they really feared. but the other thing is, you know, when i, when i, when i look at this past 2 weeks and i look at the solidarity with people again,
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it gives you hope that yes, it's been devastating and it's been really, really hard to look at the streets, the lead is of the sweets that you know, we used to drive through and take everything for granted. those buildings are gone completely destroyed in our facilities. simple facilities like dental floss her and with tricity. that was an everyday thing. now. now, it's very hard to get right. ah, but then again, like i said, you see the people coming together and you know that rebuilding, it may take time. but the people will be able to do it because he has a desire to do so because they want to come back for them. like well said earlier, how to zoom is displays were that brought people together, whether you displace personal, whether you're looking for better living conditions, or whether because you want to say with a family or better treatment, it may not be the best in the world, but for many people, it was hard to him it's, it's the best he didn't get to, and it's where your family is in school. your heart is mr. capital, are the safest place around the country. and i did, it is hope for many people despite what they've seen despite losing family members,
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despite hearing the airstrikes and the artillery here shelling they so household. and that makes me believe that this, this may last for awhile. i softly if it's going to last for a short while a long while, but people will come back and they will rebuild. it won't be easy, but they will be able to do so. whoever and dr. sarah and well, thank you for helping us understand the humanitarian crises so vividly. i want to share something with you and this is from somebody who fled from sudan. and as he was playing on the bus, somebody stopped by and gave all the passengers juice and hospitality. and this is how they ended their their thought here, that as you leave hall to me, it becomes really, really clear. these are the last fields that you're ever smile act like they are yours. this gives you a sense of the pain of seeing your own country,
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your own at home, in a complex situation. thank you for watching. thank you for your future comments and questions. the news about her down, of course, continues here and out to sarah, take care ah and a fearless mexican journalist, sidelines for taking on a precedent. and a corrupt system rolled by a single party for over 70 years. only to then establish an investigative platform, determined to break through a poisonous media landscape in search of justice. an epic saga of truth seeking
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and a refusal to be gagged. radio silence, a witness documentary on out to sara al jazeera sets the stage 3 elephant here, 5 others. i don't know. i have been deployed with they've just one enemy global experts in discussing the idea of being dear country been established in democracy . it was bound to fair explore and abundance of world class programming of the guy in the least liter yet. but as to like, give him fucks designed to inform, motivate, and inspire you on out his iraq was breaking down the headlines to exposing the powers attempting to finance reporting. what did you do, what to investigate, why didn't you on for the extra correct. there are many during that, that sensor it will have, but you think effect on subsequent stories. the listening post doesn't cover the
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news. it covers the way the news is compet to suppress moderate. and in some cases, amplify the content you see on your timeline, the listening post on which is era holding the powerful to account. as we examined the u. s. his role in the world on al jazeera, ah, regional mediators scramble to extend the shaky c, sparren. sudan has multiple violations are reported, tens of thousands, flea the country with no sign, the humanitarian crisis is abating. we have a report from neighboring chat. the situation here in this particular camp is desperate. not, not the refugees have any palm. and instructor obama ahead. ah,
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i'm sammy's a dan. this is al jazeera alive from dell hall. so.

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