tv The Stream Al Jazeera May 20, 2023 5:30pm-6:01pm AST
5:30 pm
a screen besides compensating farmers on the following 3 basis won't lead to a big enough reduction in nitrogen problems coming up, the government should force for almost a stop. it has to happen now and it will be painful. thomas have to be told you will need to quit and we will withdrawal your license. we will compensate you, but you have to stop. why should hey, this is their life. it's like they're a criminal. it's like they're doing something bad. they produce foods except for water and oxygen. we need food, but they're not the nature of the same. no, no that's, that's, that's just that's, that's who crap. what i would say caroline's on the plaza has grown into a political force to be reckoned with. after her fama citizens movement became the largest party and all the provinces during elections in march. while she supports compensating farms who want to quit, a party is firmly against strict the measures. both of the delay in government plans to half nitrogen emissions by 2030 step 5 and l 20. involved in there. the
5:31 pm
metal in the headlines on alta 0, leaders with the g 7, her promise to support key for as long as it takes and strengthen disarmament and non proliferation efforts. they also discuss china climate change on the risks of artificial intelligence from mcbride, isn't hiroshima. the day 2 of these g 7 in hiroshima, dominated by ukraine and the arrival of ukrainian presidents load them is the landscape straight after his arrival late sat today, he got straight down to work with back to back bilateral meetings, meetings with world leaders who already support his cause, he's fight with russia, but also in meetings with other world leaders who support, he would like to win, in addition to a packed g 7 schedule result. also seeing extra sessions added on the sidelines,
5:32 pm
ahead of for us. as wagner mercenary group says that his forces have full control of the besieged, ukrainian city of fluids, he made the claim and a video in which he appeared in front of a line of fighters holding russian flags circus citizens base. the broad have begun voting in the presidential run off the may 28, run off vote. that's be incumbent for us to tell you. i've heard of gone against the off position chance that has come out care restoral glue or juan. so just sort of the 50 percent needed to in, in the 1st round last sunday. a 2nd meeting between the white house and republican negotiators has ended without a deal to raise the us government's boring limits. treasury is warning, washington could run out of money as early as june. the 1st. so don's capital has come on to renewed air attacks and fighting between the army and paramilitary rapids support forces. the strikes have eastern hard to mon friday, destroying dozens of military trucks. there was a 2nd day of intense fight in the city of new jala and south star for police and
5:33 pm
the democratic republic of congo have made several arrest that a protest against suspected electoral interference. political activists are demanding an international audit of the electoral commission. excuse president felix trisic heavy retaining elect for laws. the benefit him up today to the headlines on alta 0 morning. who's coming up at the top of the hour but up next it's the stream. thanks for watching bye. i of those into the care turned off in large numbers for a presidential election to produce no clear winners. as presidents are drawn and challenger coasted on the go, have to have in over, on may 28th, who will succeed in a final post for the prize. there's a lot of the story as approved on august the welcome to the stream. i'm heidi joe castro. it's now
5:34 pm
a year since out to 0 correspondence sharing abo outlet was killed by is really forces in the occupied west bank. and no one has been held to account as the site for justice continues. palestinian journalists continue to run the risk of assault and detention by israel. today a panel reporters reflects on sure range inspirational legacy and talk to me about the challenges they face while covering the realities of palestinian life the joining today's conversation july cutter is a journalist based and is rarely occupied east jerusalem. us as warry is a journalist and writer who has reported on the experiences of palestinians living in israel, she is in the occupied westbank city of ramallah. and moran who made is an algae, a reporter, based in the besieged gaza strip. hello, everyone. i cannot believe it has already been
5:35 pm
a year since to raise kelly. and really we are not that much closer to finding justice for her. but 1st i want to ask you what, how people who she gave voice to for so many years how they are remembering her on the anniversary of her death. we'll go to you 1st july in occupied east jerusalem to hi. thank you for asking us. first of all, it's really hard to believe that it's been a year and anyone has known sharing was ever worked with street and, and especially her colleagues who actually work for their own the fields. and i've shared a lot of time and the ones who are close to her that we're, we're not, we're not over this grief. we know there is not that no one's been held accountable justice has not been served. but we're still marketing this anniversary. it's been a year since we've lost sitting. uh it's, you know, there's been a lot of events,
5:36 pm
lots of groups coming out to community extremes, legacy of seeing that there's been the announcement of a museum and an occasional institution for journalism. it's going to be sponsored by it is just the, it will be opening and i'm a law. there was a center, there was a declaration of this on the anniversary of shooting stuff. and there's been reports coming out that's highlight is rose repeated pattern and kidding journalists and not a single soldier would be held accountable for the targeting and canning of but assuming journalists people from all of our coordinating her legacy and remembering shooting in palestine and abroad. she's left a strong mark on all of us, and this is what we, we would like it to be stronger even in the future and carry on with her legacy and bureau in the occupied westbank will tell me what the feeling is like on the
5:37 pm
streets on this anniversary of sharing stuff. so it seems like a, a nice no, i'm not, you know, mornings a i, everybody, it's not just journal just but specially journalist. so we can together at the but the cornerstone for the museums and i spoke about um it's a very exciting initiative in projects, but it's very sad that we're doing it after a year for getting um the warning to still us just as this happened yesterday. i can't remember seeing is conversation with my fellow colleagues in certain of us and uh for the journey of this without me mentioning, shooting me, even those who don't have lucas, it goes beyond the people who her and it's very,
5:38 pm
very hard. i can't even put it in watch today. i doubt mute. sorry. and then usually i'm leaving the foundations for the museum. um we would do we agreed to of each other without even tracking this mind. it was too hot this month. it was too in for really uh to just imagine that a year went by without anyone being his account, the right this 5 month to been independent, an international distributions that concluded that. so a nice, nicer shopping kids. right. and around me you are coming to us from gaza. it is a very difficult time right now in the gaza strip. and yet you are also remembering the memory of sharing, how are people feel in the streets right now?
5:39 pm
this is heidi this day was of bruce pressure. so, but i can say that as i turn this and i more today of today and by just being like just doing what she did and has used to do when she was on the field. we committed vehicle murder to this day by reporting and going into the field of, you know, writing and finding the stories and listening to the voices of people who were vix or victims and they were who were killed and injured. why is there any anti air strikes that are going until this moment? so we are entering the, the 3rd day of the, the latest is really a escalation on the gaza strip. and this is, you know, this time is very times it's very, it's full of, uh, you know,
5:40 pm
stories and this is stress, a stressful moments, photos as during this whole, or you know, of the dried stay in the fields, you know, following the news and the chasing you know, the, the air strikes that are, you know, that the attempt to gauze, uh, uh, you know, across that the tech across the globe. the goal is this trip. i just, you know, we're doing what you need us to do. she, she was in the fields she, she was always there to perform her and her job as a journeyman, as and a maybe marking the day of her. you know, it's just the nation by being on the field is another response to the. is there any that your patient that no one when the silence or you know, will silence the palestinian voice or the allison and german this place and
5:41 pm
continuing the jobs are absolutely more. i'm continuing that job is an incredible tribute to sharing and we will ask more about just how difficult that job has become for you all. but 1st i wanted to turn to jo. hi as well because your room was a dear colleague at alger 0 for many years, and this is how she was remembered at the networks headquarters. it's been one year saying was assassinated and it feels like we are still grieving . because justice has not been made. we are here we, i suggest this needs to be made, not just for sharing for every journal these skills. also serious journalist, but other journalist. we saw how journalist cuban ukraine are treated differently. 2 days later, a criminal international investigation is being done to seek justice for them.
5:42 pm
that's not the case. so shooting one year later, and she is an american citizen, as well as funds. we're here to remind the world that we will never relent. i'm seeking just and your last it was in december or that out a 0. i submitted the formal request to the international criminal court to open an investigation and really we have had no updates. we believe there has been no action. can you tell me if there's anything you know, or on the updates of the other investigations into sharing stuff? and this is that the unfortunate part there has been the investigation opened by the f b. i 1st when being a us citizen. uh, but there's been radius silence by the us government by the administration. you know, reduced silence after having made vague promises perhaps, or may even promises vague statements saying they would follow up with that
5:43 pm
investigation. so there's not much open this. how many of should in recognize that the, the passive justice would be difficult on the need to be persistent. whether it's in the us or go into course in europe. then josh and the criminal court had the complaints sub submitted, one by under 0, seeking justice for i just needed journalists and the offices that were bung by is really an air strikes and gaza. another court case by the police to be impressed indicates which is calling for justice for shooting and all that as the name journalists who have been killed by his trial in occupied territories. and the 3rd one submitted by the palestinian authority, which is also seeking justice for shooting is not been much progress on this international justice front. but it does not mean that we stop being persistent in seeking justice and accountability for shootings killers. no matter where they are,
5:44 pm
they could be right now, shooting more palestinians getting more about as soon as we don't even know who the soldiers are. this justice needs to be served and this justice is necessary to stop future killings of journalists and for stuff future cause of the thought, assuming yeah, i would say there's been a lot of them patients and justifiable and patients from journalists across the world. why it's taking so long for action to be taken. i want to bring in another voice from our community. alice spirit, who is reporter, with the intercept. the shooting was one. hundreds of college students were killed by is really forces each year including many journalist. but she was also one of several american citizens who have been killed by israel with no consequence . in her case, for the 1st time as her due, us government eventually lost its own independent investigation. but that only a few months after she was killed. and after a large scale pressure campaign, including by members of congress, while the f, b,
5:45 pm
i investigation is ongoing. it shouldn't take such an effort to get the us government to do something to get accountability for the killing of one of its citizens, particularly by a country whose military to us funds to the tune of billions, billions, indeed, 3800000000 dollars a year in security assistance from the us to these really state and this is causing, um, like i said, some patients and really aggravating advocates for the press here in the us on may 3rd across the world. in fact, it was world press freedom day and we saw the us secretary of state antony blinking on stage, who was interrupted by this exchange. the 2nd guys so so so watching that i,
5:46 pm
i'm sure that you might feel some compassion, you know, for those who are demanding answers immediately and that doesn't seem to be happening around. are you still feeling hopeful that one day assume sharing will finally seek justice? uh actually no um i'm not hoping any just just from base really side of it's not about shooting and it's it's about her palestinian. i didn't the head palestinian nationality. um. oh wait, a lights off to distribute issues, getting that no palestinian is an exception and a front of those really fire paramedics of children and teachers of palestinians are from all the 6 drums. i under there is there any player? and no one will follow up their cases in the international court. or if i did to
5:47 pm
not doing or organizations in every case, just like shooting and other palestinians here and then is towards 0. that is toward code. and you know, they are protected by the international lows or support supposed to be protected. no, none of them. uh, you know, where, uh, you know, you know, none of these really soldiers or, and that none of these really division forces were held accountable for committing any crimes. and so the 3 of you, i go, so i, the 3 of you are, are supposed to be protected as journalists from international law. but you might have a different experience specifically, you know, after the most far right government in israel's history was elected. so there are, i want to ask you, how does that make your job more difficult? what are the daily concerns you have to think about before you walk out the door?
5:48 pm
as uh, being kills me really uh for me and my colleagues. every time we go in the few uh, not just 2 classes. it could be a normal fuse day. we might take a room turn, we might get that too close to something that the military doesn't want us to see. or we might be covering up sort of like the flat of the, the, or the they call the judas. and in the by the fact that by the right wing is or eighties. i remember being among me and other journalists covered inductive, damascus. each in that is jerusalem being get the spot us the head us with the flies. and that's just to name a normal truck just coverage. imagine we what happens when we cover
5:49 pm
clashes. we cover army rates like the one shooting that was killed up during the and i imagine just like the, the, um uh, the cut creations that you have to take. um, some journalists are freelancer's. uh, yeah. we all know that this some how much don't actually predict. i'm some journalist just, especially if you're freelancer, right? maybe a donald rent the phone or you don't have a full year to fix this year. as shooting was waiting for for the year. instead she wasn't for texas for sure. so all these calculations come into account each time we yeah. just allow you want to jump in there. yeah. as if i may just interject with a bit of perhaps that optimism the assassination of shooting does have
5:50 pm
a shilling effect on the palestinian journalists. but something policy means no. when the boston field is not that nothing about being a journalist, even though it's supposed to, but it doesn't protect you because is your, any a soldier looks at you is really sad. looks at you and your father to me and their eyes. you're an enemy. it doesn't matter if you're a journalist or if you're any, any other sort of thought a send in. um, so this is something we know, and i believe that with, with the syrians coming and the fact that it's, it's brought so many people together and is mobilized and many people i've, i've witnessed some incredible moments over the past year, moments of unity moments of strength and bravery, and i've heard from young media students who are studying media, who, who have met to reading the past and who are even more inspired and more insisting on katty, on getting the on with should be in this message to give people their voice to
5:51 pm
speak and approach the people and tell the story of palestine, i think she read is also left an inspiring mark and all those butting during this who are willing to go into the fields with this strength and inspiration. that's. that's thanks to should. and of course we're on is, is to allow talking about someone like you right there is actually, you know, um, um studios that pushed us uh more than more to do uh, more stories that on palestine and daily you know, to 5 more stories and 2 to have the same as drinks and the same face that teen had in her life. and, you know, i can tell that, you know, many palestinians during the least working and working in god's good good affected by her desk and good old by her legacy. and they continued to, to, to fight on some good things the truth. and until, you know,
5:52 pm
passing the message to the audience and trying to do the best of the best and their, and their job. because they sold that a veteran and the senior during the most like shooting was code for the sake of the to. so it's, it's also a, it would be the fact for every palestinian during and if you have a to do it just to go ahead and face of the to be like a brave in the front of a, you know, in the front of the fact and of passing the tools to the, to the, to the community you are reporting to. yeah, you're really on the front line there and, and you are, i know that sharing was one of the reasons you even pursue this career in journalism. can you tell me a little how you are caring on her legacy when, when uh, when uh, shooting uh was kids. i started eating some uh,
5:53 pm
a lot of people my generation were those went into journalism or not that she inspired them during the 2nd intifada. as to be more determined to seek justice for palestinians were living under a occupation. um she basically she uh my words here because i was a teenager during the suspension of interest arising starts in as a the main domain months back then. uh, fee. mm hm. uh, and she was, uh, her arabic was slow, this or her voice was a as city and captivating on her knowledge. she knew everything about everywhere and historic ballast time, the history, uh, the politics. and she became a lot of journalism that, that we all look up for here best and added more
5:54 pm
determination. not just to my purpose in staying in journalism, also to many, many others. and as genetic, they do funding during this to us this year as a, someone who actually used more benefits for the policy and caused that. i mean, i need full edition 3 or other journalists, i would say, yeah. and certainly there are so many who agree with you, i want to bring in one other voice from our community. this is hire bush cut them who sent in this video from occupied westbank the to the year. we policy is how tirelessly demanded justice for sure. we, we call on the international criminal cost, immediately ensure that israel is held accountable for killing, shooting, and forth. ongoing, systematic targeting or posting in journalists despite is rose apparent impunity.
5:55 pm
our pursuit for justice, for sharing continues as we continue to carry out the work she sacrifice her life for on the final moments of our show. as we reflect on sharing legacy, i want to ask the 3 of you, what is the key to get some real action towards justice jello um, being persistent and not losing hope and not falling forward, disappear. being optimistic for about the fact that we can together be processed into the system justice because what that does really is one to assess default into despair and this duration and lose hope and just accept that situation. we're in, we would resist the situation, we would resist the situation to impose and seek justice no matter what. thank you to well, 0 justice for these are for the
5:56 pm
shooting out on the when we are the listings are and then this it can teen safe using the home our house to continue the coverage because is there any wants to silence us once to cancel our voices and order the simulation to keep our voices her is the best just this weekend. cheese and around your final thoughts or um actually even and thats shooting gives us a kind of thing. and during the lessons, she was a huge us lawyer into the tooth and to got to head and all the message of journalism and her convention of to, to conventions and head work. and it's important for us to clearly translated and the sleeping blog of people. and this is what we should look for as yours and this, um, and keep talking about you. dean will bring her just this one day. and you know,
5:57 pm
i want to leave us with the latest numbers about just how dangerous a truly is to be a palestinian journalist. this is a from gypsy guy in kaiser with a committee to protect journalists over the last 22 years. 20 journalists have been killed at the hands of the israel defense forces. 18 of them were palestinian, and the majority, 13 of them were clearly marked press. it's unacceptable. this situation has cost a chilling effect among journalists who are afraid to go out and do their jobs, were must take extraordinary precautions and accompanying risk to do so with the amount of accountability. and so the fear is there may be a chilling effect on reporters, but to our 3 guests, i do not believe that is the case. and please correct me if i'm wrong,
5:58 pm
5:59 pm
reviewing the headline start searching what they say. exposing how the media is used to shake the, the one in the back there that never seems to make a difference is it's on true. it never happened. the listening post. you're going to the media on which is the era a diverse range of stories from across the gland, from the perspective of on network, on thousands of a to awesome products to be lucid from asian countries ending up in western these and private collections in a true pot special report, $1.00 oh, $1.00 east fuller's requests to return asian stolen artifacts. living in limbo, palestinian refugees in loving on say. they are fed with watching the escalating violence and occupied territories, watching their people suffer indignities at the hands of his rate from a distance and from a country whose own economy is in tatters and never being to find
6:00 pm
a sign. but i know about different my family, all the attacks happening and make me feel like it belong to the nation, even more generations displaced and the generations for abroad yet to set foot on their ancestral plans with every passing year. whenever there is an escalation of tension and violence between israelis and palestinians for the thousands of people living in refugee camps like this, the hope of going back home, the rate of return is something that slips away just a little bit more. we don't live in pen and lives inside us and to remain here is to live some of the forest people in lubbock of the .
37 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on