tv News Al Jazeera September 10, 2023 10:00am-10:30am AST
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to us engages with the rest of the world. we're really interested in taking you in to a place you might not visit otherwise. i feel as if you were there the . ready rescue is trying to reach nelson villages in morocco, flash and apply the f quite for the 2000 people in count. the understand you're taking this is out of here at life from dar ha, with special coverage as america as the weight. i'm going to hold in the historic center and not a cache with 24 hours of to friday nights. earthquake, many hundreds of people afraid of off the shops, spending the night in the open air also ahead. the g 20 summit drops up with
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a joint declaration that mentions the war in ukraine, but avoids condemning. russia will stay live and the indian capital. and winning have fast ran some tennis title. american teenager cook off lists the us. i've been facing the probably beginning more. okay. when emergency crews are racing to find as creek survive is the most destructive quake for more than 60 is on friday killed at least 2000 people. the west have areas all the towns and villages near the epicenter. the and the atlas mountains, the rock and military is also been mobilized, but the rugged terrain is making it very difficult to attempt to reach. these are my communities. a lot of different ghosts gums and toys you for a 2nd. there's all of us living in the village here, have lost our homes. and as you can see, all the people here today have lost somebody. somebody has died in every family. we
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are living in a crisis situation. we asked that king mohammed the 6 intervenes and sends us some help because we are living through a traumatizing situation. the people don't have electricity, they have nothing to eat or drink, no bread, nothing you hold on correspondence or and how is in our cash now as well of what you are in the course of the evening here in mount a cache. i've watched a city as cities so often do return to some sense of relative normality. many big city squares are full restaurants are full. they're still curious, wondering about that. but of course, other city squares, teller all the different story like this one where many hundreds of people to nights afraid of off the shops afraid of returning to their home. some without homes to return to us spending the night in the open air. many all angry at wondering why they're receiving no help from the government. other than the handouts with volunteers, they've been bringing along every now and then in the last hour or 2, but not
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a case. of course, he's not at the center of this quake that lies 70 kilometers to the south west of here, across the high atlas mountains, with rescue efforts are still very much ongoing. the death toll rising and some areas have yet to be reached is matter for the casualty. toll is rising fast as americans begin the hot breaking duty hope burying that the 6.8 magnitude us quake use the worst to hit the region. you know, over a 100 years the, i was asleep when the earthquake struck. i could not ask you because the fall and i was strapped ahead. i was saved by my neighbors who cleared the rubble with their bare hands. now i'm living with them in the house because mine was completely destroyed. but as some bid, the final good byes, others are in the race against time to reach survivors under the rubble, the international federation of the red cross. as the next 48 to 72 hours will be
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crucial, but it's no easy task, especially in the isolated a mountainous communities. such a rescue efforts will be absolutely prioritized in part of calls with making sure that those that did survive all taken care of, of in terms of the basic needs of the government. officials are among the able bodied volunteers involved in search and rescue efforts. the injured and the trapped can only hope that help is on the way to so foamed outside blood donation centers throughout morocco, about a whole. so we are all brothers the solve difficult times and this is why we came here. this is the least we can do some last loved ones, some last the home, some thank god for everything. we must all come together to give the victims of had a royal decree has been issued declaring 3 days of national mourning, while many residents have yet to come to terms with the new reality of rubble and
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despair around them. here in the historic city of myra cache, despite clear evidence that enough quake has taken place, most typically, much of each infrastructure remains on the scale. not so southwest of here in the highest mountains where the epi center of this quite was felt that communities in hard to reach rural areas, will likely largely be funding for themselves. it may yet be some time before the true scope and scale of this disaster is not showing the whole l g 0 motor cash area. and government is opening its asked base to allow the delivery of humanitarian medical age to morocco. i'm sure it had black band fights to its neighbor and 7th ties, 2 years ago as american territorial plains, to the disputes in the region of westminster hara will that spring in less than have died. he's a moroccan senator and a former minister. he joins us now from about some, as, as we've been saying, these areas are incredibly remote. how is search and rescue going appointment as
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well. i mean, like it's, it's very, very uh, high kind of mountains and some of the villages are really isolated. and then the road between monica sunset and then she's a serious role and, and when there is any time in the going to just have it rains or heavy snow is 11 that is also like out a quick like what happened then the road goes also has blocks because there are all kinds of trucks that block the road. so you need to do that kind of cleaning the road then that happened like early morning on saturdays for the ambulances to go in . didn't get to see provide an injury then also for the teams that mean to come and then start to the really, really heroic rescue operation and the going and then to have a sense of the for the big to show you how to go in. so some serious roads like over tens and tens of kilometers like you have going for a lot of cash instead of dense. and that i really just got sort of on the right and on the left over like read yourself about 40 kilometers this way and 40 kilometers
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this way. and those villages you need to go to a roadside some times the roads have not favorites. so we have to bring in the army in order to get to the population in villages and then you start at the rescue mission at the same time that you are evacuating the, the in jury, then some of the insurance wouldn't be backwards in just to make shift hospitals that has been built by the army and some of them will give it to a taken by helicopters if he cannot use them. beloved says because of because of the cases that they have there and then you need to provide them with the water and you need to provide them with the food. some of the communities are really, really far away. and then they have been reached on the yesterday afternoon. some of them probably like during the night and but been out of like on the low level, some how that is being done by the local authorities within those kinds of villages and volunteers. but also with the what would you consider the projection? it's a very heroic efforts that that'd be the rescue teams from the army from the said,
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the 7 foot section from there's on that, i'm not a, it's time for me. i mean, like out of the way, then they need some very multi kind of problem with the kind of operations because you need to rescue people out of the rubble. you need to get the injure. engineers are also a good fit those but that's it's, it's a very, very complex kind of operation in a very high to rain. some of these people are excessive, both 80 in villages, like 80 percent of them were built the tradition of the way you can see that the villages has have been, haven't been wiped out. but you can see that the mother buildings, for example, a mouse or a house that has been built in mother and ways has not been that has not been destroyed. so, but the villages doesn't have which have been wiped out. so they were saying those extra incentive to obviously a huge, huge logistics challenges that you're describing that. but all you now convinced or confidence at least that all of the communities that need help husband reach to all that still villages that,
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that the government has not been able to help yet. you know, i think with the army, the army has a lot of know how to know is the terrain very well because the army interviews every winter in order to deal with population that is being strapped there because of the snow. so when they did this now the army will get chain and then built like villages really like it, like hospitals and then evaluate people indeed with them in terms of for the non, if that. so they know that the range, you know, how to intervene. they haven't done a study and i pretend all of that. so with the army, we'd be had a cup service with the lips and all of that, i think most of the communities will have been reach probably that out. a few villages here. and that's because this, these are very scattered communities over very high mountain section, dude. and in some of that is, and, and it's not like a linear thing. i mean, it's very good and you are talking like an you're talking about like for the provinces, the sense of providence is the house. but what it is that has been had settled then from the south hasn't been hit show on the west. i'll also has been hit and each in
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each of those that are communities and when we're talking about communities, these are scores of images that need to be reached and all of that. i think with the logistical uh minds of the army. i think most of the communities might have been but might have been reached. but i think it's a really heroic effort that is didn't end up going in order to deal with the population out of the 2 s q outside of me sound like i'm saying, what sinuses are. i do want to ask you because this was an unusually strong quake, obviously real who his health has had to grapple with us craig's before. but this one was particularly strong. i know that people have been told not to go back inside their homes. how long is that a potential danger of off the shots when like this kind of guidance from the government change for them? as i said, i think that the after shock is something but nobody would have predicts. but i mean, most of the experts says that says that's up to of shots have happened to me like that might be either after shots, we don't know. i mean,
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what kind of magnitude generally they say that abscess trucks out of like, cuz i've been by the out a week or that i'd have to shocks that have happened. is that enough? we don't know. i think even experts, there is no consensus with regard to that. what he sure is that the high are less mountain views on a fault. now he's on a very serious. i mean like active says me kind of our region. we didn't know that before because i mean like the last kind of art, where did that happen? there was a 120 years ago. so we thought that there are other places the i get the region down for say my region are the most active, that's with the efforts in terms of fund tie system, a kind of construction has been done. but now i think the government needs to pay more attention to the higher, less mountains and secure to those areas. so that different v, like victor b, would be safer in the future. uh for the population of costs. less than head out the american centers and also a full minister speaking to us from about. so thank you so much for joining us here . and i was there and we wish you and your government over the past and the days to
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come right here. thank you. well, the spokesman for the you on sector you general. it says that health is on the way tomorrow. ok. the secretary joe is extremely sad to learn of the news. he spoke to the ambassador morocco, immediately transmitting his condolences to the king and the people of morocco. we have a large team already had been on the ground doing development work. at their request, we sent a disaster assessment team which will be arriving shortly. and we are, of course, on stand by waiting. if the moroccan authorities require international help, in which case we have people in teams on stand by ready to go, but we will do whatever we can to assist the people of morocco and this terrible, terrible tragedy. he made those comments at the g 20 summit, that's wrapping up in new delhi. and he does the issued adjoining declaration that mentions the war and ukraine, but didn't directly named russia know condemn its involvement. also announced an
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economic cardwell connecting india with the middle east and with europe. and that's bringing out of america a james base. he's at the summit for us. james took us through the big takeaways from new delhi. yeah, well the new daddy, somebody is coming to an end that coming to the end of the last session, some of already left joe biden on his way to vietnam. right now. he's already on air force one from here. what was a chief in this session? well, suddenly they got the african union and have a seat of the g. 20. that's probably going to be the most historic outcome of this meeting. and that probably provide some balance to g 20, which is the most powerful countries in the us. now africa and some of the poor countries on us have a seat at the table. they also managed to get a final declaration. it wasn't blocked by russia. and that's because they go around saying much on the war and you came by just recording last year is communicate of the g 20 that took place in bali. i have to say though, that some,
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some of very critical of, of what they've actually done with regard to any quality and poverty around the world. aux families. nation agency says it was uninspiring and underwhelming, criticism to of what they've done on the climate crisis. the g 20 of the big admit to images. one of those countries attending this g 20 but not actually a mendoza is the netherlands. i put it to the 1st deputy prime minister finance minister of the netherlands, simply called the g 20 really haven't done enough. this is obviously says that if there's a different view by different countries, but i know it's a european union level. the conversation will happen to that we need to be in the next year and 2040. it's not going to be easy, but it needs to be discussed. and ultimately, one needs to commit. this is the reality and it's also fair to see and have an expectation of the big events or is that they do more. that was particularly also over. you see the discussion at the climate, somebody and i wrote it so it is
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a cumulative process. she talks about not roby, that was the african climate crisis. we've got the un general assembly. what time it will be a key issue coming up in new york next week. not just the g 20, but all the countries, the world, all $193.00 nations to the united nations representatives and then at the end of the in november. so next to those climate co conferences that this time is taking place in the united arab emirates in device times based out different navigators at the g. 20 summit for us and your j. thank you. james of russia. the law has launched an air attack on the ukrainian capital keys last rang out across the city and surrounding regions that early on sunday morning. and while russia says if foils ukrainian attack over the bronze border region, there were no immediate reports of injuries or casualties. well, that's bringing a correspondence saying does. robbie joins us now from the ukrainian capital design . it really sounds like it's been
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a sleepless night fuel that are in case that is right. the military has confirmed that at least $33.00 iranian made kamikaze drones were launched from the north of the country. most of them headed for central keys. the military confirms that had shut down 26 in neutralize 26 of those drones. all of them targeting 3 districts of the central part of kia. this is home to businesses, residential areas, diplomatic embassies, markets. this is primarily civilian space. and what we've seen overnight is the mayor confirming that it caused a fire in an apartment block at a public park. now what your training and say is that these are primarily civilian spaces. there are no strategic military assets. and this is a continuation of a campaign of fear being carried out over the skies of their country. now, it is not necessarily the most intense aerial campaign we've seen,
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even in the last few weeks. but this, none the less resulted in fire crews going out in the middle of the night, around midnight or 1 in the morning is when we began to hear loud explosions in the area of the central part of the city. pictures began to emerge of fire crews trying to put out flames of debris and damage the vehicle was being cleared from the streets. and even though this isn't necessarily one of the most intense aerial campaigns, as i said, it comes on the heels of this g 20 summit in which a communicate was issued that you put and allies in this conflict said, was a success that it happened at all but ukraine has come down as not going far enough, in terms of language to criticize russia and his actions in this country. his name is rob a, the, for us, live in the opinion, capital keywords, overlays of thank, choosing reading on and 11 on this can take a prime minister, has one, does it renewed financing, and
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a palestinian refugee comp doesn't solve the cause and also homes, the lebanese stays not do because he had talked with the kind of stay in presidents by one of us following street baffles. and now how was between rival sections 5 people were killed and thousands injured as the seas 5 between palestinian groups ended on friday. but i know how, what is near the southern city of c dot, it's the largest palestinian refugee count 11 on nearly 55000 refugees in m l hallway. it's one of 12 that comes in devon, on full palestinian refugees, which were established back in 1948 after the creation of israel arrival factions have long fought for control, and the densely populated camp and agreement facing back to 1969 prevents the lebanese army from going into the account in order to restore one order. well that speak to zang a honda, she's net and co. what for us saying that they have a multiple incidents there and the last few days to go through what's behind this rise intention as well?
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outbreaks of violence are not uncommon. we've seen this time and time again. in recent years. there's lawlessness and accounts, how to send you infections are armed, a lot of criminals wanted by the lebanese states. hi. then i know how do we, as we mentioned the lebanese army, is not allowed to operate inside the camp. the security a security affairs is run by a joint protestant infection. but the latest outbreak of violence sparked was sparse. about a month ago when a senior commander of the palestinian felt that movement was assassinated. now for believes he was assassinated by a group known as the muslim youth, a number of armed groups. and they are demanding that the 8 suspects be handed over to the lebanese to district. in order to face justice. the muslim use is refusing to do that. and that's why there was a truce for approximately a few weeks while investigations were underway. but now it seems, there is
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a decision for an all out confrontation. what we understand from the officials is that they will not back down. they are accusing the muslim use of trying to take control of the account right now. fuck that is the dominant faction. so they're accusing the muslim use of trying to push them out and take control of the account . they're saying this will not happen. you can hear the, the sound of gunfire. clashes have been fierce and over the past 3 days in a we know a mid these classes. some people have fled to the kind of the do we know how they're doing as well? yes, we are. it's one of the entrances of the camp, and i'm sure you're seeing behind me as try the stream of palestinian refugees making their way out. they tell us they're tired. they can no longer stay inside. the 1st of all because of the fighting bomb shows a machine gun fire. a sniper fire is, are being fired indiscriminately and landing,
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and people's homes there have been, people have been wounded. so they're, they're, they're making their way out. but they don't know what to do. these are poor people, 90 percent of palestinian refugees live in poverty. if they do not work today, they cannot put food on the table and they're still not enough places for them to go. there are a number of schools that are and a mosque that are being open, but still not enough to house all these people. and yesterday there was an attempt by the red cross to set up tents. and the people here refuse. they said no. what are you doing? you're reminding us of 1948 when we were 1st displaced, following the creation of the state of israel. so they refused to live in tents because for them, when they see tense, it means that um, you know, they may never come back home to their comp, even even though life inside the camp has been one of misery. these are tens of thousands of people who are now trapped inside a war zone. a woman told me that they can't find enough food. we've seen people buy
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bread from nearby bakery is to go back into you can hear how fierce these clashes are. so people really trapped in a word zone how far as long as they know, how did they at the entrance, one of the entrances to and how i can. thank you so much and a andrew stay safe yourself. when i returning to our top story the quick and the real hope that's now speak to out of there is a lot of hodge, he's in myra cache or not. can you talk us through what you're seeing now around you? this is actually on what we are and one of the places where people decide to spend that nights at hay and brockridge afraid into another a squeak. and also we are waiting for and you and them both updated numbers by the officials regarding the reasons and the casualties. and this will actually,
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the numbers, as you know, was double during the past 3 or 4 hours. we were talking about more, we're talking about 14 hundreds of a to 4840 a 100 state, and now we're talking about more than 2000. also, there's more than 1400 at serious injury that might rise the number of the just total in this and get those for free. regarding the risk you. that operation is actually the, the team's the local teams and also the friends who arrive during the past couple of hours, literally fighting tooth and nail. but again, and they some, the obstacles are they, are they facing in a festival. the disadvantages of the, the, the jo, perfect nature of the police as that was a hit by the large scale. ask with behind me, if we can show this people's, the group of people actually who decided to spend the whole lives actually to the numbers where and hundreds during the uh,
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in the past couple hours. but i can see that people can not stand the with the, especially during the do the night was reason literally that he, so they decided to find a shelter and the government of institutes and people are seeking for shelters of and in the house of the relatives today, also, as you, as you know, that the national morning was at, declaimed by the authorities and the flags all over the country. well, a load, again the at the government said that they are doing the best. but again, and i would still can about the all these speed bites rescue teams. but up like 2 hours of the one hour ago, there was some but cooling from people in different places and different villages. and countries said that no one reach them at from the, the beginning of the district. those to be. and that's again, because of that,
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because of the far away places and all, all these village, based on high hills and mountains, are run baracus in the south of morocco. does. there is an, i'll hush the with the laces for us from the ground in our case. thank you. i'm, i will be having ongoing coverage from across morocco here on, on does. they're moving on on preliminary results of the presidential election, and the movies show that opposition candidate and the human whizzer is leading. with 2 thirds of the balance counted, he's projected to win 46 percent of the votes, which would mean a run off later this month. against president abraham mohammed solely hello or contain agent cook a golf has won the us open to claim her 1st grand slam title and she did it by fighting back from a set down to beat the new was number one on yes. how? blanca david starts as well. last year the us open set decide to serena williams. this year it said hello to
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a new grandson champion. the users to my peers. today was the 1st time i've ever seen my dad cry. the i've been coming to this tournament, my dad took me to this tournament, sitting right there, watching venus and serena kentucky. so it's really incredible to be honest. this was coco golf. it's flushing meadows as an 8 year old in 2012 on sunday as a 19 year old. she learned up against the best player in the world. the australian open champion, i read the sutherland, and it was about a russian who started strongest. taking the 1st set 6 games to to but that can go a fine list at the french open list, you determined to take the trophy this time,
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man. you don't, boy, i'm proud of 22000. he took the 2nd set to square to match the vents and stayed with her into the 3rd and with several, a list of what she from a sense she got the job done. when it gets 6 to to try to 1st make it tied to the last, the 1st man that wimbledon in july. but since then has 118 if in 19 matches she's the 1st american teenage it's when the us open to serena williams, one was a 17 year old in 1999. honestly thank you to the people who didn't believe in me. those who thought who were putting water in my fire, you're really adding gas to it. and now i'm really hurting. so right right now it's the 50th anniversary of the voice money in new york and go from the way with the windows check of $3000000.00. she's already received
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a call from president biden from the g 20 summit immediately and sold the president for record. bama city couldn't be prouder of the best is yet to come save it stops 0 to 0. and that's it for me is does he change whether isn't x then inside story, stay with the got here, the ultimate goal is spreading further. just kind of a view this big. but if i pressure is what's doing it around the edges, whether, whether sits by whether i mean the, when do you wet stuff, it's just just barely catching places like scuffling. it's not coming into the coast, no way for you over the temperatures for places like helsinki and stuck. i'm, we're up above the way with the average suggest it's not a heat wave territory. it's pretty woman who's bought the offices be the total year in london, said he was a full cost full sunday nephrotite. you'd be all night. it does come down on monday
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then back down on tuesday as it stopped. right. which is rather more normal. but to be honest, much of you, it stays warm at the house. if it's, if you like or away from france to jimmy's staff to was 18. they were in the thirty's. for the most part, there's plenty of breeze coming up. the black sea still dry in greece, that is mostly dry in spain, but in portugal the rain is increasing and there are shared stuff elsewhere. just at the bottom. you can, you can't see it now that storm system, that's what caused the flooding grease. it's now a bite to do the same, to east and libya, particularly big gauzy kind of course is still plenty of rain as far north as, as a hill. a big clump going off show through getting and see already and another one building probably as far east as the central african republic. that will go west the stories of hope and inspiration. schultz documentary from around the world that celebrates colleagues and resilience in the times of
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