tv [untitled] May 2, 2023 7:00pm-9:01pm AST
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to 0, we understand the differences in the cultures across the world. so no matter what you see when used in current calls that matter to you. in a meeting of mine, when i was studying the cannon and the curriculum that we would talk to was handed down from elsewhere, it was an inherited curriculum that is the image of architecture in the west. architects, it may a valley and alejandro ravenna thought one there was, you mean or something that social housing can not provide, which is personal expression. fright studio b unscripted on al jazeera ah, a one week extension to a truce has been agreed in principle in sir dom, by the army cheap and the leader of the par note to rocket support forces.
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ah, hello, there are kyle. this is alice, or alive from doha, also coming up rockets, a 5 from garza off the death of a prominent palestinian who had been on a hunger strike and is ready prism. it is the largest humanitarian crises in the world today. a dia, assessment of afghanistan, the inspector general's as much more needs to be done to bring stability on the pasta who is accused of telling his church members in kenya to starve to death appears and calls. and we start with some breaking news out of su dawn where a one week extension to choose has been agreed in principle my, the army chief and the leader of the promot,
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you rapid port forces enhancement was made by south sedans, farm and stream. this at the end of another day of as strikes by the army against suspected paramilitary possessions. humanitarian situation on the ground continues to worsen with food and other basic goods. quickly running out, victoria gave me begins our coverage, a key for bread in south hearty im hungry people hoping to take advantage of a temporary cease fire. there's been extended by the 2 warring sides. some have been waiting for many hours and worry. they'll go home empty handed, we'll let one on a game in a socket. all was over. i swear i have been here since 3 in the morning. so far i have not been able to get one loaf of bread. my children have not eaten anything since yesterday and today is almost gone. what i just think of the u. n is wanting, the humanitarian crisis in sudan is turning into what he calls a full blown catastrophe. and millions are affected. global zavion and hana, we are government employees and our salaries have not been paid. most of the people
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and our re prioritizing leads. they're not even targeting 30 percent of their basic needs. we pride us crisis comes to an end and our country restores peace and security. fuel in the capital is in short supply, most petrol stations are closed. the few that are open have long cues. there is relief for some who have been unable to access their savings for more than 2 weeks . the central bank of sudan says most of its branches outside the capital have reopened. it reassured savers that despite looting their deposits are safe. so far we've not faced any problems. clients are handling their accounts. tasha flowing and people are buying and selling. the situation was difficult in the early days of the conflict, but now everything is back to normal. people trapped in the areas of battery and east nile. north of the capitol hearty him, a bracing for more air strikes and explosions. as the army and the paramilitary rapid support forces battle for control of sudan at the expense of its people.
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victoria gates and b al jazeera fighting has been concentrated in the past few days in the northern areas of the sydney's capital and the nearby cities of on demand and battery being baffled for control of the presidential palace. and the port out sir, is mohammed l type drove through some areas in battery which has been experiencing as strikes since monday. the kind of double we've been driving around different areas of hell. it hammered new, hard to me. which made headlines recently. we have not seen any sign of damage or destruction as you can see. all doors firmly locked. the majority of the people here have already left because there's no electricity or water off in the water plant supplying the area was shut down. they were left with no option but to get water directly from the nile river or the few make shift wells in the area. similarly, commercial shops are closed and there is almost nobody on the streets. a few people
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have stayed behind to protect their property against theft or losing. we spoke to some of them and they said the fighting between the army and the rapid support forces did not last long in this area. but you wouldn't, a whole matessa has more now on laughing outside of a 7 day extension of the truth, which came out of sounds to dawn. south saddam's foreign affairs minister release the statement saying that president solving here has spoken to warring sides in saddam. and this is what was agreed in principle, we asked that for me to eliminate me, that there should be a cease fire observed by the 2 parties. you have talked to both of them to your, for hon and committee. and both of them are good to please your source. ask specifically for the 22 names, the representative for the talk so that we have a pre discussion, the free talk because the water cannot be and to let people talk. so yes,
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for the bid and appear to them the stress that it is important that these seventy's, this a need for god for hunt and committee to named the representative to the talked. the 3rd one is a different i did that issue agreed on to did that this particular talk will convince some of the people leaving saddam in the neighboring south. saddam thousands of them and the amount is wasted at the border is dia, this conflict caught up as a surprise and this is why when this report came in, her, we were unable to intervene on time because the number was very big. the number was later big, even if we rush, we would have not actually been able to do sufficient. where as we are now trying to do most people arriving off from south to died, they'll probably end up staying with family and friends. or what did they in
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disease to go back home? those who have nowhere else to go? probably end up staying in tabs internally displaced people hardaman tossed out of the latest. now from to don's counsel cartoon is our correspondent morgan with previously had for 3 days. he fires followed by another 3 days, his fire followed by yet another extension of that by another 3 days. and this is now supposed to last for 7 days. and both sides have repeatedly agreed that they will have a fire, that they will not fire unless they are fired at or unless the military movement. so all these fires have been conditional. and when it comes to the issue of the talks, the 2 sides have said that they've agreed to talk. but we've repeatedly heard from the general from the army that the our condition set forward for these talks to happen. as well as from the rapid support forces. now the army makes it very clear that the talk should be on a ceasefire to allow for humanitarian aid and for people to be able to leave their home in the capital, hard to him and elsewhere were needed. and then there's the issue of the rapid
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support forces themselves. the army says that any talk involving a power sharing agreement or that would end up with the rest of phil part of the government institution or the military institution is something that they're not up for. that's not clear if these talks would be far, if they happen, then you have the rapid support forces themselves. they say that for a talk to happen between the 2 sides, even if in direct there has to be a cease fire that is actually being manifested and implemented on the ground. right now. that is not happening. they were astride in the city of east mile. that's in the north east of the capital cartoon fight. they should have been flying overhead and they've been fighting around the vicinity of the presidential palace. so the conditions that the 2 said are you not it in place, and it's not clear if they would ever sit down to talk soon. and if they do, will they be able to agree on something or not o. a prominent member of the palestinian group islamic jihad has died and israel prism
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how to adam was on the hunger strike for 86 days. hundreds of people are marching in his home town of arabic in the occupied westbank to honor him. and a strike has been called across the occupied palestinian territories as ready forces arrested at 9 in early february. his lawyer accuses israel of medical negligence. nita abraham is in athens hope town of arabic near jennine in the occupied west bank. the boston in authority has condemned the death of other i'd now we've heard from the palestinian prime minister, hamid's, they calling it an act of assassination. he said that this was a sab dawn. also we've heard from the secretary general of the p, i law say in a sheer saying that israel hold all responsibility for his death. and as we've heard, also from palestinians who have declared today a full on comprehensive strike that israel wants to put an end once and for all floor the act of using the hunger strike as
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a way for palestinians to the man freed them. there is a lot of sadness palestinians are saying that is what it wants to show. the world who has the upper hand and was control of the lives and death of palestinian. the 40 for a 5 year old has gone on a through a hunger strike when he was arrested from his home. in february he was expecting, as always, to be arrested without charges. this is an israeli policy that use it uses against many palestinians. for example, for now there is $1000.00 palestinian prisoners who do not have any charges that are being held in prison. he has been the 1st person, let's say, to kind of inspire many palestinians to use individual as a way to demand freedom, particularly when it comes to being held without charges. rockets have been fired from garza toward israel after a man's death. and as i'm
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a jihad and other palestinian factions in garza had held us telegraphy rally to honor him shops and businesses in the gaza strip of clothes, following course for a general strike as get more now from gib the l 5. she's also in garza city anew. mattel's more about this barrage of rockets that we've been hearing coming from garza. yes. well, at least $22.00 rockets where it launched from the gall, this trip to the southern israeli town causing damage in said the road. israeli media or army said that at least 16 a rocket. where intercepted by the really i don't system while others coast different. sorry what others hit different areas in said the road, mainly empty areas, but a home was reported to be headed by one of the rocket. they also said the 6
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casualties were reported from the rocket launch. one of them is in critical injury . now policy of faction, joint chamber here in the gaza strip claimed responsibility and the statement is issued after the launching of the rocket. and it also says that the launching of these rockets is just an initial response to the crime of the killing of none. and why the israel, after a patient of any foolish retaliation for the launching off the rocket outside, bringing the latest that from gaza. facts, you know, let's go live now to west jerusalem. we can speak to mohammed jump june, mom and what is rainy response to these rockets have we seen so far? what are we likely to see in the coming hours? will or what we know at this hour is that is really prime minister benjamin. this ano is meeting with top security officials to try to formulate
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a response. we've not yet heard about what may be planned in the hours ahead. let me tell you what we have heard from israel's defense forces. they've said that as of yet to day there's been at least 22 rockets fired from gaza. that 16 of those rockets fell in unpopulated areas and that 4 of those projectiles were intercepted by the iron dome defense system. now we've also heard from medical officials in the municipality of darrell, which is in southern israel. they say at least 3 people were injured when a, when shrapnel hit them at a construction site where one of those rockets landed, that one of those people as a foreign laborer. that they are in moderate to critical condition. and that all of those who've been injured have been transferred to a hospital in the southern city of osh kellen now as far as what to expect, we just don't know. it would certainly be a surprise if there were not some kind of response by
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a israel's military toward gaza in the hours to come. typically a response would happen in the overnight hours either very late this evening or very early tomorrow morning. and what's key to see how this will progress is where which targets might israel actually hit? because if they were to hit, let's say empty fields in gaza, that would certainly indicate to all those watchers of this region, this area that israel does not want to escalate this much further. if on the other hand, israel were to hit perhaps islamic jihad or hamas targets in gaza, that might indicate that they actually wanted to escalate this further. so a lot is going to depend on what exactly the response will be when the response happens. i should mention one other thing of note. we're told a bi idea is really defense forces that the alert that was issued earlier for citizens insides thereon. close to gaza that they were not to leave area fortified
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areas that that has now been lifted, which indicates that it's not as tenths at this hour as it was earlier in the day. all right, thanks for the update mind. we'll keep close eye on events. there, across the region, thanks very much. now, representatives from more than 20 countries organizations have agreed to remain engaged with afghanistan as the international summit. hey, and doha. and how about government that took power in to 2021 was not invited to the meeting, which was led by the you and section general antonio terrace on to flask as to james bass has more. if you can look at this critically, you could say that not much has come out of this meeting. the only concrete thing that's been announced is the fact they're going to convene another meeting. i'm told, possibly 3 to 6 months from now. but the idea was to get the international community on the same page and see you and saw says that they've gone some way to doing that . they're hoping, for example, when the chinese foreign minister and the pakistani foreign minister meet with the
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taliban for a minister in the coming days that the parameters for those conversations would have been set by this meeting. they will be using the script to this come from this international meeting when they speak and relay their messages to the taliban. but we're a long way away from any possibility of the taliban being recognized. just listen to the answer. the secretary general gave when i asked him about his own engagement, potentially with the taliban when it is the right moment to do so, i will obviously not refuse that possibility. today is not the right moment to the cell. meanwhile, the us must still decide what to do about it. he managed tearing operations on the ground in afghanistan. an internal review has been conducted by the un and the un agents is operating in afghanistan. a deadline has been set for this friday for
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that review to be completed and the un to decide what to do, whether to resume its full humanitarian work without using female un stuff as a say that review result of that review expected on friday. cilla had hair on al jazeera hollywood writers walk on the job the 1st time in 15 years of the talks for higher wages break down. i will tell you why these animals which spend most days upside down could hold the key to a health breakthrough. ah . with let's get going with your weather update for asia. thank you so much for joining him. we set record low temperatures for the month of may and him alt show pradesh in the northwest of india $8.00 degrees. typically this time
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the year we should see a lot more reads on the map which would indicate much higher temperatures. storms through this area is wall punjab state delhi right into the production. a water view of india will show us also storms toward the east is while stretching from what spank all into town will now do and careless states here on wednesday, this activity all came out of boston. some severe storms in the north co dot. she was soaked in some spots of the city, but a years worth of rain in less than 24 hours. now we do have this storm system winding up that could turn into something tropical. flood advisories issued for messiahs in mindanao, in the philippines on wednesday. and then quite a vigorous system moving from the gang, see river valley up into the yellow river valley. so some big storms to be expected here. pulling up a lot of moisture from the south china sea. it is a pleasant day happened down japan, but a bit more in the way of cloud cover all has to do with that storm system in china . so let's look what happens on thursday. this does begin to creep closer into beijing, system showers and downpours to be expected there on thursday with
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ah. again, you are watching out there. hes reminder of our top story is this on to dawns 2 warring general's have agreed to a one week extension to a 70 to our troops, which ends on wednesday. several of these fires have failed since the fighting began 3 weeks ago. at least 528 people have been killed and battles between the army and rapid support forces, prominence, palestinian activists, and has died in israeli prison up to 86 days on hunger strike. hundreds of people marching in the occupied westbank to honor him at them as a member of the la mc jihad group and representatives for more than 20 countries. organizations have agreed to remain engaged with afghanistan as an international summit sled by the inspector. general taliban was not invited to the meeting or more now on sir john. just short while ago i spoke to do a tire. she's
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a social activist, uncall team resident. she said she's got no confidence in any sees fire. actually hearing the sound of the of this he's fired right now a, b, i b, s crap is bombing for the next. the 2 blocks away from my house. i can hear it very loud. so there is no such as the fire happening. it never work. and we don't trust them, it will ever work with sure. welcoming any efforts around in the, in the, on the way to negotiate in this. but right now we're kind of like getting the point where people started organizing. we have now working, we are now working in case this might last longer last longer. so we're working on now. emergency response rooms, are we focusing on helping the people who stays in? because the number of people who leave are quite big is not a small number, but the number of people that is staying actually call them is way larger. so it's
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kind of like we will focus on getting the people who are inside or to support to get the need to get the food around by far, i mean this credit is responsible. so we're not focused on the political process because it might take long. we've been also battling these 2 forces for 4 years now for democracy. so right now this one of course is difficult, is different because the shooting of the bombing and then in the house is and also the it is, is katie. but with kind of like adjusting unfortunately, we're trying to make our way to democracy. through all of this, the canyon cult leader accuse of urging his followers to stop themselves to death has appeared in court. pull in thing game a casey mackenzie was an 8 co accused by several charges including murder, terrorism, and kidnapping place. having seemed 10940 so far with the red cross, estimating 100 small still missing apple reports. one thing in mackenzie
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from that guy in the mood somber in court, but not for every one. even a man accused of mass murder, paul entangled mackenzie, the self proclaimed passed and his co accused, say several charges including terrorism related offenses. the investigation do not just sent that one. they might that judges, i don't, they must monthly charges that we pointed out to be put on my list. we are looking at charges on the portal. we are looking at charges under the proceeds of crime and money laundering. we are looking at very complex investigations may be the case has been transferred to the high court in mombasa, where terrorism related cases can be tried. mackenzie is accused of urging his followers to starve themselves to death so that they can go to heaven. the police
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have found the remains of more than a 100 people, including children on his land. what they is, what it seems like following jesus christ is the biggest crime in the world. get away from the bustle of the courtroom. a mother clings to hope. her daughter, husband, and 3 children may still be alive with duck on the balance. i know the survivors because i was part of the congregation. i have asked if they have seen my family, but they're not talking to our lives. pathologists are carrying out autopsies to determine the cause of death. as the search for more bodies continues. many kenyans are still in shock. they are asking how something like this could have gone on for so long undetected. the mackenzie is well known by police and has been arrested several times before, but each time he was released because of a lack of evidence,
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some rights group say they had received reports of extreme fostering in south eastern shack, a whole region as early as february. they accused the police of not responding fast enough. we thought it was a place where this going again with the fact that we were so that having or the fust team, when he goes into humphrey place, the number of people being rescued is dwindling. while the bodies keep piling up, michael apple al jazeera, a us senate panel is meeting to scrutinize the ethics of the supreme court following revelations of real estate transactions and luxury trips involving the court justices. none of the 9 justices repairing the just re committee hearing and said the panel will hear from lawyers and academics supreme court justice and not found by a code of conduct. unlike of court. thousands of film and television writers in the us are on strike, demanding better pay that oceans with g days,
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including disney and netflix failed to reach an agreement on monday. right of guild of america represents more than $11000.00 writers. online streaming has been a strain on tv and st. revenues a previous strike in 2008, cause california is economy. $2100000000.00 for many actors and the host say that backing the strike. i hope that the writers get what they need. you know, i do even our unions, i'm lucky to be a part of line with that. and so hopefully everybody can get what they need safely and everyone get back to work. i support my writers. we have a lot of staff and crew that will be affected by this, you know, but you know, they got to get a fair deal. i think a computer scientist stopped. the godfather of artificial intelligence has quit his job at google to speak out about the dangers of technology. jeffrey hinton told the new york times that a eyes capacity to create convincing false images and text is creating a world where people will not be able to know what is true. he says, competition between tech jones is pushing them to release new technologies at
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dangerous speeds off a holiday. michelle is a senior fellow in ethics and international affairs at the carnegie council. he agrees with hinton but has more immediate concerns. i think that there are all sorts of long term concerns that we should definitely sort of have in our mind. but part of the issue is that sometimes when figures like jeffrey hinton talk about, you know, a super intelligent a i that has this power seeking behavior. we lose sight of some of the, the more immediate near term dangers with a i, things about how to keep, for example, chat box like chat, g, p, t, a more honest and trustworthy and, and less toxic. you know, the scary thing actually to me and, and too many figures about artificial intelligence is that you don't really know how malicious actors are going to use the technology until you've put it out into the world. and that raises some really difficult questions about what sort of
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processes might need to be in place before companies release these models into the wild conversations that aren't yet happening. are often seeing these models being put out into the market place. and then these difficult lessons being learned after the fact. and there may be a conversation now to reverse that find to think costa rica face sloths. that could be the key to discover new antibiotics. a team has been researching the firm and found unique bacteria that could offer solutions to drug resistance. alexandra bias has more. it's another slow start to the day for judy ab, for 30 years, she's run a floss sanctuary in costa rica. her team has rescued and studied more than a 1000 these animals raising them by hand until they're healthy enough to be released back into the wild. she says she's seen all kinds of injuries, but one thing is clear slots are more resilient than you think. we've never
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received a slot that has been sick that has a disease or has an illness. we don't know if it's it's because if they have this beneficial bacteria in their hair, we've received floss that have been burned by power lines and their entire arm is just destroyed. i think maybe in the 30 years we've seen 5 animals that have come in with an infected injury. 2 and 3 toed slots. live in the canopies of costa rica, jungles. they're also the countries newest, national symbol researcher max chavarria was intrigued by what judy was seeing at the sanctuary and took the 1st samples to analyze in his lab. see no way for him, floyd in belie whom social. when you look at the fur of a slot, you see movement, you see moss, you see different types of insects and you see that it is a place where we have a very broad habitat. and clearly when there is co existence of many types of organisms, there must also be a system that control them and use their theory was confirmed within the slot for
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they found would appear to be anti biotic producing bacteria that fight off pathogens an infection. bit of can up inside of my job, why not think further that this molecule could also be used for us in other applications. for example, in medicine, in human health, specifically chavarria and his team want to know if the slot microbes could help against antibiotic resistant, super bugs, where standard treatments no longer work. they admit the answer to that question is still a long way off, but it's one that's becoming increasingly important. the world health organization estimates that by 2050 resistance to antibiotics could be the cause of $10000000.00 deaths a year. and just like the accidental discovery of penicillin so many years ago, researchers here are hopeful, costa ricans, sloths could hold a solution of their own to a rising global health threat. alexandra buyers al jazeera.
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ah, go without a zara. these are our top stories. so dawns to warring generals have agreed to a one week extension to attempt to our truce. the ends on wednesday. it was mediation by south sedans. president silva care, several of these fires have failed since the fighting began 3 weeks ago. yes, all us specifically for the 22 names, the representative for the talk. so then we have a free discussion of free talk because the water cannot be and to let people talk. so yes for the wind and appeared to them new stress that it is important that this cylinders this emit for god for hunt and committee to named the representative to the talked prominent palestinian activist cutter arden has died
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and is ready prison after 86 days on a hunger strike, hundreds of people are marching in the occupied westbank to honor him at them as a member of the islamic g hunt group. rockets have been far from garza toward israel after i've done death. i'm off as i make. g has another policy. new factions in garza have held a solid derek to rally to honor him. shops and businesses in gaza has also been close following codes for a general strike. absences for more than 20 countries in organizations have agreed to remain engaged with afghanistan as an international summit. that by the un secretary general taliban was not invited to the meeting. thousands of film and television rights in the us are on strike demanding higher pe because she ations with studios including disney and netflix failed to reach an agreement on monday. the lights of guild of america represents more than $11000.00 writers. and it can you pass the accused of urging his followers to staff himself to death as appeared
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in court in the southern city of ma, lindy, pool, mackenzie and gay is now facing charge of the terrorism, money laundering, and radicalization. police have discovered the bodies of a $109.00 people, including children. those are headlines as always, a website out there a dot com has the major still not top stories. boy he tell is next. a week to look at the world's top business stores. thousands of people go on, try to pay the high living from global markets, an economy small business export restrictions really impact. we're trying to understand how we get things counting the cost on al jazeera ah, caravel. saigon was built during the time that the very turbulent era the caravel was the great vantage point. from the roof of the caravel hotel, we could see very clearly the evacuation. this was sort of the
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at its heart islam soon square, where journalists, diplomats, military st. off and spies, rub shoulders in its famous hotels during the vietnam war. ah, the area around loves salt square. you've got the caravel on one side, the continental on the other, the old passage, a den where the a p office was in my office, the nbc office, and the vis news office. all of these agencies were there and then down the other end of the square, the wrecks hotel. this was the nucleus of the life that we led as war correspondence. at that time. this is the sy gone that we knew a very small but very pivotal area of sy god where we sort of made our home for a number of years. 2 0, the caravel was built shortly after the 1st into china war in 1954. at 10 stories. it was the tallest building in the city. and it became
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a significant base for reporters who arrived in saigon in the early 19 sixty's to cover the vietnam war. joan gardner once a general manager of the caravel, remembers those war reporters from his childhood. the famous journalist that i recall were david hel, bostrom, peter arnett. neil she in morley cypher tim page. they were names that i grew up with as a teenager watching the vietnam war on tv every night. fellow new zealander peter arnett, is credited as being the only western journalist to cover the 20 year war from start to finish. i was assigned to vietnam by the associated press as a correspondent with their saigon bureau and i arrived there in saigon and june of
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962 at that time, saigon still had the atmosphere of the french colonial city. when i arrived in saigon, i checked in at the caravel hotel that was a residence where a peas stop. those who were in and out of the country always stayed me. the war then was between north and south vietnam. but as it intensified, american presence in saigon grew. the 1st 400 u. s. military advisors checked into the rex hotel. but some stayed at the caravel enough to interest the journalists there. what was interesting to me as a journalist, that in the hotel the caravel were staying there were crew cut,
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young americans in the bar, and walking around. and the restaurant of it turned out that they were american soldiers on leave, from the, from being military advisors in the country side. clearly things were moving along for me as a journalist to indicate that there was a real story at that time in saigon. arnett, journalistic intuition was spot on. in 1963 south vietnam was in disarray. the unpopular and autocratic president was deposed in a qu, backed by the u. s. and the caravel was at the center of the war reporting action. the caravel hotel proved its usefulness and burst under the headlines. november 1 of 963. that was when those a military coud a tar,
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against the covenant of president, no din z m, which led to the assassination of the president. and his brother. in the course of that action of our 24 hour period, the center of saigon was, was zone. the press retreated in effect to the caravel hotel, and that was when many of the stories were basically if not, dateline, the caravel. we certainly mention that a lot of the, what we were saying was from the caravel. the u. s. military officially joined the war in 1964 and hundreds of reporters, camera crews and photographers descended on saigon. hotels quickly filled up the passage in building the hotel continental, the majestic and of course, the caravel. it became
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a desirable location for journalists, particularly the american networks, c, b, s and a b, c. not only did they have correspondence, like dan, rather moley safer and others out in the field covering the actual war. but they had an administrative staff that occupied the sweets on the corners of the building lodge, sweets and also it was meant dozens of rooms they rented permanently, ah, for locals. these press hotels was something of a spectacle. as a boy hung van cold lived in a small traditional house behind the caravel. from where he watched the news crews come and go, hung will become a war photographer,
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himself. cash i got, i ran our talk on the man that the one going show me getting food on a junk dory. like on your name, given your name to it, the matter that they shouldn't show me go to see more go bad and yeah, i will go back my mouth and to get all my nice show of our boat the co and to cut her in shall no need lamarche to me thought could lead to and got of and you, me. but soon the hotels themselves became targets. a huge explosion shook the caravel in 1900. 64 after a bomb was planted on the 5th floor, where many journalist state he thought, probably yeah, not a good day in mind, yet in the old acting latin. lincoln,
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opal kind. all though down law law known pay. laugh. boeing acting, one, know, 2 o'clock in one, but got new guy nor laugh been the rocks all bad though. he whom my mom note look like and one looked long thing mom nod roy. wow, you go back now guys like linda, shaun p. king. my, we really didn't, 19 rooms were damaged. the windows of several cars in to door street were blown out and some passes by were injured. most of the journalists were out in the assignment, so there were no casualties amongst them that day. the caravel was not a safe haven in the sense that there was no protective environment around it, though or no security people were no bunkers in front of that. it was just open. it
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was an open hotel, just for civilian hotel. no place in saigon was said through the war escalated and by 965, there were around 200000 american soldiers in the region. when the 1st marines landed in south vietnam, they were accompanied by more news cruise. this 967 photograph of the a b c. news crew in the care of our rooftop restaurant has become an icon of vietnam's news coverage. caravel hotel was built with bulletproof glass. it also had a backup generator for those days. there were many blackouts of electricity's. it was also the only building in the city that had a conditioning. and the communication was one of the few buildings in the, in the city that had a fax machine. so the journalists considered it
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a good communication center. the 1st of all, it was a well ron model and residency excellent stop. it had a very supportive management that catered to the needs of journalists, keeping the bar open. most of the night, for example, making show communications systems existed. so the caravel became know when, as the price, so towel in 1967, half a 1000000 us troops were in vietnam. and saigon hotels were again packed the western media presence, w dot year, including bbc cameras on eric data. my 1st trip to vietnam was with a real wonderful veteran correspondence with d. b, c, antony laurence,
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and the counter man who subsequently taught me everything. i know mother's man bill bagley and we were sent off seemed a long way away we had now. i know i'd never been to asia and there we were in a country with a war. 1968 was the bloodiest year, the war. and the extensive coverage of the infamous tet offensive rock to the us and started turning american public opinion against the war. again, the war came to the count of al, from the evening of january 31 through several months, the saigon itself was subject to frequent battles. the american embassy was, was attacked the palace. again, the caravel was
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a refuge for journalists. so figured it was too dangerous to live in houses and we'll check into the caravel. and again, from the roof top, you could get a sense of the mayhem and difficulties being faced by the by the american vietnamese military and by the civilian population. came our morgan in time, show me that molten thought. ne, loud dan, warm none, it's all we got. we got mad now we're doing whitening, catching all the t la fung. you didn't, you eat my them from being you doing new or way feed by new a new men me. both sides suffered heavy losses. but the
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offensive heralded shifts and the war richard nixon became us president in 1969 and began withdrawing troops and started secret negotiations with hon. but then in 1970, he bombed neighboring cambodia. a new wave of correspondence had to shuttle between vietnam and come bonia to cover the spreading story. jim laurie was one of them. i arrived and shy gun in april of 1970 age 22. not knowing very much about vietnam, nor about the war. i was a backpack or turned freelancer, and in those days, the places to stay where the caravel, the continental, maybe the majestic on the waterfront. but i didn't have the money for that. so i stayed at basically a $5.00 a night run down hotel. it was called the royal hotel. there was nothing royal
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about it at all. but i simply, you know, given the money that i had, that was the place that i 1st stayed in 1970 the last war years were intense on all sides. for those fighting it, and those reporting it in 19731 year after americas most brutal bombing of north vietnam. the paris peace accords ended us direct involvement in vietnam. but the war was not over in 1975 events in cambodia shook the us on the 17th of april. the cambodian capital tell pen fell to the communist. come out roofs and the americans had to walk straight, a sudden evacuation. it was clear, the united states was about to lose sophia. now to so the war, reporters shuttled back to side guns hotels. when cambodia fell to the commander
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rouge, i came over to vietnam. i arrived with a brilliant and very experienced australian camera man named niel davis. we arrived in saigon and trying to decide where to stay. we thought about the continental, we thought about the majestic, we thought about other hotels. and we felt that maybe the caravel might afford a bit more security. it was a sturdy or hotel we felt than the older continental. so on the 26th of april, we checked in to the caravel hotel. i was in the car of was a handful of other journalists who had decided to stay behind to see what happened when the communists took over the city. me on the 29th of april for the communists closed in on. so i got, the americans ordered their 2nd regional evacuation in 2 weeks. most of the
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dramatic footage and photographs of the withdrawal were taken from the caravel hotel. for many of the reporters were here in saigon from april 29, april 30th of 975. this was sort of the front row seat, if you will, on the top of the caravel to the final stages of the war. from the roof of the caravel hotel, we could see very clearly the evacuation at the american embassy had been just 2 or 3 blocks away. so all of the network cameraman set up. so a lot of people were fighting to get into the embassy over the war. whatever, ah, nearly a 100 journalists chose to stay inside on the carnival was
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a frenzy of activity in the last hours before the city finally fell. in the early as of april 30, i was awakened and my room with the thundering air strikes and attacks. i quickly got dressed and went to the roof. i could see a bitten amaze, transport plane take off from the airport and start climbing into the sky. it exploded in flames as breached just a few 1000 feet. and it was clearly indicated that just a matter of time before they communist forces barinello vicinity, neil davis and i on late morning of the 30th, had a very nice breakfast. and then we went to the embassy itself. we happened to get there around 7 o'clock in the morning of the 30th of april, 75,
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and we watched the last helicopter leave the roof of the embassy. as the last american had a culture lifted off from the u. s. embassy, rooftop, hundreds of north vietnamese tanks, packed with soldiers, advanced into the gold plans on comb was assigned to cover the advance names. i got the wrong bout, not who will bout now to take online you defending my pay not make those. those. those soon love heart, they get talked a lot off to so you take 113, and one. the mall. no shot though. mar jacket though. mark the guy, bocce man. hiking and going i don't l t o t says into bowie. hello, auto stop thought. all the sad you get on panel. dante hall, yo yo kato, oh, from me and from my g g la, you satellite hallmark,
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i walked up to the american embassy and it was being ransacked by the needs of many of them angry because they hadn't been able to leave and the, and the helicopter many of them taking the opportunity to grab anything they could have value roughly an hour or so after the chaos at the u. s. embassy, and after we photograph that, we decided to split up deal. i went with neil initially over to the, the palace. he felt as i did that soon, the north vietnamese force would be arriving. so i made my way back to the n b c news office. and then we heard on saigon radio, the unconditional surrender of general min, who was the provisional leader of south vietnam at the time. around noon,
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the north vietnamese tanks reached the presidential palace gates. the 1st north vietnamese tag came through failed at 1st to break down the gate and then backed up tried again and crashed through the gate of the palace and deal got that classic shot with the flag of the national liberation front, waving from a top the tank board up to heal though among come those again you can go. the monk come to josh and the guy and you more ala me more and they towed up long it more. come go high. ran by bowie boy feet loud mockingly. o phone meetings. i hope la and new navy. now me, i came back to the care of l hotel and i was very much in this location,
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came out to the balcony and spotted in this direction. north vietnamese tanks. this area which is now a subway construction area, had a pass road. the road took the north vietnamese tanks out to the square. they made a right turn, which in those days was freedom st. heading down towards the sky. god driven me returning to the count of cameras on eric, tighter and corresponded. brian baron filmed the rousing victory scenes. this photograph taken from the count of el hotel, shows eric on top of an american car advancing ahead of a communist tank. we found a convoy of tanks, fright heading towards the street where the caravel hotel in the continental palace hotel. ah, so we followed it and then one of them overtook us. and then another one came
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behind us. and i said to brian, well why don't we just get out on to take some great roads trying? we had to do a tracking shot. wonderful. and we got some great images of the welcoming crowds on 2 row street. 0, one of the interesting moments for me, i looked over the caravel and there was a large, con minutes flag hanging from the middle windows of the hotel. that 4 stove, 4 rooms wide, and 3 or 4 deep. that the staff of the hotel clearly had it preparing in advance, that the caravans would be regarded on and off favourably, by the new communist occupy, as ah,
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april 30th, 1975, marked to the official end of the vietnam war. with heavy loss of life on both sides, nearly a 100 journalists were killed or went missing, chewing that war on his roof overlooking the carvel hotel horn. van combe built a memorial to the journalists killed in the 2 into china wars, troy dumb lum. nope. now dog, on whom way down billy, who man only getting the ladder makin dolly looked now shanie willingly die haitian campbell in the caravel hotel, continue to prosper and thrive. in the postwar years to day,
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it remains a landmark in the city and the repository of the treasured memories of those journalists who made this war hotel, their headquarters, their sanctuary, and their home in we're speaking about half a century ago. in terms of being a war hotel for correspondence delivered, it was what the ward, in a sense, really never ended for me. the 1st impressions that you have when you're a young person, are the deepest impressions you have when you show up at a war zone in a place, cambodia, vietnam at age 22. that sticks with you for the rest of your life. ah, when the war action ever came to saigon life, be overthrown, node and z, and the military code the tet offensive. and now the fall of saigon,
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the caravel was the great vantage point. and i and because the hotel continued to operate and provide food and lodgings, it qualified in my mind as the perfect war. oh tell and does to this day when i think about it, ah, ah, ah. a sanctuary for journalists. it was a haven from the wall and shelter for civilian refugees were scattered into the garden during cambodian bloody civil war. stuff imploring us up to me and suddenly returning back to the canal,
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rouge had taken anything of value out of the hotel cambodia lit no war. hotels on al jazeera ah a diverse range of stories from across the gland, from the perspective of on networks journalists on al jazeera, ah, a one week extension to a truce has been agreed to ensue dawn, but many on the ground, fer it will not stop the fighting ah,
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are them nora? kyle, this is out. is there a live from doha? also coming up. rockets are fired from gauze or off the death of a prominent palestinian who'd been on hunger strike in israeli prism. it is the largest humanitarian crises in the world. to day. a dire assessments on afghanistan, the inspector general's as much more needs to be done to bring stability. the man regards as one of the pioneers of artificial intelligence, quits his job, wanting of dangers. it poses to society. ah, they saw with breaking news from sue don, where a one week extension to a truce has been agreed in principle by the army chief and the lead of the paramilitary rapid support forces. it was announced by south to dawn's foreign
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ministry and their affairs. this truce will not stop violence, much like the other cease fires that have come before it. meanwhile, the humanitarian situation on the ground continues to watch them. victoria gatsby begins our coverage. akiva bred in south hearty im hungry people hoping to take advantage of a temporary cease fire. there's been extended by the 2 warring sides. some have been waiting for many hours and worry. they'll go home empty handed. we'll let one on a game in the south at all. so ha ha, i swear i have been here since 3 in the morning. so far i have not been able to get one loaf of bread. my children have not eaten anything since yesterday, and today is almost gone. what i just said, the u. n. is warning, the humanitarian crisis in sudan is turning into what he calls a full blown catastrophe. and millions are affected no more. levine and hannah. we are government employees and our salaries have not been paid. most of the people and our re prioritizing leads. they're not even targeting 30 percent of their basic
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needs. we pride as crisis comes to an end and our country restores peace and security. fuel in the capital is in short supply, most petrol stations are closed. the few that are open have long cues. there is really for some have been unable to access their savings for more than 2 weeks. the central bank of sudan says most of its branches outside the capital have reopened. it re assured savers that despite looting their deposits are safe. oh, so far we've not faced any problems. clients are handling their accounts, cash is flowing and people are buying and selling. the situation was difficult in the early days of the conflict, but now everything is back to normal. people trapped in the areas of battery and east nile, north of the capitol, hearty, him, a bracing for more air strikes and explosions. as the army and the paramilitary rapid support forces battle for control of sudan at the expense of its people. victoria gates and b al jazeera fighting in the past few days has been concentrated
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in the northern areas of the sudanese capital and the nearby cities of on demand. and barclay have been battles for control of the presidential palace and the airport out there as mom and al type drove through some areas in battery which have been experiencing as strikes since monday. her the limp alcala to sub bottle. we've been driving around different areas of helen hammered near her tomb, which made headlines recently. we have not seen any sign of damage or destruction as you can see. all doors are firmly locked. the majority of the people here have already left because there's no electricity or water awesome. the water plants applying the area was shut down. what apple, they were left with no option, but to get water directly from the nile river or the few makeshift wells in the area of the exxon. similarly, commercial shops are closed and there is almost nobody on the streets. a few people have stayed behind to protect their property against theft or losing. we spoke to
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some of them and they said the fighting between the army and the rapid support forces that last long in this area. well, you know, how much hasta has more on that announcement of the 7 day extension of the truth which came out of south to don south saddam's foreign affairs minister released the statement saying that president salvage here has spoken to war insides incident. and this is what was agreed in principle, we asked that for me to eliminate me, that there should be a cd player observed by the 2 parties. yes. talk to both of them to do it for hon until committee. and both of them are good with your source, ask specifically for the 2 to named the representative for the talk so that we have a pre discussion of free talk because the war cannot be end to less people to talk . so yes, for the bid and appeal to them, the stress that it is important that these seventy's, this
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a need for god hunt and committee to named the representative to the talked. the 3rd one is a different did the district agreed on, did it the, to this particular talk will comment. some of the people are leaving sedona coming to neighboring south to don thousands of them and he managed to situation at the border is dire. this conflict caught up as a surprise and this is why when this report came in her we were unable to intervene on time because the number was very big. the number was little bit. even if we rush, we would have not actually be nip one to do sufficient. where as we are now trying to do, most people arriving off from south to died, they'll probably end up staying with family and friends, or work with the indices to go back home. those who have nowhere else to go, probably end up staying in camps internally displaced. people hardaman tossed out
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there and i'll head morgan has worn out from the sudanese capsule caught him was previously had a 3 day cease fires, followed by another 3. this is fire followed by yet another extension of that by another 3 days. and this is now supposed to last for 7 days. and both sides have repeatedly agreed that they will have a cease fire, that they will not fire unless they are fired at or unless the military movements. so all cease fires have been conditional. and when it comes to the issue of the talks, the 2 sides have said that they've agreed to talk. but we've, we've repeatedly heard from the general, from the army that they are conditioned, set forward for these talks to happen. as well as from the rapid support forces. now the army makes it very clear that the talk should be on a ceasefire to allow for humanitarian aid and for people to be able to leave their homes in the capital sort of to him and elsewhere where needed. and then there's the issue of the rapid support forces themselves. the army says that any talks involving a power sharing agreement,
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or that would end up with the iris have still parts of the government institution or the minister institution is something that they're not up for. so it's not clear if these talks would lead far, if they happen, then you have the rapid support forces themselves. they say that for a talk to happen between the 2 sides, even if in direct there has to be a cease fire that is actually being manifested and implemented on the ground. right now. that is not happening. they were asked strikes in the city of east smile, that's in the north east of the capitol, her to him. a fighter jets have been flying overhead, and they've been fighting around the vicinity of the presidential palace. so the conditions that the 2 set are you, not it in place, and it's not clear if they would ever sit down to talk soon. and if they do, will they be able to agree on something or not? ah, a prominent member of the policy and group islamic jihad has died and his rally prison had an odd numbers on hunger strike for 80. 6 days. his lawyer accuses israel of medical negligence. and the strike has been called in garza and the
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occupied westbank. neither abraham reports from arbor in the occupied west bank. he endured 5 hunger strikes in the last 10 years of his life, but the body of 45 year old hauled that had nan couldn't take it any more. he was found unconscious in his cell in a rumbly prison in israel. on tuesday, before he was announced, dead at man started refusing food. when he was arrested on the 5th of february, he was later charged with offences including provocation, of violence and belonging to islamic jihad. an armed droop, israel considers a terrorist organization. we do not want any response from those who had failed to put an end to the injustices done 200 to these, to any occupation forces before the palestinian authority or resistance factions. i say, remember the faces of all my children as they are raised to appreciate nothing more than pride and dignity. in 201200, i then became a household name in palestine. the baker had refused food in protest against his
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detention without charges. his 67 day hunger strike ended with israel agreeing to release him. then again in 2015, he was freed, after a 55 day hunger strike, none of her health or see the happiness among palestinians flowing in the palestinian pain and the hope for the freedom of all prisoners. god willing. his success inspired dozens of palestinian prisoners to protest against such detentions by going on hunger strikes. the majority of those individual actions lead to israel giving in to their prisoners demands in 2020 mad a luckless was released after $103.00 days of hunger strike. so i see how that works. they want to break him and palestinians through breaking him because he is a symbol of resistance and steadfastness. he is a freedom fighter. they want to show that they have the upper hand and control palestinian officials and his lamishia had leaders have condemned his death,
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saying it was an assassination by israel. people across the west bank have closed their shops and businesses in protest against his death. hunger strokes are one of the few non violent tools left to palestinians as they battle against israel's unfair legal system set within a context of long tongue occupation and a regime of apartheid. for many, he had heard that i'd, nan has become a symbol of resistance against the israeli occupation. they say what's happened to him should bring attention to the plight of thousands of palestinians suffering in his way. he jailed many of whom without the charge. neither abraham al jazeera, the occupied westbank rockets have been fired from garza towards israel. since at nan's death, hamas islamic jihad and other palestinian factions in garza held a solidarity rally to honor him shops and businesses and garza holes had been closed following calls for a general strike. let's get more now from garza and join,
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yamuna. ols said so for us will tell us a little bit more about this barrage of rockets that were fired towards israel. yes, so the policy of factions here through their giant chamber, the joint temper said are claimed responsibility for firing barriers of rockets towards the southern israel. the towns. ah, the said the best comes in response to the crime committed by the occupation of killing could that i'd none. and they also said that this is just an initial response and warrant these really occupation of any foolish retaliation. now a we can hear above us in the skies of gaza, actually at 16 israel, the war jets flying in the skies of gaza as i speak to you right now. and also we are, we, there is a very cautious called in this, in the,
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in these hours waiting for the israel, we were supposed to, the launching of the rockets are from because the strip towards those israeli towns . ok. you know, many thanks for the moment. so let's go over now to west jerusalem, where we can speak to. mohammed jumped june. so mom, we've been talking about what the response is going to be. we're now hearing f 16 is really war jets flying over the skies of garza and clearer indication as to what is where he's going to do will or here's where we're at at this hour when it comes to any type of israeli response. we know that prime minister benjamin netanyahu is meeting with top security officials to try to formulate a response that we've also heard on twitter from the country's defense minister jo of golan t tweeted earlier. i completed several operational situation assessments following the rocket fire from the gaza strip. the security establishment will act with a determination and force against any one who tries to harm the citizens of israel
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. now we heard earlier from the israeli army, they confirmed that at least 22 rockets were fired from gaza toward israel to day. according to israel's army. 16 of those rockets landed in unpopulated areas for were intercepted by the iron dome defense system. the israeli army also went on to say that there was at least one rocket that landed in steroids in southern israel. as a result of that, there was shrapnel that injured, at least 3 people. the one of those people who as a foreign laborer was that is in moderate to critical condition and everybody who was injured as a result of all of this was taken to a hospital in the southern city of ash calon. now key right now to understanding what's going to happen next is what exactly is israel going to do if they decide to respond? certainly it, it would be a surprise if they do not respond in some way. typically if israel response rocket
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fire, they do so in the overnight hours that would mean either later tonight or very early tomorrow morning. now if israel were to respond by, let's say, firing a if they were to to get it launch airstrikes on to, let's say, empty fields in gaza. that would indicate that they don't want to escalate the situation. that is just a message being sent. if on the other hand, israel were to hit, let's say, islamic jihad or how much targets in gaza that might indicate that they actually would want to escalate the situation further. and that this could be more drawn out going forward. as of now, it's more of a tenuous calm. we should also mention that israel's army has informed the residence instead of that they no longer need to take shelter in fortified areas near gaza. that indicates that it's a lot less sense than it was earlier in the day. but at this point, very much
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a holding pattern, and we'll just have to wait and see what happens next. and lot of we will. okay, mohammed for the moment. thanks very much. well, still had hair announcer, sarah will have all the latest from kenya on the pasta accused of urging his followers to stop themselves to death and hollywood writers, working on fidel for the 1st time in 15 years after talks for higher wages breakdown. ah, al jazeera sets the stage 3 elephant here, 5 others. and although i have been deployed to thief, just one enemy global experts and discussing idea of been to your country been established in democracy, it was bound to explore in abundance of world class programming. of it least, will you to ask him fucks designed to inform, motivate, and inspire you are now to sierra frank assessments. this treaty provides
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us with this hopeful moment where countries could come together and stop putting in place the rules allow us to treat this global comments with the attention of deserves inside story. on al jazeera, freight companies, vic passports, international banks, and the procedures organized crime purposes. big p a lay valenzuela, awarded some of the both of you feel like in a remarkable 3 part, people empower investigation into a complex, secretive world. 2 journalists go in search of italian mafia dirty money, the maunder of part $3.00 on a j 0 lou .
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ah, and again, you're watching alan's is era. his reminder of all the top stories this hour to dance. 2 warring generals have agreed to a one week extension 272 our troops that ends on wednesday. it was mediated by south sedans. president saw the care. several of these fires have failed since the fighting began 3 weeks ago. prominent palestinian activist how the atlanta has dies in israeli prison after 86 days on hunger strike. hundreds of people marching in the occupied westbank to honor him. adam was a member of the islamic jihad group. representatives from more than 20 countries and organizations have agreed to remain engaged with afghanistan. jorgen the international summit. here in doha, the taliban government that took her in 2021 was not invited to the meeting, which is that by you in sexually general antenna guitar. ash,
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the participants are words about the stability of afghanistan and ethics expressed those serious concerns. they relate to the persistent presence of terrorist organizations or risk for the country, the region, and further fields. the lack of inclusivity, which importantly includes human rights in particular those of women and girls severely undermined by recent valuable decisions and the spare of that trafficking . with all its domestic consequences at that flask has to jam space has more. now if you can look at this critically, you could say that not much has come out of this meeting. the only concrete thing that's been announced is the fact they're going to convene another meeting. i'm told, possibly 3 to 6 months from now. but the idea was to get the international community on the same page and see you and saw says that they've gone some way to doing that
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. they're hoping, for example, when the chinese foreign minister and the pakistani foreign minister meet with the taliban for a minister in the coming days, that the parameters for those conversations will have been set by this meeting. they will be using the script to this come from this international meeting when they speak and relay their messages to the taliban. but we're a long way away from any possibility of the taliban being recognized. just listen to the answer. the secretary general gave when i asked him about his own engagement, potentially with the taliban when it is the right moment to do so, i will obviously not refuse that possibility. today is not the right moment to the cell. meanwhile, the us must still decide what to do about its humanity in operations on the ground
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in afghanistan, an internal review has been conducted by the un and the un agents is operating in afghanistan. a deadline has been set for this friday for that review to be completed and the u. m. to decide what to do, whether to resume its full humanitarian work without using female un stuff as a say that review result of that review expected on friday. the ken in cult leader accused of urging his followers to starve themselves to death, has appeared in court, pulling the thing a mckenzie and 8 co accused face several charges including murder, terrorism, and kidnapping place of exempt one $109.00 bodies so far with the red cross estimating, 100 small, still missing. michael. apple reports. one thing, mackenzie robot guy, he got. the mood is somber in court, but not for everyone. even a man accused of mass murder, paul entangled mackenzie, the self proclaimed passed and his co accused say several charges including
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terrorism related offenses. the investigation do not just sent that one. they might that judges, i don't, they must monthly charges that we pointed out to be put on my list. we are looking at charges under what we are looking at charges under the proceeds of crime and money laundering. we are looking at very complex investigations may be the case has been transferred to the high court in mombasa, where terrorism related cases can be tried. mackenzie is accused of urging his followers to starve themselves to death so that they can go to heaven. the police have found the remains of more than a 100 people, including children on his land. what they is, what it seems like following jesus christ is the biggest crime in the world. judging away from the bustle of the courtroom,
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a mother clings to hope. her daughter, husband, and 3 children may still be alive with duck on the balance. i know the survivors because i was part of the congregation. i have asked if they have seen my family, but they're not talking to our lives. pathologists are carrying out autopsies to determine the cause of death. as the search for more bodies continues. many kenyans are still in shock. they are asking how something like this could have gone on for so long undetected. the mackenzie is well known by police and has been arrested several times before, but each time he was released because of a lack of evidence, some rights group said they had received reports of extreme fostering in south east and shackle holla region as early as february. they accuse the police of not responding fast enough. we thought it was a place where this going again with the fact that we were so that having or they
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were fussing when he goes into humphrey place. the number of people being rescued is dwindling. while the bodies keep piling up, michael apple al jazeera, thousands of film and television lighters in the us are on strike demanding higher pe because she ations with g d, including disney and netflix failed to reach agreement on monday, the rice of guild of america represents more than $11000.00 rices, online streaming, but a straight on tv industry revenues. a previous strike in 2008 course california is economy. $2100000000.00. many actors say they're backing the strike. i hope that the writer is get what they need. you know, i do even the power of unions. i'm lucky to be a part of one with that. and so hopefully everybody can get what they need safely and everyone can get back to work. i support my writers, we have a lot of staff and crew that will be affected by this, you know, but you know, they got to get a fair do film correct. richard fitzwilliam says the strike could last
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a long time as rises. have many concerns to be addressed, particularly the union sphere is the what the studios have in mind eventually is some form of freelance. so right front of that is not that adamantly opposed to the other problem, of course is the threat as they see it of a i. and you could have a, i've produced the raft in the script, and then you could ask writers to publish it up. on the other hand, you can write to script to lend a, i could changed. i mean, of course, this is a field that is still rem, brianna the last right to strike landra days. and indeed there was one in the 19611988, which was not almost 15180 days. so there was a real, there's a real problem here of thousands of jobs being effect, but also genuine fear that the being a writer could be changed dramatically in future years. i mean, firstly,
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what pro have in the patches for they rely on job suddenly rely on scripting. they will do that. secondly, the day time, so probably will be affected. and then thereafter, here's the big question. what we don't know is how much stock piling of scripts has been done by prigs on flips. i mean, the screamers, how much they actually got, they could hold out a computer scientist dobbs. the godfather of artificial intelligence has quit his job at google to speak out about the dangers of the technology. jeffrey hinton told the new york times that its capacity to create convincing false images and text is creating a world where people will not be able to know what is true. says competition between tech john is pushing them to release new technologies at dangerous speeds. and he warns it's hard to see how to prevent bad actors amusing ai for bad things.
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over holland. michelle is a senior fellow in ethics and international affairs of the kinetic council. he agrees with hinton and has more immediate concerns as well. i think that there are all sorts of long term concerns that we should definitely sort of have in our mind . but part of the issue is that sometimes when figures like jeffrey hinton talk about, you know, a super intelligent a i that has this power seeking behavior. we lose sight of some of the, the more immediate near term dangers with a i, things about how to keep, for example, a chat box like chat, g, p, a more honest and trustworthy and less toxic. you know, the scary thing actually to me and to many figures about artificial intelligence is that you don't really know how malicious actors are going to use the technology until you've put it out into the world. and that raises some really difficult
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questions about what sort of processes might need to be in place before companies release these models into the wild conversations that aren't yet happening. are often seeing these models being put out into the marketplace. and then these difficult lessons being learned after the fact and there may be a conversation now to reverse that. the bodies of several u. s. m, and recovered from the wreckage of a plane that crashed during world war 2 are being taken home. u. s. navy divers recovered the bodies from a b 24 bomber called heaven can wait. they went down off the coast popping a guinea in 1944 for me and laura kyle, for the moment the weather is next. that is i sorry. ah hey there, good to see you again. it's been
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a wendy pitcher up and down the golf. it's the type of whether you're driving a car round and it jolts you around or you're walking around and the winds just blowing you around. so quite fierce winds we go in for a closer look here the forecasts will call for more of that on wednesday. a for us here and cats are, i think when guess 60 kilometers per hour. but we're still in bahrain. you could see those winds whip up to 70 kilometers per hour off to pakistan. most of our nasty weather here is moving into the north west of india and we've got disturbs weather right around the caspian sea. so showers boxes that on and as far east as ask about on wednesday for turkey. yeah, it looks like this. that disturbed weather is also moving into the western side here. so more in the way of cloud cover. antalya, i think building clouds as well in is stumble and ox africa. we go a northerly wind means the temperature into auction is 35. that's pretty what were you should be for this some of the year. and there's been a deadly landslide in the south west of uganda. that's really where our biggest pulses of rain will continue to fall on wednesday. and then we've got this clutch
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of storms just around the coast of south africa, southern mozambique. but i think the worse of the weather will stay out over the open waters, but can't rule out a few showers in durban with a high of 23 degrees. ah, jump into the screen and percent of the population globally is responsible for about 15 percent of carbon image showing the debate. people have already lost that people have a, have your say, want to broaden conversation by bringing more voices into it, live on you to people commenting. i want the whole world to know that jackie are not headed to replicate all this really with the power that be this on al jazeera chad house. hundreds of thousands of refugees from seed on a more have been pouring in. this is the latest fighting began last month. but
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beyond that, what does the war in sudan mean to chat and how much of a threat is it to insecurity? this is iceland ah . hello, welcome to the program. i'm m. ron kon. that fighting incident between its army and the power military rapid support forces has largely continued despite a ceasefire. so far, the crisis is forced at more than $20000.00 people to flee to neighboring chad. but the impact of the crisis goes beyond the immediate displacement of students. people . analysts warn the unrest could pose a serious threat to the stability of neighboring countries and the region as a whole. we'll get to, i guess, in a moment. but 1st, this report from the had a lady who dons neighbors are watching with great concern as to how the conflict is
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unfolding for regional powers. it's more about minimizing the impact of the crisis . what do you and one's more than 800000 people may flee as sedans, army and paramilitary, rapid support forces battle each other. despite a faltering ceasefire, at least a 100000 sudanese are expected to seek refuge in child alone, which already horsed more than half a 1000000 refugees from sedan. without a quick resolution of this crisis, we will continue to see where people are forced to flee in search of safety and basic assistance. and we are then good picking a coordinated contingency planning for new arrivals or refugees returning refugees and others, including 3rd country nationals to all countries in the region. saddam borders are staggering. 7 countries, including libya, egypt and chad, a region that seen its share of conflict in recent years. and analysts sworn the
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conflict may attract more weapons and fighters. sedans, western the full region is closely linked with neighboring chart. any instability there can quickly spread across the border from chart that means fighters friendly to the head of the era. surf mohammed hummed, and the galler known as ha metty might come to his aid. child is a you, as ally, and some say has concerns about the presence of rushes. wagner mercenary group in neighboring central african republic, and the potential to back tad in rebels threatening its government. the wagner group has been accused of having close ties with the rapid support forces, but the mercenary group denies any involvement in the country. a prolonged fight in sudan could have wider ramifications for the sa hell where foreign powers, like china and france have had a presence for years. sudan stability is important given its strategic location and
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has drawn the attention of major powers from both the east and west. but the continued unrest poses a significant threat and could lead to further uncertainty for the region. he had a la beattie full inside story. ah, that's bringing a guest now in angelina, remarked g. i nathi a senior researcher covering chad and africa's great lakes region for the institute of security studies in manama, abilene shape, a sudanese lawyer, analyst, and member of the arab association of constitutional law and addis ababa solomon death, a founding director of amani africa, a pan african thinktank that focuses on peace and security policy in africa. a wall . welcome to you'll. i'd like to begin with the remote g. romaji. there are 20000 refugees in chad already from neighboring su, dawn,
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that numbers rising every single day. is this threatening the stability of chat? teen q r i t data low. truce lee it's not about are those that figured switching to stability? i'll shaddon yawn. but what doors are huge number for the figures bringing and the sedition is on funding. so my deed at this number may arise again, what it's bringing is more distress on the national are you monitoring system, but also need the national new money to we. and now edward can his issue many do you when that dies, taking care of that for you seeing the country because every pre your, to the conflict in sudan assistant was already under stress because our dwarf program, but the ceo of the main humanitarian organizations are publicly communicated on the fact that they would and so shortage of means, meaning our findings to take care of that efficient that were already in the country. so our desire
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a huge number from saddam in the last weeks. my didn't be adding stress on a system that is already ah, facing a lot of challenges. let's bring in now. holly, shy who's joining us from montana. where is the sudanese government here? where is the roughest port forces when it comes to their relations with chad? to do that, i have good relations with chat. i think i think it helps the relationship with, with, with chart industry strike with the, with the government. but also you need to look at it from another perspective which is basically there are some of the, some of the person on fighting the earth. if they are coming from child, there is tribal tribes in both borders. there's family relationships and interracial unmarried relationships between, between the 2. so the, the border has been the case that people seeing the 4 area that you start for for
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20 years, not since the since the war. and therefore this has witnessed some sort of stability when the lease agreement has been signed. but again, i mean people know they're thinking that you know, they need to flee to, to chat mandate. also our stuff for center and our phone and our for area where the 5 between the, between hours at the house, you know, troops there and the sudanese army as well. so it's historical issue. but again, they get with you'll get stuck. you know, the number will be increasing and people have, you know, seeking different ways to leave them in general with our, with our child to, to subsidize to egypt through. if you can, let's bring in solomon does her solomon, there's about 7 countries that neva food on all of those are facing a refugee price of salt as people try and get out. is there
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a way that these countries can come together and trying to sort this out as a unified block or other to many divisions within the mall. and what does, and in particular, what's chad's role here in the situation saddam is very dire. and if you know many people fear, conflict continues and becomes protracted. there is a danger to done, would be fragmented and fragmented. so saddam, that is in conflict. i would also inevitably spill over the insecurity into neighboring countries. it's important to recall that the relationship between saddam and chart historically as with is one where, for example, for revenue brooks, well printing from china town been successful in launching that come paid again
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this to me in previous years. and some of them came product to even have to in previous years, is that all, you know the course well between now and enjoy that i actually inevitably to the base of the rebel groups in china. that's turn the page in terms of to dance. squeezy the groups ah, and we have to also record what the facility and the existence all the groups operating in the north of china. and they may be able to take advantage of the situation for their own paris hall. never
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really and recommendations to dance wouldn't be very disasters. and indeed if the stability and whatever remaining 5 in the news to continue both in the region in the central africa just in the public origin, is going to continue imperative that these countries come together. you know, living differences and you know, the situation so that they would upward the water. that's good car. let me bring in . hey bill, how you got the leak? i'm guessing that is have a said he's worried about a fragmented, sued on to think that's a realistic feel so far. if you look at what happened in the leave, you know what happened to syria? what happened during the countries that you know, had a spring in a way the illusion started peacefully. so we had revolutionists soon. i know that a pricing issue that is subject useful in for 2018. it continues to get there for
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2018. it resulted in an agreement which is basically up to can sure political agreement that divided arbiten civilians and the military. so we had some sort of stability for 2 vs before the coo and now 2 of our 2021. but again, the b, b, b. what is wanting right now is basically you have an equal foster. this is in these armed forces, which is, you know, the support forces which is completely outside the supervision and oversight of feel the mysteries on forces. but people the have, you know, different issues about who was talked to this in the, on the 15th of october. but by the end of this, the people, they still think that this can be contained, it will be something that, you know, the, the, the transition has to continue people. so thing that, you know, you know, it's not going to bring any piece are stimulated from them, but again, the position that has been taken by this is, and he's on process. and that, you know, there's gonna be issues right now with the, with the, with the, with the, with the, with respect, at least not with, with,
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with me deal with this is deputy his brother. so the fear is there that you know fragmented showdown would make it worse for everyone in the region for the africa, for the neighboring countries with egypt. and you are chad. but no one has an interest for this to happen, not the of the big from community launches who invested too much on having a political agreement or collecting from agreement to see to see the light. it's still a possibility for now who is fighting is basically the hour has the addition to these forces. if we find people i civilians have to defend themselves, then the risk is very high that we can go to civil war at the now it's, it's, it's almost we can see there is a control of who's fighting was controlling lisa with guns and then the risk is there, there's no political sufficient for,
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for these, these 2 to leave her to him for these talks to, but to that back, i think the risk is high and i'm expected to be in a position where we're so don, is another, another, libya or another, another serious or 4 years ago, and no one has any just to see that. let me bring in solomon death i here and i have a solomon. chad is a u. s. ally, the u. s. has a number of ally surrounding sue darnell. those relationship with sued on itself has been strained. shall we say over over many years. do you think chad has a role a diplomatic political role to play in the resolution of the complex? i think a contribution or lucian of a prices are every neighboring country. i would say also die hard to think, but also a role to play for the resolution of this,
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this company by using any influence that they may have on both sides of the conflict, the conflict parking, the student armed forces and that are the support forces. but i think it's also important to remember that chinese also it's going through a transition and not dissimilar to that of. so that is similar to sudan in the sense that in china we have also a military and government that is leading a transition post on. although it has not been sanctioned in the way that it was sanctioned by the african union. but the conditions are similar and there are going to station within, within china. so they're either lead to what china china can do. but all the same within those limits,
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i think it's important to bring in because if you don't bring in all the neighboring countries give that, that exclusion would leave a vacuum. that me easily be ex, exploited, or you know, to undermine a dramatic effort to bring peace and i see the fighting in have to, well let me bring in, let me bring and remind you now from angela from actually is there a limited role that child can play because of this transition that i guess not as i was talking about. i think that and so we the, the connection. but i, i think, as make what he just said, jed can play alone and live as the called, the fact that just before d ha de sac. ginny, fighting in 9, sudan, ah, child received obsessively to visit our 1st from edward on himself and the day
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after, from our amity. many in a way that to, for the village of, and actually fighting in sudan at chad. could play a role in what's happening in the country and i took the leg on the fact that chad at the moment is also managing air transition. i would a lot of internal, i won't the stations and the position that ease somehow for jail, but also facing a lot of fossil ridge appearance inside. but i definitely, i think a solution to a conflict like the one in so don't actually as absolutely to be at originally said, so in that day in that way, chad, our sound on i think i'm going to move up on to countries or back to the sat on the student needs to be implicated in finding solutions so that your loud drill crisis . i believe. i mean, here we are another situation where you have a country that is almost on the brink of civil war. student is fighting with each other. you have the perimeter, she forces the rapid support forces you of the government. ah,
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no one's talking about peace right now. but all of the regional countries including chat, are wondering what that means for them. but the 2 power plays in sudan are 2 saying to the world, this is an internal conflict right now. they're not interested in talking. so what does the international community do? what does a country like chad do with $20000.00 refugees arriving at his border more coming every day? what's the short term that countries like chad can do? it's a mom look which i'm in here. i think it's a bit. it's a bit ah, ah, and you are listed to suggest that one single, rick and even if it, it might be like my colleague has said it's a, it should be a very limited for them and then the scope. that's all the boundaries that he can move and the margin is, is very slim for chapter you already have, you don't require you had, you know, saudi americans. you have the m r and then you had the u. k. as part of
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a mechanism i have that trailer from nicholas which is basically he got african union ambia. i'm unanimous. so you've, you've had mechanics in place in, in for to that way or another of the fell to contain that, that conflict for so far. but again, there's initiatives, you know, between the saudis and americans to suggest the cease fire and for that to use fire to be permanent. what they are doing right now is that they're extending the truth for allowing, you know, i'm guaranteed secure, safe routes for, for, for allowing, you know, can be trained to come to her. but again, i think it's a, it's not like a one country that can do anything. it has to be a community and you can actually communicate itself to move and have to the, the, the resources that we have right now. and in the country basically, you know, the, the mechanics that we have in place and try, which is just something just the other thing is, is,
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is what you mention about the internal, there's not intended in turn, the intention between be between the hours from the city office to get to negotiations. i don't think this is entirely correct. we can see that the rest of the are beginning empty. she'll international committee to, to find a way for them to negotiate because they don't want to lose what they have achieved so far. the past 4 years on the fast, we are taking a very stubborn position. they're thinking a very they're reluctant to my job with the, with the thinking, you know, the, the, the per direct now is basically to resolve this issue. that's really, i'm that you know for the us to have to move outside of with their tubes and the areas that they are controlling. so i, but there is a way to resolve this, but i think it would take it, it would take high, the shape and the form of whatever i gave me that will check. it's not everyone is focusing on a cease fire that you know they, they can make it to a minute that it can make a for, for him to join in to,
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to him. so i think this is the focus. no, no, no one is no one seems to be between the 2 parties interested in either talks of political process, at least for the, for the asset analysis. in this process, political part is the, are made it clear from the beginning there to see the the medicaid back there, i guess the war and the solution has to be a political solution for the transition to continue the solomon. once again, we are facing a situation where the international community is getting involved, like a guest. and manama was talking about the various different mechanisms for talks are coming on. but until it's an african solution for african problems, we're going to see this again, isn't this an opportunity for the nation surrounding so don to come together and talk to sit on and big, bring an internal solution. let's not rely on the u. s anymore. let's not rely on the u. k. any more? surely this is the opportunity when i think it,
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it's one thing to have that kind of ambition or being able to, to, you know, exercise responsibility and leadership and being the 2 sides to the, you know, to the people that were indeed that is what the african union gonna have been trying to do if you recall just a day after the outbreak of this fighting on the 16th of every the peace and security concert of the communion convened an emergency station on the same day, the inter governmental authority on development got the region and body also convened a state extraordinary meeting exactly to take leadership, but also to press on the 2 sites into a meeting to a cessation of hostilities. i think there is so much that they can do in terms of the laser that they have to bear on the 2 sides. so,
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it is important therefore, for these countries, since they can by themselves or whatever they have is not enough to induce the parties into coming to a cessation of hostilities. what the question therefore to in least the support and leverage all others? you know, we did that again, but also beyond that, that's why the role of countries such as those in the gulf of the way becomes so important. and it's important to record that during the transition process. why, why the kind of important that you, when the african union and e get was at the front of it, the 4 countries making up the ones that were exercising leverage. now in pushing some of the you know, the p,
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i remember the framework agreement that was done in december for example. but i think there were also lessons that need to be learned. that there is so much focus on trying to get the 2 sides on the neuron potentially being the wider student is public who are opposed to the bloody war and what been a champion off for clarity, but also peace and the voice of the wider suitors public needs to be harnessed and there is, there should be a way in planning tossed between these 2 sides to ensure that the student is a public if also adequately and effectively presented, including the members of the response committee who are displayed in an incredible level. you might have thought activity a very interesting point. a very interesting point. solomon. let's bring in abilene high. hey, i know you're, you're a lawyer. i remember
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a few years ago the sudanese lawyers association in caught him was a very powerful organization with a civil society voice. they're kind of civil side, the voice of solomon dis, i was talking about has that voice now disappeared? where is the sunni civil society here? when it comes to this conflict. so this is, this is for frontier, be the newsletters association when they came up with the, with the, with the initiative to come up with the constitution so, so to speak. me came up with my situation. was part of the drafting committee or within the experts have been part of part of defense, some of the stages. but again, they wanted, they wanted to kind of situation to a, as a process. i'm actually going to have a process that constitution because they should have never been without, with a cab constitution, but we have the constitution in place, no unrestricted duck institution, not even doing that transition. not even after the cool. so i think the people, they thought, you know, if you're having a prostitution because teaching could be a political process. so did use the constitution by this is and he's my lawyer
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cessation. and then they pushed that to athletic process. this started, you know, moral shops, different talk ships around, you know, areas lead to peace and security. but again, when they came to the piece to create the, when they came to the issues listening to reintegration of the, our staff within the army to he was the complex, you know, the, the, the, this is denise, unfortunately made it clear from the beginning that you know the best way to get you to be as soon as possible we needed to move in 2 years. and then the us, if you wanted that to be within 10 years. so i think i think of the political party now watching that they're trying to help, but i don't think this is beyond the should be suspended to contribute. i think service will say it's right now. what they are trying to do is basically make sure people are see if people are cared for, people are able to go to hospitals and get treatment, which is not the case right now. i mean, most of i think 90 percent of all, sorry, i don't think we all running out as we all running out of time. and i do want to
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bring in remote g here romaji. we've talked a lot about the refugee crisis about the political diplomatic role chad can play, but in the very, very short term. the longer this war goes on, there is a danger of our forces could fall back to the border with chad. and that could create a real instability and a real problem for some members of the chatty and government. but certainly within that region, is this a short term concern for you? for sure. there is a, this kind of concerned because actually what the valve there, that the issue of that conflict, actually the editor from losing ground and capital in getting back to duffle might be, might be something that would change it a pool. busy cycles in that soul, but also the edison winning rat sightings actually might also have an impact. so in the short term, whatever the issue of that conflict, there might be a lot of him factor on doubtful. and then on chat, because there was
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a very big component or ethnic correct of the forces that actually are fighting within dallas unmanly arab tribes gather under emma des coleman. and we also know that in the past, i club room between the different groups and doubtful i, meaning that as a guide does a co op, do myself and at us of always been very fragile. so any change in the position of the artist actually might have an impact in better for and meaning also in chad as, as philip, i want to thank all our guests sir romaji and i think, i believe shave and solomon differ. and i want to thank you as well for watching. now you can see the program any time of i visiting our website out there, a dot com. and for further discussion, go to our facebook page at facebook dot com, forward slash asia inside story. and you can also join the conversation on twitter . our handle is at ha, inside story from me, amman, con and the entire team head i for now.
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ah, the latest news as it breaks age is to say there are hundreds of students, refugees, wasn't the community, or you have to be registered under who cannot access paid with detailed coverage. you believe this message of protecting fundamental rights and democracy will once again resonate with voters from around the world. one thing it shows is roches continued ability to be able to strike everywhere in this country whenever it pleases. a fishing town in senegal,
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a condo because his mother hasn't worked for years. he's also unemployed. and as a family to the doctor, we already have to share with the promises that have never been meant. not even one 5th striving or used to depression. depression that is leading to drug addiction, africa as one of the most, i'm equal societies in the world and the gap between the rich and poor is growing millions traps in poverty. many discipline and discouraged young africans say the government needs to seriously address unemployment. otherwise they'll be forced to remain idle and unproductive. ah ah hello.
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