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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 28, 2023 4:00pm-5:01pm AST

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a lisa both, it's actually pure. i'm. i'm holding a well it's, it's a big step for the whole industry. when we make these transition. ah ah, the whole rama you're watching the out there and use our life. my headquarters here in doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes fighting, impassive sudan despite as seats far extension view and wall. the conflict has re ignited ethnic tensions in dar fall and an accidents from dar for stretches. neighboring chads resources. it's reporting the highest number of refugees from the
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sudan conflict. in other news, france urges as a by john to stop restricting access to the corridor linking the disputed corner caraballo region with armenia and spain, portugal and morocco, brake records for the hottest day in april. i paul reese in sport, tottenham, recover from there 61 thrashing against newcastle. the new coach season come back from 2 goes down against manchester, united cape spurs, european hopes alive ah, welcome to the news of sudan. cease fire has been extended for another 3 days. but an already tattered truce has been broken repeatedly on friday. more than 500 people have been killed and thousands more injured in the fighting. so far. international mediators are pushing for a long term and to the hostilities. but in the capital cartoon,
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the violence continues with each side blaming the other and the humanitarian situation. getting steadily worse, rahile emma hammett reports smoke billowing of a car tomb. evidence at this extended cease fire is no more reliable than those that when before each side accuses the other of violating the deal, the rapids support forces say the army has launched as strikes on its positions in northern cartoon, and the neighboring city of arm, to remind the army says the r s f was responsible for shooting at a turkish military plane, as it came in to land north of the capital at the what he said, the air base being used for civilian evacuations. there were no injuries in the incident. took his offense ministry tweeted that light weapons were fired on the c 130 evacuation jet, which touched down safely despite the fact that no one was injured, necessary controls were being performed on the aircraft. the battle continues to sent hundreds of thousands of people looking for safety across to downs, borders,
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machine, and indian travel blogger joint dozens of others, making the hours long journey to ethiopia from money. se of hard to so daily about me people just few minutes ago. like i have anyone standing over there. well, actually standing here like around like you to leave by groups or don't leave by a big bank. goes on last year's big machine guns and everything down i think to got, oh, i've been, it's been play god, a bullies going to be a while long. others managed to fee for the self. this doctor says she feared for her life, adding to that that the streets are not safe. um, because you never know if you're driving down the street that seems safe and there's nothing going on there if they would start shooting at any point. so making the journey to the bus stop on its own was difficult, but we got there. we realized that the prices had skyrocketed for, you know, a bus ticket back in har tomb. some of finding solace in friday. praise ah, even as the sounds of wool echoed around this occurring shortage of basic
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necessities as age groups struggle to reach those who need help. baker and running out of flower and residence, worry what little they have won't last long then another. yeah, any people are not thinking except for worrying about themselves and their families . the situation now is that the food supplies are diminishing and the citizens will face a firm or at least a crushing foot crisis for all the talk of an extended ceasefire. it's this conflict that's being extended day by day and the humanitarian crisis that it's triggered. only deepens or healing mohammed al jazeera or we have correspondence in the sudanese capital car to him and on the sudan chad border. let's begin with him . morgan, whose live for us in khartoum and haber, the cease fire extended. i mean, how much would impact is this now having on people be able sort of to move around the capitol while movement around the capital has largely stopped and martin
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has become a ghost town. people aren't focused on moving from one city to another. the way they used to prior to the conflict between the raft, support forces and the sudanese army, they're now focus on trying to get out of the capital. but the major issue here is the access to bags and cash. many people say that they can't access their accounts because banks have been closed since the start of the conflict. and in the online banking operations are very unreliable. that's in addition to the skyrocketing of prices, of market prices and prices of transport to get out of the capital. so many people say that they, they're trying where it's stable to leave the capital bill. that's and that's impossible. then you have the people who still have to live under the s drive that are being launched by the sudanese army against rapids support forces position. and the artillery strikes that's being launched by the rapid support forces, people in order to me, north who was pulled to say that they can't leave their homes, that they're still out of power and out of water. and that they're afraid that the very little food that some have will soon run out of, of course,
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herber in sudan is a huge country. and while we're hearing about people traveling new to like port suden over there in the, in the east that there are issues in areas or like nile or in dar fall albedo as well. i mean, the, the problems of vast and this sort of country at the moment. yes. now there is concerns. there are concerns rather about the violence in dar for a turning into an ethnic conflict. therefore, of course, witnessed over that lasted nearly 20 years with the arab tribes, fitted against the ethnic are for tribes. and in the recent fighting up until yesterday, when we spoke to citizens, they said that arab malicious ally to the rapid support for us as well. launching attacks against ethnic dar 4 is in the capital janina that's in west r for he said that ongoing shooting for many people into their homes. and that despite that, people were still being targeted in their homes and that market places were burned
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and that displacement camps were also at a destroyed, looted and burned. so the situation there is quite grief to the point that for the 1st time in this conflict between the rapid support forces, anderson and his army. the armed groups which signed an agreement with the government agree to send troops to the region into 4 and to flow them in areas where they are violence to protect civilians from further flaring up, a fight conflict between the 2 sides. whom morgan force their in khartoum. thank you. now mark khalid is a doctor and political activists. she's coordinating with other doctors online to help people find medical out. we're not disclosing where she is for her safety, a doctor called good have you with us live on al jazeera co. we just begin with the state of medical health facilities, as you know, it from the spi people you're speaking to in khartoum and beyond. okay. firstly, thank you for having me. i'd like to take a moment to remember the school we have lost ever since the war began. and ever
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since provider has begun. also, i'd like to wish the wounded hope and hope for a fast recovery for all of them. and the safe return to every one we have missed ever since the uprising till this moment. the last war began. basically there are a lot of problems due to giving the health care providers and health care receivers . many drugs. they're chronic disease, drugs like anti hypertensive and, and diabetes. drugs have been cut off from the pharmacies and due to the, to the war itself the civilians could not even reach the pharmacy or even go to the hospital. and all, as everyone has seen, the most hospitals are out of service due to the bombing or due to the shooting or due to the, the soldiers. and she's and army going inside of the hospitals,
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which made it very unsafe for patients to come in. so how does the doctor, i'm just gonna jump in there, how do you and your organization that coordinate the help you can possibly give in terms of advice or getting medicines to particular areas with the public at large? how will you managing to coordinate that? okay, so basically basically for now we're mostly doing things online. we have divided it by through connecting directly to the doctors and seeing what they need. we have many senior consultant for many syria registered doctors and physicians who have been contacting the doctors in sudan directly. and then we did open an online consultation for people who needed online or anything that can be done without them getting hurt or getting to the streets and everyone who could not possibly go out
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to to seek medical, a consultation. also, there are many doctors who would like to select from here who have put their life to danger and went to cover in most little duties with barely none of the facilities doing, especially the obstetricians and the gynecologist who have been doing normal, labors and delivering baby story and to their inspections without many facilities given. also dialysis physicians who have been working very hard to find many solutions for the patient to help them keep their dialysis ongoing. also, people are trying to, i can totally appreciate the fact that dr. to work into a great deal of stress and strain, especially when the facilities either are not working damage or they haven't got the medicine to help them continue with their work. so how important those supply
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lines. i mean, obviously you're talking to doctors who a telling you what they need most, what do you being able to tell the outside world, whether it be the w h of the charitable organizations about the type of medicines that needed to be gathered ready to go into the dawn when there is a law in fighting so basically the, the red cross ended up louis to the united nation. everyone has been seeing this all over the news. they cannot find place drought to give the supply. they cannot, even if it was inside the country, they still cannot get it. but hopefully with various initiatives from social media work, most of the people will have medical supplies in their pharmacy. they kept telling people, they can contact them, they will deliver it to them. the resist, the committees are doing an excellent job, trying to link the pharmacies that have the, the chronic medication medications to provide it to people. but either way,
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this is the last high to read. how important is the issue of power? because without power, you can't reach charge your phones and you can't use the internet on these 2 crucial elements for your organization. exactly. so basically this is the consequences of war. that even if you have medication, many patients have been contacting us, telling us that info and for example, needs to stay in a cool place like the refrigerator and so on. and even if you have insulin, now we're not going to be working because of the power supply, then that's going to make it difficult. it's already difficult. now it's more difficult to reach people for medical consultation because the, the power is off. so basically, there is no internet, and there is no phone cellular or cellular signal for you to contact the patient, even if you want to call them directly throughout the form. so this court has to
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stop by any sort of meaning because it's, it's still taking a tune now on the country, on the disability and, and even on the facilities as well from the country. obviously we'll keep in touch with you and with your organization as the day's rest. dr. martin calling to thank you for joining us there. thank you. thank you for having me. now let's go to an interest correspondent to in the village of fruit, in chad on the border with suit don standing by for the m and obviously, you know, the situation is changing by the hour, especially border crossings and border areas. what's happening right now where you are well, basically what's up, what's been happening for the past few days, especially yesterday when there was some incidents in janina, was several. so i just was killed in bumble and blasts and shootings. we've seen
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a stream as to the stream of refugees, even as we speak, many of them also crossing from the student side of the border into child and one in christian factor or one interesting thing about this is that most of the people fleeing live just not far away from the charging border, for example, jeanina is about 35 kilometers from why we are right now. and following incidents yesterday, a lot of people are trying to escape, but there was no way the best position for them to go was to go farther in towards her tooth side and other cities far, far away from the champion border. which means that going deep into the conflict zillow and away from way how is currently available. so that's a very tricky situation for most of the refugees. a lot of them are trapped on that side. and those who can flee, quote, close to the border. actually not having access to this particular location now to
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throw more light or to discuss followed up on this is the units of communications officer in chad. going to do talk to us about your assessment of the situation you and other international organizations. united nations organizations was one, is going to happen here, talk to us about your own assessment of the situation, right? well, what i see is an extremely challenging situation. obviously. you see, i mean, you see around this, this is a very small village, and this village is already out numbered by refugees. they're not recipes coming from far away as you just said, they're just leaving on the other side. but let me just give you one example, there's hardly even enough water for the local population here. so we, he to act fast to make sure that these people get access to water. it's, it's $45.00 degrees out there to day, for example, you know. and so this is very important and the 2nd very important urgent thing
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need is that we just completed about an hour ago, a 1st round of distribution of essential supplies, such as mats, blankets, mosquito nets, cooking materials, containers for water and things like that. because some of those people have been sitting under the trees for days and they need shelter. now do do, do think the resources you have is enough to deal with the situation at home. at this point, of course not, and the global humanitarian community is going to to, to need a lot of money on their money. our 1st calculation is that we are going to need on the, on the cherry and side. unicef is going to need $1500000.00 to cover the next 23 months, or we don't have that money. now we're looking at little in, on, on chad, on, on, on the child side of the, of the, of sudan. and we don't have enough of those resources. so of course, yes, it's going to be a huge effort and more over if people manage to,
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to come into sad or from further into that for you talking about like over social stuff like water like her shelter. what happens if these resources are not, are not available and an attitude is what happens through the refugee. so who are here and those trying to cross the border. i can tell you we're running against a club to try and mobilize as much money as possible as fast as possible, obviously. and now one other thing that is important to emphasize is, even though this is a very poor region of chad, which itself is a very poor country. ah, the people here are amazing. they have a tradition of hospitality. the little they have, they share it with the refugees. now soon also we run out of resources obviously. but i have to say this is a very important part of the tradition. i was earlier this morning with a meeting with the chief of the refugees and the paramount team here. and that the
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chief of the refugees were saying are okay, you're going to give some items to the refugees, but don't forget the local population. and then the paramount chief local said, no, you know what, we're fine. just give the refugee 1st and then if there's any left you can give us, but everybody is poor in that region. thank you so much donate. ah, do you hear the situation here in, in a coffin and it's expected to get was unless help arrives it quickly here. now, meantime, which was seen and we continue to see more and more people crossing into this border area. and as long as it's costly discontinue, many people will be trapped, and many people will try to come this way. don't agencies wanted all calculated estimator, but they're going to deal with 20000 people, but that is not even close to what is going to happen in the next few days as fighting continues emitted as force there on the chart said on board a thank you. oh,
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but brazil's president is due to meet indigenous leaders who holding the annual camp in the capital, priscilla indigenous activists have been demanding that more of a ancestral land should be reserved for them as well as state action against illegal mining. as course over to monica under kiff, who's in brasilia for sir monica be full of being elected the president. it's visited last year as compound and made a series of promises to those indigenous groups. i mean, as he kept them. * ah, well, as soon as i lula took office in january, he took action against illegal miners, some 20000. the legal miners that were in the young miami territory, which is the shows largest reserve. he expelled them, that there was a health crisis there because mercury was polluting the rivers. he took that he
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also now brazil has its 1st ever indigenous minister. she's a woman, she's an indigenous more men, a very active one. so in many ways, yes, he's also made a point of saying he would reverse our far, right. our former president j. both sonatas policy which was not to des market any more indigenous territories. there are hundreds of them that are waiting to be. c marketed and have been shad been shelved during the previous years. so yes, he has addressed many issues, but there are many, many more to be addressed yet. so what seems to be the main demand right now from those indigenous communities a well what they're asking now. * is for our like to denmark, kate, many of these lands that are, that had been put on a shelf bible, san ardo. and that is because, while this question is not solved,
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there's always buy life in the land. it's the indigenous people standing there around. again, farmers against our lockers against miners, so it's, it's a very complicated issue. each of these are processes 6 years in years to be finalized. so they're waiting for him to take a stand and demo kate. at least a few of these land molecular yellow care force that in brazil, you're thank you least 19 people been killed in missile attacks across ukraine. a residential building was partially reduced to rubble in the central city of eman. keith was also hit the 1st time by russia against the capital in nearly 2 months. charles stratford has more from keith. this is all that remains of an apartment block in the city of oman in central ukraine. the government says more than a 100 people live too many would have been asleep. the explosion ripped through their
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homes, killing friends, and neighbors. distraught onlookers. a man unable to contain his shock and grief. oh, i never thought this could happen, says this woman, we are covered in blood. the rocket hit our building. all the windows of shattered children was sleeping here. it's good that they are alive, but i was so afraid. russia, we hate you. ah, this is one of what the ukrainian government says. we're 23 cruise missiles and so called kamikaze drones that russia fod in the early hours of friday morning. some were reportedly launched from as far away as the caspian sea. 21 intercepted says the ukrainian military, but falling debra from powerful exploding projectiles can kill to emergency services carried the dead body bags to waiting ambulances. moscow has repeatedly
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said it doesn't deliberately target civilians, but thousands have been killed by russian missiles. drones and shelling intensity populated towns and cities since the war began. and that's another, that's my daughter's classmate. lived on the 9th floor of the destroyed building. i don't know how, but praise god, they're alive. it's a great tragedy. president vladimir zalinski said on his telegram channel, this russian terror must face a response from ukraine and the world. and it will what i do. medina, my preliminary information is that 109 people lived in that section. and 27 of the 46 flats completely destroyed. we organized operations as fast as possible to rescue the people who are alive and trapped onto the rebel. k non units are also at the site. ukrainian officials say other cities here to include in the pro and east nikolai of in the south 11 missiles and drones intercepted over the cave region and explosions heard impulse hava and commentary on the disney pro river. it's been
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almost 2 months since such a widespread bombardment. so why now the attacks come ahead of an expected ukrainian counter offensive one, which the head of nate, so un stalson berg says when involve 9 brigades of western trained troops, 230 tanks, and 1000 $500.00 plus armored vehicles also supplied by western allies and thousands of tons of ammunition. now, whether in fact these attacks were an attempt by russia to preempt that operation is difficult to say. but one thing it does show is roches ability to strike targets across this country. whenever and wherever it pleases. chance dropping out 0 give the french foreign minister catherine colona has urged to armenia and a very leaders to resume talks over the disputed armenian enclave in john cologne, visited alameda side of the border after having talks in vacuum on thursday and she
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calls the removal of a checkpoint on the only road linking the corner car box to armenia, but back dismissed it. we encourage both parties to take steps to progressively recreate this lacking confidence. we are here to accompany this process. it is the focus of our efforts and i set it in buckle. this piece process is possible. it requires the termination and courage, and certainly a vision that is hopefully shared by both countries and be assured that france and it's european and american partners and allies encourage both parties. well, law this i'm joined by bennet smith, who's in the area city of chicago. bennett by been really what are these very saying in terms of what the french want them to do? well, that checkpoint is essentially a border,
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a frontier control point close the border between as a by john and armenia and the armenian government officials. i've been speaking to over the last couple of days on thursday and on friday say they have now no intention of removing that checkpoint. they say that as a by john has the right to enforce its own borders. like every other country does. and it has the right to inspect material, what is coming through armenia, up to other that so remaining ethnic are our armenian enclave. the problem is that the 2020 p steel struck by the russians between azerbaijan and armenia. meant that that road called the latch in corridor was supposed to stay open. there was supposed to be free movement of people up and down that corridor, as by john says amin has been using it to move ammunitions, to move weaponry, and to move fighters into this ethnic armenian controlled enclave. that's called stepan. occurred by the armenians can candy by the us aries. and of course bernard,
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as you mentioned, you know, the, any, the main cities delica is controlled or a by the armenians and yet it's been, access has been restricted since december. so what one does, what conditions are like there right now? we're exactly, we're in shoe. sure, which is a strategically important town because it overlooks can candy ought to panic, kurt, and from here you can see what's happening. you can control essentially access to that town. sto, panica, is the only remaining part of azerbaijan. internationally recognized as airy territory. it's the only part that is still controlled by ethnic are median, has a large built up area, large urban area apps and at least $50000.00 people living in there. the only way they've been getting food and supplies in and out with through that latch in corridor, you can approach their from azeri controlled territory. now,
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from what we understand in their conditions are very, very difficult. supermarket shelves are empty, they say it's been hard to get medicines and so conditions there are difficult. essentially it's surrounded because the rest of the territory around it was taken back by us by john, in that 2020 war and everywhere i've been on the way around. it is a hive of activity and see it behind me. the reconstruction work of a mosque, their shoe, sure the earth ethnic are meaning that lived here before the war. a gone. it's now empty, full of work, man preparing it for as aires to take over. so around the only place like beyond the hills, whether ethnic armenians in as a by john is to panic, hurt can, can be but as with the forest, didn't you? sure, thank you. look for news of the ongoing heat wave in liberia and north west africa is rob. that 3 countries broke their april high temperature reco usa,
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3 countries in spring. this is of a heat wave. all right, 41.3 record that market 90 degree above the nation's high temperature for a proven foothills of the atlas managers, i think we'll see the same again. market, the heat still there being per study throughout our area to what's to nicea. and in spain, it was called the bar that made the new national record 38.8. this is the hottest part of spain that spread the heat across into central and southern portugal. some more made a new national record for portugal as well. now there is still more heat to can, but possibly not reco breaking me by friday we're still looking about high thirties for most of the space, but on saturday. a hint of a change with the breeze coming in from the atlantic. a suggestion of rather more clouded, right, and there is indeed rather more cat right. still it will be halt several degrees above where it should be, but maybe not breaking your record. same sort of trend is happening for the size, an increase in the cloud. however, we've still got high temperatures to this,
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the capital tennessee will be very close to its record on saturday. might even break it out. jerry only did way a so away, so the heat hasn't gone, but it being temperate. well, still had here all the out there and use the b. b, c's, chairman resigns over his involvement in all the u. k. prime minister boys johnson's finances and in sports, the boston celtics progressed to be a playoff study finals story coming up with straight after the break. do stay with the latest news as it breaks the i think, i think has been confined to the camping on both sides control of major facilities . but so far has been asked to confirm who has the upper hand with detail coverage . people are coming here to demonstrate growing please violence in the demonstrate from around the world. and even when doctors here are able to make an early
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diagnosis and guarantee the transportation of the sick bay feel free. another challenge in 543, he won a fraud, takes on the big issues. this is not one off. he's talking about a systemic issue here. black labs don't really matter in the police were unflinching questions is war with lawanda, imminent rigorous debate? people who are dying because of lack of medical treatment, challenging conventional wisdom. the fact that people are starting to get angry about this is in itself a sign of progress. join me more for my hill for upright. what al jazeera ah ah.
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look about you. what channel there is news i would meet the hell robin. the reminder of all top stories. on the 14th day of conflict incident, the albion paramilitary rapid support forces have agreed to extend to cease fire by a further 72 hours. but residents of the capitol, khartoum say the bombing has not stopped, and the u. n. is warning, the conflict is rig 90. ethnic violence in dull for brazil's president is due to its indigenous leaders who are holding the annual camp and the capital brazilian. integers activists have been demanding that more of their ancestral land should be reserved for them and state action against illegal mining. also, the french foreign minister, catherine colona, has urged armenian and azeri leaders to resume talks over the disputed armenian enclave in azerbaijan. alone visited armenia side of the border after having talks in back. so back to our coverage of the conflict and sit on several houses
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in the town of calcutta, a suburb of southwestern cartoon had been raised to the ground did so clear who carried out the shelling al jazeera is mab adult. i visited the area to meet some of the people who've lost every think. with a heavy heart, this woman looks at the rooms of her home, destroyed durham, bumping on tuesday and minutes her life and that of her family changed forever. everything has been reduced to rubble buried underneath is her house, a place that used to be buzzing with life. calico la is a small town south west of cartoon, far away from the front lines of the battles between the sudanese army and the rapid support forces. learner that new fam, no, i'm on salam or wilmont, ohio. we used to live here safely, securely and in peace. we have nothing to do with the 2 sides. either the army or the rapids support forces. we have no political affiliation, so we are not taking sides. all we want is to live in peace. we refuse to take part
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in any of this. i thought is dumbest, not all. i mean we can sense the fear and the panic in everyone's voices. they said they keep telling us that they have nothing to do with what is happening though, and they hoped this fighting will and quickly so they can go on with their lights while fi router together. neighbors help each other repair some of the buildings that survived. and you had a bit we were inside the house, you were when the shelling started, we ran, bumping into the door, coming back and up and running again. well, my shrapnel was flying in every direction yellow bug. but for those who have lost everything, rebuilding seems it in surmountable challenge specially you're in these uncertain times. families sled the bomb being with nothing by clothes they were wearing. now they are trying to retrieve what is left of their belongings in our leave him behind a house filled with a lifetime of memories. not manda, i ha,
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people here are powerless, the count to anything. we were sitting peacefully and still we were shout. this is wrong, we ask god for help and mercy with many say they don't have the money to rebuild their houses. they're not the only one. the extent of the destruction in decision shall area so far from the fighting ha, spots has left families would more questions than answers homily algebra? sullivan dresser is the founder and director of ammonia, africa, a policy research organizations based in addis ababa and josephina from new york could help you with us on al jazeera sir, the international community was sort of holding its breath for under the ceasefire . and that seems to be happening, be it with some skirmishes here. and there that we're hearing about a relief for now. but is there any momentum in your opinion, for the international community to continue now put even more pressure on the warring sides to talk to each other. i think there
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isn't enough momentum. there is a need for scaling up the pager on and the diplomatic effort not only in terms of engaging and also trying to get the 2 sides to commit to us. it's 5. but also importantly, i think it's given the nature of the fighting where it is happening, civilians are caught in the crossfire. the 2 sides needs to be pressed by the international community to span civilians from our packing sibling areas, ncb, dances with. so i think there is a need for keeping the page on the 2 sides, but also for reaching out to the wider stakeholders in sudan, pointing to the point calling. so porters harness their page up and also their leverage. ok. so while the conflict continues inside the country, there are 2 groups. you might say, stakeholders says the why,
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the international community and the neighbors. let's just talk about the why the international community, because there is the influence that we've been hearing about from i gather from the african union. they need to do more than just issue statements. so they, but what can they do practically? so statements is one thing, but i think it's also important to actually enlist the, the leverage of those neighboring as well as gulf countries and european and the us, the labor of this country's needs to be enlisted was keeping the same page including by keeping eyes on students on what is unfolding by calling by talking to these people directly. and by creating all the space stuff is possible for monetary and access. because that is also another important
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aspect of that the problematic efforts that new sudan desperately needs. and also by allowing and facilitating, of course, in the neighboring countries for so denise club, eve axis, are they fleet, this war and fight. but the most important thing is continuing the the phone of course, on these people, the convening, facilitating and coordination with extremely important because you don't want a traffic job of diplomacy. the ends up being manipulated by the actors you need to have isn't as i did want to interrupt too much they are, but i do need to come in because obviously you say when you need the state and you need that the actors involved a in, in trying to get the 2 sides talk to each other in terms of the immediate neighbors of which some of them are within. i got all of them are within the african union.
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they have for years now since you know that the fall of omar alba, sheer been sitting on the sidelines watching what's going on in sudan, seeing one military coup than civil society, take up a potential and hope for civilian government. do not think that they that they need to do more, they need to, they need to voice that concern because at the moment they are paying the price or they not for the refugees and some internally displaced were having to move to, to cross their borders. chad, egypt, ethiopia and now ethan, south sudan, south dallas, got his own problems and the other. absolutely. actually one of the things that makes this a conflict, very dangers in exactly the environment in which it is happening, a versa. hm. well, child is nebling of you know, is a full of travers the one of our because is deeply fragile and, and you also have the whole plate of the y t if it's actually
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becomes protracted, not totally that it would descend into other forms of conflict, drawing in various communities against each other, but also it would be the very serious potential of becoming regionalized. and when the school, this country becoming the one, libya how the experience which is basically fragmented and, you know, unable to pull itself together. and that is a very dangerous before that, that we have at the moment to countries, libya and in that kind of situation. and obviously need every reason for you've got enough. you can, you need to be worried and everything possible to avoid this. indeed, difficult time at the moment what will keep a very close eye on sullivan dress. so thanks for joining us from new york time. thank very much. now the chairman of britain's public broadcast of the b. b. c,
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has resigned. dr. port said that the breach rules, which had sharp, faced inquiry for his role in securing alone to the former prime minister barak johnson. this was just before he was selected by the government to chair the corporation in early 2021. i feel that this matter may well be a distraction from the corporations. good work were i to remain in post until the end of my term. i have therefore this morning resigned as a b, b c, chair, to the sector state and to the board. it was proposed to me that i stay on his chair until the end of june, while the process to appoint my successor is undertaken. and i will of course, do that in the interests of the corporations stability and continuity as cost over $207.00 suzetta. bbc hate q in central london. huge upheaval for the b b. c. right now, andrew well,
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yes. so he goes right back to october 2020, when forest johnson, the former prime minister was in personal financial trouble and was looking for a loan. and at the same time, richard sharp was looking for the job of chairman here of the b, b, c. a. he let that be known, devoris johnson. and just so happens that he put johnson in touch indirectly with a friend who had a guaranteed position. he would make a guarantor position on a loan for $800000.00 pounds. that's nearly a $1000000.00. now go forward of it to january 2021. it just happened then the bar as johnson named him as the preferred candidate. and within a month he was chairman of the bdc. but the remarkable thing about this situation is there was 2 years before anything was found out about what had happened, and the bbc staff here, for instance, didn't. why not about it until they read it,
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read about it in the newspapers. this was a breach of b, b, c, code of conduct for public appointments, and that there were 2 charges against the chairman. however, he did survive and he has it. it seems full on his own sword, not under not under willing circumstances. it was certainly pressured to do it. he would have been quite happy to stay on in natural fat. he was somewhat defiant in his statement later on saying that the b, b, c, r was a place for him and that he'd inadvertently put the position forward in the way, had the, the bbc has been celebrating it, sort of $100.00 the anniversary. it's when the oldest broadcast as around deeply respected globally, but this and many other issues a, a denting, it's reputation, and it's image. this is
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a big blow. we're certainly in terms of its credibility, at a very high level of management and, and also it's in impartiality. as you say, it is a regard that is a fine institution, a fair institution impartial, won a journalist's. a feel quite low about this situation that there are high standards here. there's no doubt about it. of this government influence on managerial appointments is that is a really hot potato and now was a big political storm going on on top of the, the issue of impartiality with the labor party, the main opposition in the u. k. at saying that this is cronyism that this should never take place and this should not be a political appointment. the chairmanship of the bbc. now the prime minister, where she soon act has dodge the question of, should he change the rules on having the prime minister having the say on who is chairman of this institution? he's dodged that, but nevertheless, it's not going to go away. there is a major, major route going on about it politically and it, it, as i say,
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it won't go away. and really, i think what, what will happen next is that the opposition parties will really push hard on soon as he's already being accused of, of cronyism on the, on the fact that he was actually a friend, a colleague of sharp back in the days when they were both in the finance industry and he was effectively working for our shop and who was a banker. so they, you have a that was a goldman sachs by the way. so this is good, this, this isn't over yet, is not going to end with, with the resignation of shop, which is the what happens for the moment and re, simmons. thank you. no, a giant panda who spent 2 decades in the united states has been welcomed home to china. yaya has been the subject of passionate discussions on social media with many chinese uses, accusing the u. s. of neglecting her despite veterinarian saying that she had been
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well cared for her washing to report awesome. basing. 20 years ago yaya the giant panda arrived in memphis. a sign of good will and a high point in relations between the united states and china. this week people came to say they could buys melissa leanne to ya. ya has been under good care throughout her stay in the memphis, sue. she is deeply loved by the american people, mostly. but in china, people have been speculating about her health for months, saying she looked sickly. figure out how the why is ya? ya so thin? we need to listen to the experts. some commenters online said america didn't take good care of yaya. i think it's a good thing that she's back. i hope she'll get proper care. dogwood ordered her coolly. i don't think we're all the countries wouldn't maltreated our national treasure. just that they are locking the experience hall to look after the panda. young as male companion, lyla, died from heart disease in february fueling commentary online that they had been neglected. however, that's from both countries said the panders had been well cared for. and that yaya
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has a genetic skin condition which results in fur. los, china's most famous animals have been used for so called handed a pharmacy for decades, but they are expensive. visitors, china charges host countries, hundreds of thousands of dollars each year, and zeus spend millions on special facilities for the animals. some analysts say the public sentiment reflects the relationship between china and the us, which is at its lowest point in decades. that is an expression of how people feel. and that, that, that's, that deterioration has an interest doesn't help anybody. and in fact is, if you go back 20 years and you know, whether you're in china or the u. s, there was hopefulness. there was a sense that how many things were possible. yeah, yeah, we'll spend a month in quarantine before being relocated to beijing. once a symbol of friendship, now a symbol often increasingly antagonistic relationship. jessica washington out 0.
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beijing. well still had here on out there are taking cover. find out what got these gold was, worries out all the gold schools in mexico. all coming up with all the sport. ah ah
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ah ah ah ah ah. i was born on his full sail. thank you very much at i after manchester city state they claim on the english title with victory over arsenal. the local rivals, man, united, went to tottenham, looking to get back into the champions league for next season. spurs were coming
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off a big defeat and the sacking of the couch. but it wasn't an easy night for the manchester team. raoul pathic reports for the 2nd night in a row, it was london, this is manchester, a spurs white house to man united. and for the 2nd night in a row, it was the manchester team that dominated early on 7 minutes in a foreign finish mark jayden santo, giving united a one mill lead. oh burnett. recently. sure. team coach lauren mason was a new man in charge for took them off the previous caretaker, both christians, delaney was sacked following last sundays. 61 defeats at newcastle, but it was the same old spurs as just before half time. marcus, russia doubts through the hard defense to w norton's lead, that she had died a teacher, but it was a different looking talk them after the break war on by the home fans the intensity
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that was so lacking from spurs in the 1st half was now there in abundance, a wonderful finish from pedro polo just under the our mark, making it to one now with majesty north and who are hanging on, only eric die will know how he missed this chance. i really should be back little. but the man, he scored a goal at that new stadium, once again brought the home crowd to their feet on human, completing the stairs come back to 2, was how it finished. not an ideal school for e, the theme as both sides chased champions league qualification. but for tottenham it was a spirited response to what has been a very topic will ronald havoc al jazeera, i admit, the boston celtics have made it into round 2 of the n b a playoffs. they caused out
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their series. yes, the atlanta hawks meeting them a 128 to a 120 in game to 6 jaylen brown's gold. $32.00 coins and jason tatum added 30 here that secured the overall victory for games to to the 2nd seated celtics will now play till the 3rd seats filled up here. 76 is in the semi final game. one is on monday in the foster being eastern conference here for you know, they can bring the fi, philly's a tough environment to when, ah, you know, they, they crowd gets involved into the game is gonna be, is gonna be fine. ah, we already know it. i got some great players, tom, enjoy limby, james, hard and in company. so it's gonna be another test. again, how c as a great thing with supposed be, you know, probably gonna be the n v p and bead and ah, we are looking for those with the playoffs is about the best teams. oh, best players. go ahead. american basketball player, brittany greiner says she'll never play abroad again unless she's representing her
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country at the olympics. it follows her experiences in russia why she was detained for 10 months on drugs charges. the 32 year old was fried in a prisoner exchange in december. having originally been arrested in moscow in february 2022. since i released griner has a re signed for w n b a side, the phoenix mercury. speaking to media and arizona, the to time olympic gold medalist got visibly emotional when talking about had time in a russian prison. i'm no stranger to a hard time the you cried, you made me cry. oh, just dig in deep. honestly. you know, you're going to be faced with adversities throughout your life. this was a pretty big one. but i just kind of relied on mar work police in delhi, you have told india supreme court that they'll bring
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a case against the head of the wrestling federation. 2 of the countries wrestlers have filed a petition of allegations made by several female athletes that they were abused by breach, boost on sing. he denies the claims the wrestlers had called of protests in january, but reinstate them last week to demand immediate action. the las vegas golden nights, the 1st seemed to make it into the n h l. playoffs. second round, they beat the winnipeg jets $4.00 to $1.00 vegas gold. and the la home ross were making a fantastic double, save her to keep the jets out at the other end. chandler stevenson scored twice as the knights racks up their thought. when an hour after losing the opening game of the series, they go through 4 games to one. the new jersey devils and i'll just one went away from the 2nd round. eric hola had 2 goals and that assist as they beat the new york rangers for it's nothing to take
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a 32 series lead ranger here. not bad. 14. that had been 2 games down the toronto maple leafs missed the chance to wrap up their series in front of their home fans. that will be in by the tampa bay lightning for to, to forcing it into game 6. and my belief still lead 3 to overall low as they chased their 1st series went in nearly 20 years. now to the biggest stay in american football, outside of the super bowl, the nfl draft where teams trade off to take college plays into the professional ranks. the draft was being held in kansas city where raining super bowl champ patrick ma. homes of the chiefs paraded the trophy, the carolina panthers like rice young. oh, now caroline, it will be hoping they have a quarterback. he can end up matching the homes up to taking bryce young from the university of alabama at 2nd overall heck was c j. stroud, taken by the houston texans from ohio state and he's allowed me um, you know,
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for it being um, you know, to, to black quarterbacks being paid wanted to, um, you know, that, that, that means ally. um, you know, i'm gonna keep trying to do everything. i can to, to improve and i know the worst not done on, but as everyone know, there's a lot that had to happen. there's a lot of people that paved the way for this to happen, and i'm grateful to be a part of that. and i'm, i'm also super grateful for the pioneers who allow me knowing and broke those barriers now, so that, you know, we could be where we're at right now. theresa more one, the olympic surf title in tokyo, 2 years ago. and now she's celebrating, again, the american took the title out, the world surf leagues, margaret river, pro events in western australia. she's a 5 time world champion of the win, lose her up to 2nd in the rankings. the men's event is won by brazil's gabriel medina. the 3 time world champion, picking up his 1st championship tool victory since 2021. he is now 7th in the rankings. further on to see i'm the round the world ocean race. a scary moment for
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team hold. jean p o b who's must snap tough in the middle of the night? 20 miles off the coast of brazil. it's unclear how it all happened, but the crew are safe. they were leading the 4th like of the 6 month race at the time. now by drifting back to land. well, just a few weeks after winning the master's gulf weld number one, john rom is now trying to defend his mexico open title. the spaniard ended the 1st $84.00 shots off the pace, trailing the american leader, austin smitherman, who equaled the course record to finish thursday. on 8 on the pot also in action was a swarm of bees ra. here they are forcing eric royan to take a divers. he lined up a shot on the fairway. the south african avoided getting stung. as did various other players caddies and cameramen conroy and one shot behind smuggling.
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okay, that's what he has bought for now for a whole we back. so health. thank you very much. look, look, buzz off quite yet because about more news on the other side of the break until end from pull me on the team. thanks for your time today. ah. and find me like a vase in the south of india to find out how tiny back in this steve brought an extensive mining operation to a scan. corona virus wept across the world with devastating effects. and it's widely believed to be connected to the legal wildlife trade. here in vietnam,
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we visit a rescue center for some of the world's most threatened animals and joined the call for an end to the global wildlife cherry earth arrived on al jazeera, under cover reporting for exclusive stories. explosive al jazeera investigations from breaking down the headlines to exposing the powers attempting to silence reporting. the listening post doesn't just cover the news. it covers the way the news is copy. oh, now does it may on $20.00. a year after a 0 journalist should in a block there was murder 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. he quit. and what the case against him could mean for press freedom after leading to a key for 2 decades, reggie pie into that is facing perhaps as toughest election yet as
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a rare coalition of opposition parties hopes to unseat nigeria is to hold it 1st census in 17 years an exercise likely to few ethnic tensions in africa's most populous nation. the united kingdom celebrates the coordination of charles the 3rd as his crown at westminster abbey made on al jazeera, ah, fighting impulse to sit on despite a c sar extension. the un was a conflict, has re ignited ethnic tensions in da for an exodus from doth, all stretches to neighboring chance resources. it's reporting the highest number of refugees from the saddam conflict. ah, how robin, what y'all is there like.

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