tv The Stream Al Jazeera May 18, 2023 10:30pm-11:01pm AST
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those abi has surrounded a northern town with suspect 2 gang members killed a police officer on choose day one and 5000 soldiers and 500 police officers have been deployed in the way of a concepcion to find those responsible. the officer is the 4th to be killed since president naya kelly launched a crank down of gangs lost the columbia as president has said, there's no confirmation that the 4 children, including a baby who disappeared when they're playing crash and the amazon being rescued. well, the 2 weeks ago, the plane took off from a rob, acquire a deep in the amazon jungle. it was supposed to fly to san jose del guadalajara. but it came down to the municipality of solano de cats. that prevents rescue teams, have found items they seem to belong to the children in the jungle, as well as a makeshift shelter. this led them to believe the children escaped and set off into the forest to find help. that's being an extensive search by the ministry. 3 adults including the pilots and the children's mother dies when this will at croft went
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down on may the 1st the business, or at least the top stories ultra nationalist has radius of gathered and occupied east or east lemon made incursions into the alex and most compound is part of israel so called flag day israel's far right? national security. me this is a mob been give you join the crowds making their way through damascus gate. and the old city with a mux has more football capacities to raise the, the historically, the area inside the whole city direct people find the most of the centuries. the police had the opportunity, as it did last year to try and round some of these marches through the christian side, to be honest with you, to get to the point that this isn't that they chose to. piedmont has 2 choices,
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one of which was to come this route will be while it goes up, processing is held counts of demonstrations waving palestinian flags along the heavily $45.00 board defense with his well days ago sees fine end of the 5 day conflicts with so heavy fund trade is between israel and the fleming to hide the palestinian group and goes at least $33.00 palestinians, and one is riley were killed, the sudanese dumped his union says the number of civilians killed in the countries . conflict has arisen to 833 heavy strikes, pounded southern areas of the capital call to on thursday. because we are gonna be empowered, military rapids support forces continue to bustle for control ukraine and stuff. at the round of intensive russian and bombardments in claims ministry says the intensity of the attacks is unprecedented. but for now, this defense systems coping more bodies are being found in flood ravaged. oven is lead taking the death toll that now to at least 13 firefighters are continuing
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rescue efforts in those haul to reach towns which now console from highways and without power. within 10000 people have been evacuated off the down pools, quote, hundreds of land slides and nearly 2 dozen rivers bus that box. okay, those are the headlines as always, all website and how to do it. don't comments the latest on all of our top stories. state street, the stream is next, and one of the sit down is conflict is beyond control. for a week to look at the world's talk business, the thousands of people go on strike. i have to pay the high cost of living global markets in economies. smooth businesses of the tech support restrictions really impacted to understand how it affects counseling. this goes down to 0, the high fmi. ok, thanks for watching the stream today on the stream. see don nomics in limbo some of
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the best, but it's good not as soon as i've heard coming out of the cold conflict incident has come from a farm. i really want you to listen to this. this is come all l busha and i was on a monday the info use the various leaders have been unable to do anything. and finally we have this will for full. yes. we being told that the transition to civil authority would take just one year, enough in 4 years. they've not been able to form the governments. you can't move the country forward, do you move it backwards at the end? you take us to wolf, your own personal interests. be at home actually from a prime minister. him doc, army chief, the have all the devil. all of them a loses were like, well know if i gave you the biggest lease as a whole course civilians i 0 is have a morgan has more from the city of on demand since the fall of the fighting in mid april 8 has not been able to come into the capital for those who need it and the
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needs are huge. many people say that they can no longer afford to buy food because of the increase in prices. and many of us say that they can no longer buy because they have not been able to access their bank accounts and have no cash on hand to be able to afford basic foods commodities. residential areas in the capital have also been cut off from power and wants are for more than a month. and we are going to be looking today at how the people sit on a ferrying wall to warring generalist points around them and how to add west stuff for the state. how are they doing? joining our conversation. we have my next it is a journalist who has reported widely own sedan. he's in the egyptian capital, cairo, dahlia. abdul, one m is a state and these journalist and political, unless she joins us from london as the phone company. i kyla, is a sudan country director at mercy cost. you don't just import sedans. hello, everybody really great. have you a plus online audience who are also standing by to be in the comment section on
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youtube. i, i want to play a thought here from dr. muhammed up in the baka, and i'm just going to give you a warning because he's going to be talking about sexual violence. i'm what i want to know. my dad's phone connie, is, is the war on civilians. because what the, how much has to say makes me think that the general was a targeting civilians this have, let's look, let's have a listen. in reason 2 weeks, there has been escalating record things and report things of sexual violence within the capital itself as well as outside of hospital. most of the report it to be committed by the rapid support forces and confirmed most of these cases. and the biggest chair is that if that is left on check, and if the these types of actions are left on check,
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this is only going to get worse. so this doesn't look like it's cost 5 is looks like a study, whitley going for the people who a quote in the conflict by your thoughts. i want to talk on a few about this but you still yeah, i mean, so i think it's a, it's both, you know. so the answer caught in the crossfire and there certainly are civilians that are being targeted. i think both on an individual basis and on an organizational structural basis. so what we are seeing is, is you know, questions already in regards to the chain of command, specifically as it relates to the rapid support forces. and so it doesn't appear that the leader of the rapid support forces has to be full control over as forces, nor does he really seek to have forward and hopefully control of his forces. maybe that's another question as well as so we're really seeing
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a free for all in terms of reading homes on their part in terms of using sexual violence, rape as weapons of war. and then we're also seeing the arbitrary nature of it from the rapids support forces in terms of the detaining numerous young man on the street as well, with based on no evidence and then interrogating them. but thinking that they could be spies for the harvey. very briefly on the army side and appears to be actually more specifically targeted, at least with the elements of the army or their supporters. perhaps some, some of their supporters from, from the old regime of my, of this year in which we're seeing specific activists that are engaged service provision, journalist for instance, medics within the hospitals that you've played a significant role in demonstrations against the former regime of this year. are now suddenly being targeted with death threats and calls and, and,
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and things of this nature from supporters of the army side. so we're seeing target violence, we're seeing violence on arbitrary scale as well. and we're also seeing violence, i think on a structural scale on both levels. so phone got me. i can see, you know, the nazi can make that note for us please to to jump in here. i think when we, when we look at the people who are left behind, these are people who were already vulnerable, even before the start of this crisis. so you think of the cool people who are living in poverty. those are the people who can't afford to leave the city bath a lunch for a mesh behind the ones who may not have the connections, other resources to be able to leave a key to a safe for space and they are found. her ability is being compounded by everything that's continuing to happen in, in the city of talk to him and elsewhere. goodness made down his right. yeah. i go
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ahead. i mean, i think if you look at our history as instead of what both the, our assessment of the army are doing is not new. i mean, if you just look recently the recent conflict conduct for the nova mountains, you know, they have precedence this has happened before, but the differences has now come to the center. so now people are more aware of it, but this is not new. the, the, the cost of the war on civilians has never been the number one factor or the number one issue of concern for either side. so i'm not surprised that there see, you know, we're being hit from the ground in terms of the reception looting and rust acting of homes and buildings and the volume, sexual violet violations that have been going on. we've been hit from the sky by the army using it's, you know, uh, air force to target supposedly target the r a stuff with. in fact, there he think the infrastructure of the capital of my costs, pencils, you know, uh, there was a mosque in the i think he but morgan actually reported in
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a on that there was a mosque that was hit, churches have been rated. and so we simply just have had no risk spite since this conflict started. and what the, the cost of us is the least concerned. i think not just for the 2 generals, but also for the international community, simply because it's to how long does it take and for in the organization to actually step in and say, we're sending in humanitarian aid or opening of a safe passage for a to come through they had that chance when they were evacuating foreign nationals, but nothing came. and now it seems that is also the huge risk of their happening, of looting competing for the of this age. because there is no control the debt, the agreement is basically worth the paper it's, it's not even worth the paper it was signed on because neither side is complying with the get the agreement of assess which was the basic rules of, of, of, of war. exactly. so the, you know, neither side is complying with it. you know,
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the rapes are, i mean i'm, i, i've been, we, i've been for, i've been doing some research on the sexual violence and rape of girls and it's staggering. what is happening is, um it's under reported. hospitals are understaffed, hospitals are barely functioning. you know, food is running out the, you wouldn't really reduce the reports. thing cost the population of the, of sudan. so many the 25000000 are in need of help are in need of 8. let me bring in some, some more thoughts here. this is from doctors without borders because they absolutely by cop what you all saying. this is you on nicholas who spoke to us a little bit earlier. who is the situation is to done is create together for or civilians in the countries where the they are leaving active config zone. or, you know, the parts of the country, the head of scare system is a collapsing due to the fighting due to the targeting of health care
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facilities. and the looting of those facilities, the medical supplies disparate community, the, on the population is also not taxing or the basic needs like drinking water or food. so if i'm gonna need a over a month ago, we were saying as an international community, people in she died, the student needs, the asheville was a, we need your help. what is the scene that's different in the past month? to jump in on what dalia say, that's the name of abandon meant overwhelming the occasion by the evacuation of foreign stop pro hawk do and the vision of abandonment. i see monetary and organizations is 100 percent understandable. i'm sitting on that side it's. it's a very difficult decision for one to make when the context that's it as an organization. we 1st and foremost paused operations because we had to step back and
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balance, especially a monetary and imperative against the state safety and well be of our soft suit and use and not a suit any. and once we were ready to get on the ground and stopped working, the current situation is unprecedented. so we're essentially going to be pushing the lives of our staff at risk by asking them to provide this assistance that is so badly needed. and it's a very, very difficult situation to be in where we wants to help, but by don't, by going in, we would be increasing the risk profile of or last off. and this is not just international stock, but also the new stuff as well. our own stuff hasn't been displaced. so we had an office of 40 stuff in her room and over half of that number have left the city. and as a leader of an organization, it's very difficult for me to say to my team,
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oh hey, get up and go and provide help with their own lives are at risk of office and they to the new ted and, and our own stuff have lost everything as well, we haven't been able to pay salaries either some cases and it's very difficult for our own team members as well. we do recognize the huge role that local initiatives have played in being at the forefront of assistance in many communities. and we do recognize that we need to support these efforts and not undermine demo, overwhelmed them. and, and so as was thinking about responding, we're saying to ourselves how do we continue to support these local initiatives and continue to provide the assistance that is much needed. but from outside it's also a very, very difficult situation, given that there are no guarantees for the safety of you to manage the test, which is something to build on your site is very difficult me that you can't help you decide if our security and allies and then the security in the lives of the
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people you're trying to help, you just decide to make that decision. we can't help right now. we are helping so collectively as an energy or community. we're currently active in 14 alto, ps, to don, to 18 state, doing a range of status, health care provision of food assistance, non food items. so we are definitely on the ground. but the scale that often leads overwhelms the resources that we're able to get our hands on. again, because a lot of our facilities have been looted and we can't access, not the ones that are still standing. yes, not go ahead to. yeah, i think it's, it's also quite refreshing of the need to, uh, uh, or the plan to support local initiatives for 2 reasons. one, i think they already have the structures in place in order to assist people with the most fundamental needs that they probably have. you know, the best, you know,
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understanding of, of the risks that are, that are there and how to do that because they're the, they're still present in that situation. but secondly, i think in terms of, in terms of age, you know, a decentralized approach should absolutely be 2 steps that would be the, the approach that's taken here in the past. we've seen that's who done more centralized approaches with aid. we've seen the authorities intentionally try to stop by to conquer, i guess the 8 communities, no way between i and cios and local and g o u and agencies and then donors accordingly, sometimes putting them under different regulations and. and the reason for that is essentially to try to consolidate aid efforts and then try to weaponized paid accordingly from communities that might live in new lines or too closely dispatch
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military intel to follow other age groups accordingly. so what we're seeing is that there's a lot at stake, and there's a lot of stake apparently because we know that there's not a lot of humanitarian aid coming from 1st through the probably and compared to a number of other crises in the budget that's probably allocated to ukraine and comparison, and then other crises in the world right now. and so with that little aid and with the country essentially, you know, the economy devastated. it would be entirely predictable for, you know, the authorities and particularly the army here, which would claim to be being printed with should have an institution compared to the r a. so to impose regulations once again in order to consolidate aid for a paid efforts. and essentially cannibalize that a, so i think the way around business is exactly what was mentioned in order to decentralize aid and assist local um you know,
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already local civil society community structures as much as possible because i think that makes it significantly more difficult, right? for 8 efforts to be consolidated accordingly by the authorities that yeah, i also think that yeah, sorry, i'll go. yes. go ahead. uh yeah, i also think there's several problems that going to crop up in the, in the near future. the rainy season is coming up and the more people there's, there's more internally displaced people, the more that they will flood into other countries. and our surrounding neighbors already have their own problems. so you're looking at the humanitarian issue that could very easily engulf the whole horn of africa, so to speak, in a way. cuz we border if you'll p a egypt, you know, chad, the central african republic themselves to that. and it's already taken this long for 8 or few monitoring assistance to come through. and i completely understand, you know, the whole shock is always able to shop to everyone when, when, when the,
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when the war erupted. but speed is of the essence. i mean, i think in a way, taking your sweet time, you know, as, as a, as a g o's, or as you an agencies, is to our detriment as to the knees. and already we've all been hearing and seeing of the problems of. so the news will have to let or manage to flee are facing whether it's at the board as of egypt or trying to get this out of the or we're or going to to tad. so i'm just my worries and within a month or 2 months, the situation is going to be going to become even worse. and then what are we going to do? i mean, already as this is, as this is a new use, i mean my hands are type i, there's only so much i can do from there was always so much i could do when i was in. so then 3 weeks ago. and there's even less that i can do even being away from it. and so if i can't do that too much and the agencies and deals can't do, got to much, then what's going to happen next. and the picture that i can picture that that's,
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that's forming in my head is a very grim and dire picture. and i'd hate to think what would happen if speed is not of the essence, you know, you know, it's not being pushed forward. i think that needs to be more noise being made. i think this needs to be more attention paid to this is to the scope to this crisis. and it's not it's, it's just, it's frustrating to me is this is the needs to see the where we are right now. and i still think the reaction of the international media and g owes you and it's very slow and it should have been sped up because like math mentioned in regards to, to ukraine. i think a week within the clean war, you know, 8 was rushing in visa pro visa processing was done wide made quicker on it. so it occurred to me this is a headline that came out of the building about to don. i'm just gonna share it on
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my laptop, and this was from the same person who created a, an incredible scheme for ukrainians to live in the u. k. and, and he's saying recreate u. k. house, a crane skills to sit down, refugees. just one of the original times architect. so why can't we do exactly what we did for ukrainians? for refugees from see don, who has been displaced. i want to share something with you. this is from one of my colleagues. he was reporting from chad, which is where some people are leading to. and then dahlia, somebody who is from c dot and you'll seeing these refugees. i really want you to tell me what does this feel like when you see this that's have a look. the border between chart and so done is porous and wild. lately you can see smoke rising in the distance, faint and far away. but those living here save that is alternate. now, the capital of west are for burning the most active hotspot and students conflict. second only to hard to oh,
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no armed villagers caught up in violets. the consequence of the fight for control of the country. refugees here say they escaped in the night, searching for days to find a safe crossing. not everybody came. we left the old people. they're still there, we can't go back to get them. we don't know what to do. that a you had a conversation recently with friends about when can we go? when are we going to go home? what was that conversation like? tell us the pessimistic um because we all do want to go back, but we don't know how or when. oh if it's even possible to go back. i mean initially i thought and i'd be back within 3 months now i'm thinking maybe a year. another friend told me no 2 to 3, so i don't know because i don't see any silver lining in the horizon. i
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don't see any chance of either of these 2 men to put down their guns or put down their weapons and say, okay, that's talk because that's not going to happen. and he said also when we spoke about some reason we talk about this transition to a, a process where civilians take over it. is that just a band and does not just that, that's not realistic. the military will never allow c, denise civilians to run their own country. do so. where do you see that? not once they don't, they said that yeah, that is not going to say already you can see that it's a split within the needs of those who think we should support the army, no matter what. and forgetting what the atrocities they've committed in the past and what they're committing right now, because they'd rather support the institution that use. this is denise army, then the power military forces. but in my book, they're both equally the same. but at the same time, you can't have
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a country without an army. and i also say are politicians also failed us. just like so many other people have failed us, a civilians as to the knees. so i don't know, i mean, i wish i had the answer and say this is what it's going to be like, or this is how we should. this is the route that we should take to. i don't think anyone actually knows curiosity. what yeah, of course. what's the process i have? i have a number of questions for my audience. who are watching right now? i want you to austin very quickly. so um uh, so phone guy, he helped me with this one. what measures are in place for civilian contributions to help with the sudan crisis a quick, so the revised thank you, the revised amended terry and response plan was launched yesterday and a number of organizations working in so dont including marks the core have channels for individuals to make donations, there's also
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a number locally organized initiatives. if you follow mats and bobby arms with a, you'll be able to see some locally organized i. there's that you can do the best collaboration here. thank you for that stuff are all set. i'm gonna give this one to you dahlia surfaces. i'm, i'm very much worried about these, the teeth of life saving medications. one of my friends mothers of the hot surgery is now in, i'm the mom who we spoke today. sorry about the complete breakdown of facilities that you would normally expect. utilities, you know, expect. what can you say to that if you get in touch with the local resistance committees in the 3 main areas of cartoon by the undermining car to the resistance committees are working to, to, to make it, to try and get the, you know, needed medication to those who can't get out to call and get it themselves. so same thing in thought for just just get in touch with the local resistance committees. if you ask anyone everyone does this house, it doesn't work. you know?
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yeah, someone, someone else will will help you wouldn't guide you. so yeah, that's my best advice. don't risk going to a hospital. don't risk trying to find medical attention just gets help and they will come in and they will help as much as they can. i. i noticed the treat of yours, which was of really bold tweet, which was the caps to be died. secuity rivals, problems the country into war. but house that arrived at this point is a story in itself. i'm going to send people to the tweet because it's a long story. but how would you describe the story now in a sentence where all we now? yeah, i mean, right now i think we're, we're in the worst possible, but most predictable scenario that we could arrive to maybe wasn't predictable when we were in the heat of the moment. but hindsight is 2020 as they say. and you know, we're the one thing that i wanted to add on to, to values,
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comments in regards to whether or not the a civilian governance or, or transitional stuff tends to be about one sentence left. anything, ties show, use it wisely. go ahead. okay. i don't think uh for a lot of international partners, genuine civilian rule. i was truly on the table. thank you matt. i have his dr. dalia as i used to phone gunny one sentence left in this particular episode of the stream. but we will invite you back. this conversation is not over as to watching. i'll see you next time. take everybody the
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drinks a nice day you were born. and today you know, want to meet the look of this the why are some bangor tossed out to 0? the women use brakes devices like these as you can imagine being used in the way across the front. like when people need to be heard. and the story needs to be told seed was always very hard for me to find a job because i come from a very poor neighborhood with exclusive interviews. and we're back from the heart. and this is our found era has changed on the ground like to bring you more award winning documentary on live news. the .
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