tv News Al Jazeera June 10, 2023 8:00pm-8:31pm AST
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stories and report from the big events is going on, but we'll say and tell the stories of people generally does have a voice. i mean one of the trunk where that's me never be afraid to put the hand up and ask a question. and i think that's what i actually really does, the, all the questions for people who should be accountable. and also if we get people to give that view of what's going on. the advancing against the russian troops, ukraine's president says, a counter offensive is underway in the east the time several venue. this is alex a 0 life from don't also coming up yet another ceasefire and sedan that people hope will hold and help them get desperately need to date. the challenges and trauma,
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as for colombian, children were stranded in the amazon rain forest for 40 days. and after surviving a plane crash and burning out of control, we report from one of the worst wildfire hit regions in canada, the ukrainian president of the mirror zalinski has confirmed accounts for the offensive is now underway. the operation had been expected to start soon. ukrainian forces have made gains in the east, near the devastated city of the moment. they are aiming to in circle the city, which russian forces seized in may. on friday, russian president vladimir putin at warren, ukraine's counter offensive, had begun, and was already failing. well, this is the last case response to dollars show, which is cut off from us. it's interesting that boots and should be talking about our counter offensive. yeah, it's important that russia should feel all ways that it's not
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a long way ahead of us. the counter offensive and defensive actions all taking place and ukraine will not speak about which phase the in, but i would not trust the various telegram channels about it all in particular, proved to make use by the ukraine's military will likely use new tactics as fighting intensifies our correspondent jo stratford is in crematory, eastern ukraine, with more on that. we spent this morning with ukrainian forces in the town of chess . if you all, just if you all are, is important because it is the, the 1st town west of buck moved of coast. buck moved was claimed by the russians to be fully under the control last month that somebody this dispute seed by ukrainian forces. but what we saw in that area seemed to be an effort by ukraine in all its energy units to try as minex. we call it softening up targets in an around buck. mood that's basically testing russian defenses. testing how strongly are before a more consolidated push. according to the ukrainians in that area,
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they said that they all making gains slow gains from the south of the quote. i'm heading around to the east of the town. and they said that those gains could be up to a kilometer a week. but they admitted that some days it could be as little as a 20 meters and all those $500.00. they also said that there was a similar operation happening to the north of bulk mode as well. again, just probing a tax is very difficult to say whether this in fact is part of some sort of diversion we tactic by the ukrainians to attract the attention away from another area where we're so hearing that there is ongoing shelling and heavy fighting that south of zap parisha, but the bul intents and purposes, the kind of the operations that are happening. that's another siren that you hear there in, in the background. hearing cremmit souls, the sirens and outgoing off i suppose, every hour or so. but as i say,
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it's impossible, really to know for sure where the, what we saw in chests, if you all close to bulk mode was anything more than a di bush in from potentially a bigger move being planned body ukrainians in all the areas along the front line, cello, stuff on how to 0 criminals. a journalist daniel hawkins, has more for most go now. there was and 10 special is going on along the southern is that what is your front within? was were let, let's do strikes and i'll tell you. baffles, reported on both sides as they pull up reserves to the front line. war correspondents here and russia have reported the front line has shifted multiple times in certain sectors as the russian forces. pull back the rows of lines, regroup, and reclaim co. true that that information has been coming, as i say, from one correspondence not from official sources lottery uprooting. as we said, that has claimed that the offensive has failed along. sex is the m,
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o. d here in russia is claiming massive loss is for the great inside both in terms of mountain power and material, as well. with the rough and state media also reporting over the last couple of hours when asked like when the middle muted, good old with a tree edfield and another strike one. and i'm a nation depot near the city of commons key. now we've also had a reverend mission from the russian president yesterday that the russian army suffering from a lack of more than military equipment. but he also said that issues being addressed as well as comments on russian casualties. and then other read comments from the russian, m o d saying the russian army has also suffered loss is the far less than the credit inside the 24 hour ceasefire is now in place. incident and the army and power military rapids support forces have been fighting since mid april. and this is the 8th troops that has come into effect the united states and saudi arabia broker. this deal is meant
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to allow the safe delivery of humanitarian aid. however, previous cease fires have failed to stop much of the fighting have been, morgan has more from durham and across the nile from cartoon. many people who we spoke to in various parts of the capital say, this is the quietest day since the fighting started on april 15th. now people say that they were not able to hear heavy artillery that they were for rather than gunfire in parts of the capital. but they say it does not seem to be fighting between the rapids support forces. and this is denise army, and they say it's most likely individuals firing guns. so the ceasefire up until this point seems to be holding. now let's look at how it came about. it was mediated by the united states and saudi arabia, not the 1st. there was another seized car that was mediated set to last for 7 days and then extended for another 5 days now in their statements. and before the ceasefire came into effect both and said that they were frustrated that previous these fires were violated by both sides. the sudanese army and the permanent 3
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rapids support forces, but it is a lot at stake when it comes to this current 24 hour ceasefire. and that's the talk intent that they made it very clear. the mediators made it very clear that should the 2 sides violate this currencies. fire then talks and get the will be suspended and there will be no initiative by both this business idea review and to the united states to try to end this conflict between the rapids support forces and the sit in these army national. it is a political and this will cover a sedan. he says he's not optimistic that this extension will allow for humanitarian access. as i think of both sides are incentivized to keep on fighting . the army needs more leverage before it can really commit to talks. and i think the very the principles of the declaration of the general agreement, which does under pen every renewed cease fire, go against the tactics of both sides in this comfortable for the recept,
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particularly of their strategic utilities to imbedding themselves and residential areas. taking over a huge, important infrastructure like water pipelines of water stations, cutting off water to, to so many residents in the city as well as you know, for instance, turning hospitals and military outposts to ask them to, to withdraw from that puts them into the oven and and, and puts them in their minds from their perception of a significant disadvantage. their, their tactic is to put civilians in danger, in order to frame south as it is coming to force the army as indiscriminate. and they army is going for the bait. the army has shown that it is not interested in trying to limit civilian casualties. it fires from the sky at women's residential areas, and it kills lots of people, you know, as a result of the arts of strategy. but they're not taking very many preventative measures. so we see that the agreement that needs to force both,
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so that would require both sides to change their military tactics. neither side has incentivized to do that. but the ortiz in columbia found for children who spent more than 40 days stranded in the amazon rain forest. the oldest sibling is 13 the youngest, just a year old. they were from the we took the indigenous group and they went missing after their plane craft early last month. the accident happened here in the town of solano in the southern content. the province, rescuers found them about 8 kilometers west of the wreckage sites. we've come, we have kind of, i don't, they are very weak but they know they are in good hands here in the hospitals. everything will be fine and he will keep coming back because this has been a long process. but once they get assigned a rep, yet the isn't but with the with more let me start just saying that it's an extraordinary achievement that they've been able to do that to survive for so long and the jungle. we still don't know the details of what they've done each day,
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but we understand that they one of the main food that they have access to was that what they call study now, which is essentially a ser, i've got to solve a flower that has been long used in the amazon that uh by the parents uh for, for, for their children. they had the little sash of that on the, on the plane that crashed and they use that the 1st few days. then we understand that that product was part of the survival kits. that the, the columbia and military essentially, and the throughout, through and into the jungle. hundreds of the survival kits. that where the board thrown over the jungle from alec cops stairs. and we understand that some of them were found by these children because the rescue teams then found them open the fruit to ask heathen and so forth. another issue. another reason definitely is the
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fact that they are indigenous to children from a traditional we talk to community, they know the jungle. they are used to the jungle, their parents, their grandparents thought them of how to take advantage of what the jungle has to offer in terms of food being at seeds being efficient and the rivers are or, or being fruits. now we haven't been able to talk to them directly, but these are essentially the 1st, the information that we got from both some of the relatives that spoke to journalists here outside of the central military hospital where they are now being under control of a number of different doctors they are looking at is at their medical and psychological conditions. the official is in canada is eastern province of quebec, or hoping rain in the forecasts will help fight the more than
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a 140 wild fires burning their international cruise or their helping fight the countries worst wildfire sees known, the record authorities have set up, makes shift shelters the fires stretched between canada is west and east coast. many have been burning for days, others for weeks. at the moment, 424 active and authorities a most are out of control. the eastern province of come back is the worst hit. it is the smoke from there that is causing small going to haze in the eastern united states or gabriel elizondo has more from could back. this arena has been turned into any evacuation center at its peak there, about 400 evacuees here just a few days ago. now only about 50, as you can see, but there are costs that have been set up. the red cross is here, providing food medicine for anybody that might need it. as many of these activities that have come to this town to flee the fires have been able to find shelter with
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friends or family. never the less, there are still people here. we spoke to a family, a dad and his wife, and 3 young kids that had the we a town about 3 hours north of here. and he said in the middle of the night at 3 in the morning, they were just told you gotta pack up here as quickly as you can. and that's what they did. they said that the fire has not burned down their house that they know of yet, but that it's getting very close. that's the basically what everyone is waiting for here now is to get the a ok the to get back into their, to their house and get back into their town to see what damage has been done there . but the good news is that rain has been following here in quebec for the last couple of days intermittently. and that's helping firefighters to try to contain these blazes. gabriel is on the houses here, rober, canada. thousands of people have led their homes and the central philippine
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province of albania, ahead of a possible volcanic eruption. but many se life in the shadow of the volcano is something that they've become used to want to below. has this report from near the volcano of the central philippine province of followed by in a state of disaster. on friday, forties went from village to village at the foot of 2 more young volcano to move residents to temporarily shelters away from the threats of interruption site to say, the above served an increase in activity that could lead to a dangerous explosion, meadow capable possible. we see 2 possible scenarios. first is the 2014 scenario we're in the own iraq falls, or it could be like 2018 when there was a major interruption. good. despite the warning areas around the volcano aren't a no man's land yet. leon, volcano den mountain behind me that's founded in clouds, is one of the most active volcanoes in the philippines. it threatens to erupt every
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few years. now this area is within its 6 kilometer radius declared as a permanent danger zone. but thousands of people live here. some families of taking a day to way up their options. delatory is, is, are getting ready to leave. after the government ordered evacuations. we're gonna hit out fine, made up on less than that. evacuation center isn't easy. we sleep on the ground. there are cash stipends, but we don't get them right away. you didn't mind your says she's worried about their crops and livestock. but for the sake of her children, she's decided to go less than the and we hear and feel the volcano rumbling. then last night, the summit was glowing. my own volcano is part of their lights, but how can anyone get used to it? they ask when the choices solving between life and death? barton are below algebra. i by the philippines, are still ahead on elsie's 0 tough questions about rails safety in india. and also
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last week, spring crash officials say a lot of work is still needed and why rocks ation, all 3 industries struggling to suffice will have one that when we come back, frank assessments, quite frankly, let's address the elephant in the room. the reason in the south koreans want their own nuclear to terraces because they don't trust the us informed opinions. fighting has basically lock this thing up so far that it is impossible virtually for somebody else, 7 to the race at this point in depth analysis of the days headlines. so then can might an influx of the states that there is no strong government to control and which means that this might affect other countries inside story on challenges. era . the
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our ukranian president vladimir zalinski has confirmed a counter offensive against russian forces is ongoing. ukraine's military says it's made gains in the east near the devastated city of the 24 hour ceasefire appears to be holding between sedans, warring signs that is the 8th truce. since fighting began and mid april, the army and paramilitary rapids support forces are best links to control. for children have been found a line faster, they were stranded into columbia in rain forest for 40 days. the siblings went missing when the plane, they were flying and crashed on maybe the 1st iraq is released $2700000000.00 in frozen assets to iran. that is, according to the head of the countries joint chamber of commerce. it follows a number of meetings between us, iranian and amani officials. dorset jabari has more from different to the latest announcement from the iraqi officials, as well as the confirmation from the head of iran,
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iraq chamber of commerce highlights the fact that iran is still fighting to get paid for the services is providing to a number of countries and in case of iraq, this 3, nearly $3000000000.00 is part of an $11000000000.00, a frozen funds that is currently being held as a result of united states sanctions. now the sections came into place in late november after the november 2018 after the united states withdrew from the nuclear deal in may of 28 and imposed a series of strict economic sanctions on your owns oil and banking sector. now the number of countries that were still purchasing at oil and gas from iran were not able to pay around for those things that they were purchasing. now, the united states, along with the rocky foreign ministry, have held the number of meetings, mainly the most recent ones. being held in riyadh, where the record foreign minister announced that they managed to reach a decision to unfreeze a portion of about
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a quarter of what the iraqi government owes to iran. now, that doesn't mean that the government into around will receive this money in cash. they will use it to pay for a number of fees to, for example, saudi arabia, for the number of nearly $80000.00 the reigning pilgrimage that make the trip annually. they will also be able to use this a, some of that money to buy much needed goods that has been hard to find inside or on for the short term. it's not likely to leave the economic pressure inside the country. but there's hope that in the long term it will be able to provide an example of how iran is able to unfreeze the new, the $100000000000.00 of it has frozen and assets and funds across the world door safari algebra 0 to hong the former british prime minister boris johnson has resigned as a member of parliament saying he's been forced out. johnson has been fighting for his political future after an inquiry into the so called party gates scandal. on monday, the parliamentary privileges committee is due to publish its findings into whether
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he deliberately misled parliament about social gatherings held during the coven. 19 pandemic johnson maintains at all locked down rules worth oh, should bob has claimed responsibility for a nighttime attack on the beach side hotel in the somali capital, the attackers entered mogadishu was leto beach hotel accompanied by explosions and gun fire. police say at least 9 people were killed and 21 wounded. the beach hotel, often the most high ranking somali and foreign officials. at least 5 people have been killed in an explosion in turkey's ankara province. the turkish ministry of defense says there was a blast inside. a rocket, an explosives, factory, emergency crews of rescued people who are trapped under the rubble. chance little bit above the m. k record and explosives factory in element out. there was an explosion in the donna mont department as a result of a chemical experiment,
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according to technical stuff. unfortunately, 5 workers died. condolences go out to the families. we've watched an investigation into the incident. there were 5 workers under the rubble, but we managed to risk it. last, friday's 3 train crash in india is raising more questions about rail safety. the collision killed 288 people and entered hundreds more. 20000000 indians use trains every day or equal social research reports from moving ashore. the capital of a dish of state in eastern india, where the accident occurred. a day of reckoning for the government that's prided itself on modernizing india as colonial ease of re networks. a lot of the so became the side of the worst re accidents in the country. last week, the 3 trains collided, killing nearly 300 people. month sonia and all just as the board was submitted to parliament, wanting about read safety issues. that support is only now coming to lot the full
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you study, highlighted shuffles and inspections, staffing, and the lack of funding for renewing for a trucks. your mind is increasing, but capacity of, of a network has not kept pace. so there is, well, when you apply vision, massive condition. and that condition has a lot of investigating effects, you know, last saturday from mr. new range and moody will, should use to, you know, create a new train. instead, he was visiting passengers and hospital who injured and the ball a sort of crash. the government says it's improve the safety of the trained network in recent years. but the report says, budgets to implement safety measures have been reduced. it's an antique collision system that causes trains to break automatically is operational only on 2 percent. defend just re network and it hasn't been installed on the eastern railroad. the
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last weeks accident happened when i left the 8th and they bothered me. stephanie, this accident shows that this government is not running the railways efficiently. the accident didn't involve one with 3 trains who's paying attention. critics also see real has failed to keep pace with changes in the transport industry. so the problem is that because of the safety concerns, because of this condition is not able to do this dispute. that is, that of that we are losing market share. an accident that came hundreds of flights may be among issues, voters will be concerned about during general elections next year. they've done that will get to them then. yeah, i haven't been waiting for the train for the past on its sleep is ended the duty of our government and showed it the right sort of time and takes us to our destination to see. so, you know, there is a need to upgrade and yes, really into stop to. but 10 more than i zation out face safety of the billions that
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are being spent to make the network better. experts say investments are needed in technologies that make up same safer. let me close, i'm sure to you. obviously the inclination, eastern india, heavy storms and flooding. i've had central and eastern cuba. several villages are cut off because bridges have collapsed. at least one person has died. and many more have had to leave their homes more heavy rains are forecast and the next 2 days in iraq. now, the ancient arts of pottery is declining. many potters have abandoned the craft as people turn to modern imports, but some are keeping that rich heritage alive as not without the one head reports from the one east of baghdad. when life is solved, suffice says there is nothing more soothing than delicate clay. for 24 years, he's made your walk you through additional pottery using centuries,
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all the methods. he says he's family has been in the business for decades, but it's coming to an end high and i took it to because of impulse and elective demand for products and the lack of government subsidized fuel business has been declining. my family members and cousins have changed their profession. it doesn't lock. po 3 is deeply rooted any rocks, ancient cost. families code out the profession from generation to another form asenia using the same ancient techniques to turn them all into kitchen with and bows. the newly made put some pictures need to be left in the sun for a few days until the dried up. they are then put here into this oven, to be heated at about $1500.00 degrees celsius for about 20 hours. and today,
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some families in the countryside is to use clay tongue dues for be king. but the market is being overwhelmed by cheap reports imported from you on expect say, gearbox, heritage of so marian and but loony and pull to re manufacturing has now become more went out, practiced in academia, what instead it does go to an eoc dates back to 4500 b. c. it was linked to spiritual returns in the 1950s are to started introducing pieces, imitating ancient earns, and you're on the books, it is part of your dox, cultured heritage. so even if it declines as a profession, it said flourishes. us quotes or so our history pottery has provided households with most only useful products, but also an archive of people's way of life in ancient times. so far as factory has survived in an area where thousands of others have been abandoned, yet he's the last one in his extended family left. holding on to
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a profession that is thousands of years old would have to do i had under the law. and the other one east of love, dad, and that's it from me 0. then you have next analysis 0. you've got whether the inside story will be looking at rushes plan. withdrawal from a 1990 treaty on conventional armed forces in europe. the following something dry as usual across the middle east we have got some lifted dust, the sand to watch out full but the may whether action in terms of any rain as off shore, we're able to we'll see a radian see grassy pushing some way to the west side of india towards the fall south of pakistan slowly but surely somebody to watch out for next week, a few showers around to k, a westman central passing some showers,
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able to both the cool. this is using down across the caspian one or 2 showers into iran for a time, a few showers to the into afghanistan, but across the road with an inch league of the time which is made to high for it is very, very hot weather pushing in once again, then we have got some that to dust the sad, to watch out for some of the picture to cost 7, north east of africa. all right, $36.00 celsius, a cooler encoder that colder than that has been recently a few shelves into northern parts of tennessee and all them out to you area maybe into the areas of america, but plenty of showers across the west africa nigeria pending to go got a lot of the way across into liberia, seeing those live the showers, and some of the showers to gathering right across the tropics, right across central positive africa. so it just, some went to whether eventually pushing its way into south africa, cape town, dining with us. we go on into monday and grassy, tiny cooler for joe, back on the
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when the news breaks behind me, what do you see is the side of the massive accent. we so involving 3 trains when people need to be hurt and the story needs to be told, there was no profit soccer pitch here. so i trained in the street with exclusive interviews and in depth reports christopher columbus wrote about it. in 1492 algebra has teens on the ground business were pilots catch the way to bring you more award winning document trees and light news. and a court described as the cornerstone of european security as unraveling russia. as finally withdrawing from the treaty on conventional armed forces in europe in november, nato has condemned the move. but did the treaty ever work? and what does this mean for global arms control? this is inside story, the .
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