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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  November 9, 2023 1:00pm-2:01pm AST

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it's likely explains the global audience, why it's important, because impacts the light at the height of the storm. to hi, bye hey, this is an important part of the world. people pay attention to this very good bringing the news to the world. from here. the the, the answer of any age group, they have you with us. this is the news our lied from the coming up in the program . this, our more wounded people arrive at an overcrowded l shift. the hospital in gaza city is really farms. x flows nearby, tens of thousands fleet, the self concept that find no safety as air strikes and han eunice kill at least 4
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people. guitar is helping negotiate a possible ceasefire and gaza and release of his really captives. the sky director is expected him to offer talks here, gas tension and the occupied west bank was really raising the amount of lead to stand offs with panelist at the st. battles between palestinian fighters and his really forces are intensifying near the center of gauze. a city that says israel continues its relentless bombing campaign across the north of the gaza strip. like, oh, apple begins our coverage just before dawn and gaza slays light up the sky. off during nights of bombing the jabante, a refugee camp in the north and sub district in the waste or under attack
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near the entrance to god. his biggest hospital people run to safety. the rising sun reveals a smoke filled sky and the northern gaza press of the day i should is a majority. for nearly a month, there's been no electricity to power fridges at the mold and many dead bodies. and they compose on this child beyond recognition. we the ministry of health together with the justice ministry prepared different grade level, but no one is untouched by israel is bombing, campaign name on the way call families. some of my family members are killed, some injured and some missing were now looking for one another. thing, jabante a. at least 9 people were killed. many more missing, most likely buried under other ray. the forces have ended, garza said he and all the battling palestinian fight didn't street by street in the house by in scenes reminiscence of the force displacement of
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750000 palestinians. during the creation of israel. in 1948, tens of thousands had been forced from the north in recent days. and those able to get out head for the rough. i border crossing with egypt. this is the gate we had this night there. i cannot even send them to see what people are going through . on the other side, the humanitarian crisis unfolding and gaza is unprecedented. as many palestinians are forced to eat scraps of bread and drink whatever water they can find, even if it is contaminated and then safe water had let the i wish i could go back home that i hope i can go back to school and see my teachers i wish i could go back and play with my friends. i hateful because it took the lives of all my friends
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when night's returns, so to israel's bones. and nowhere the site level, which is their houses here is honeywell. mode is in the southern, gaza and what a refugee camp talk to us about the people of gaza who are trying to leave the city and about that decision making the yes, nick, we are still here at the interest of, of the rage. can the central part of the gaza strip in the area that is supposedly designated by these really military as a safe area for palestinians. now, hundreds of palestinians starting this morning at the window 10 am to 3 pm were given and by it is really military to start evacuating the northern part time jobs of cities, hundreds of palestinians. and you can see from the camera,
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started to pour into the central area. we managed to spoke to some of the people come into this area who, who told us about horror stories on their, we'd 1st of all the, the can, they can drive their cars, the walk a long distance to get to an area where there's really military setup at check point, where they have to show their id cards and raise their hands without any belonging and let them in. but on the sides of the road, they told us about the store. horrors store those of bodies dictated bodies from the past. 2 days are on both sides of the road, being shot ad or the die has a as all of the an air strike. what noise teller is telling, targeting civilian cars on the road. all of this is happening under heavy campaign of years, strikes and bombardment of the north garza and gauze, the city. what seems to be israel, the strategies to push people and put them under the pressure of a force displacement that there's no sleep of place inside gods and the northern
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parts. and none of the elements of life that they could hold into, such as water bakeries, food supplies, or solar panels, even our star, they are any more so feeble. it's a difficult decision. it's a hard decision for so many as we've seen the whole entire family, the crying full of tears as they told us about the humiliation and the care of these experience on the road from gaza to the central part of the interim. boorish cam right now and what happens then? we know honey that it's estimated more than half the palestinian population in gaza has already been displaced. you've just told us about the hiring circumstances that people have to endure when they're trying to leave the north. now to come to the south, what happens for those who do reach, for instance, i'll be race camp where, where you are, the great dogs in the northern parts just turned into
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a desk and the central part than the southern part of da da da is it gradually and increasingly becoming a large concentration can we have some at the 750000 pallets and you're really here with hundreds more are pouring into this area. it's becoming very crowded. and. and then if the owner was, schools are fully packed or really was so many a vacuum we've been trained into the area here, it will become very difficult to, to respond to the emergency. and the needs of those evacuees, in terms of food supplies, of, in terms of human at 3 and a just to sustain them says some of the people who arrive at this point, they are still at the side of the road. they don't know where to go, they don't have a place to go on. this might one of the reasons why it's the, the, the lift gauze at this time because they already had no place to evacuate to. and in addition to, if we talk technically,
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there is no safe place in gaza. some of these people have rudy family members who have already evacuated. the south already found themselves under unpredictable bonds. an error strikes an already killed so it's for them. it's that they've everywhere and there is no place more sleep than the other. unfortunately, everywhere they go, deep feel that they're going to die if they're going. these just died instantly in the north, in part here. what seems to be a star vision? what seems the lack of water seems to be the threats of a fully on a predictable bump. they're going, it's going to kill them. honey mountain road reporting live from a boy raised camp that's in the southern part of the gaza strip. thank you very much for that honey. let's try and find out as much as we can about what's happening inside gaza city itself at this hour. hidden cou dory is a during listing, gaza, you are able to join us live from gauze. the city, you're one of those people who have stayed. i see you're indoors and you're still wearing your bullet proof vest. why?
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because we open the windows of the office and it's very obvious like everyone sees us. so we want to make sure that that is where the voices know the people on this floor are a journalist because there has been i'm saying that the attorney forces are stationed on a couple of buildings across the ghost gym across like about a couple of blocks and i'm like only 20 meters away from everything going to be happening. there has been a lot of exchange acquired by the munition on our colors shopping and got lost as far as quite the funds. and there has been very intense up to your inbox out this sound is, is ongoing and continuous sense the top 3 days there has been a lot of fighting between the palestinian arch. how does he find a fighters as a is really arms in the same exact area we're talking about the area between devices played and done sod area. and that's also how to use the fighting to where
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you are. only like a couple blocks away. maybe 20 meters away from where the 5 can just turn to happening. and i'm a something else. it's crazy where i do like my house, my family's house. there's center didn't station over there. so it's very intense. it's very stressful. and i feel like i'm very worried before this is my neighborhood of the pricing just trying to taking place in my neighborhood. explain to our viewers, why you and your family are still in gauze and city. see, i'm not. my company's not ok bye. is that what is it to the, my husband at least somebody is actually considered black. and i'm the only person saying, because i believe that everyone is back to a bed and everyone laughs. and i feel that i have a huge responsibility to watch what's happening and to tell the world what strange
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happening. there's a very few number of a palestinian journalist for a city but to a thing to the south. but i am one of the people who believe that, like i have to say there is not a lot of english speakers talking to the media and talking to each other like a forcing on what's going on. and it know that there's a huge responsibility on the 2 port, let's keep going on. okay, so look, this is a call that reporters and work on respondents in particular have to make when you're staying in a place that is dangerous, that you know to be dangerous. and that people are leaving for that reason. so i, and i understand you're thinking, but if you don't mind share with our viewers what your decision making is going to be in the coming hours maybe days. is there a point where you're going to say ok if the is really military, open another window for me to leave. this time i will leave i think so far. i don't feel that there is a risk in danger on monday night or where i turn key on because i'm away from where
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they are being stationed and targeted. but, but as soon as i feel like it's not only me, we are now a couple of dc journalists in this building. reporting to start from outlets are masses for us right now. yeah. and you know what, your microphone is picking up some audio that i couldn't hear earlier, but we now heard we're, we're hearing not just the sound of the drones overhead. but we also heard that what i think was gunfire just a moment ago as well as showing. so it's it's, it's the units in between the product and inside service. and that is where the army and there are sniper stations on a couple of buildings. we saw a like an hour of both fighters is tracking our b j's on one of the buildings where they believe that there are, uh, it's pretty important in dispensing. so what happens is a lot of people do fax wasted. all the houses are empty right now. and is there any
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horses are stationed in these buildings and they're trying to, to, to scare the way for themselves, different areas because the policies like, just, are still working on looking for the parts. i think that so it's very intense. i never missed such thing. i never thought i would report see what's going on, and i really find that like, no one in the congress never imagined this spinning. i've never imagined. i'll be here. i'll be very suffering to stay in boss. i don't feel like i want to leave my house. i don't want to be my dog. i don't want to use the people who are still in our hospital in foster care in honor was was the we, we know when i see and i see people every single day evacuating from here. but at the same time, there are thousands of palestinians refused to me. we are talking about hundreds of thousands in the, in the nation with us in the another. we're talking about more than 40000 products
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in the hosp to their students over each other in the office in to see these people are still here. there's a large number of people who refuse to leave the office to enter that to it through the software and use it. but when you walk around gaza city right now, do you feel that it's an empty city except for those pockets of population to hospitals and then you wouldn't run schools or do you think it, do you see? but it's the city that's very much populated. it's still i see i was, i was amazed to see people are still searching for walter, striving to find bread. people are like everyone, everyone is trying their best to look for. and how do you do that right now and gaza? we try to search the. c couple of people operating and they're, they're, they're, they're trying their best to get flustered for everyone. people are still operating
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with solar panels and they're still trying, trying to their best to provide water for these people. 88, it's like you have to wake up very early and be the 1st on the to lie. and, and, and, and i really see people sitting in the cities. now there is own restaurant operating . people are crowded over there. we do see like composite empty, there. c tend to people still here and, and what is your, are your national news organizations are trying to persuade that? everyone does not. okay. i mean, i think it's, yeah, everyone is not. 2 people are senior people, still refused to use the dog to skip the measuring mazda service because they fear that the students do that, but they don't want. yeah, imagine that, that's something we're going to talk about learning later in the show. because in that you, you may have heard michael, apple's reporting at the top of the show that some of the scenes that we're seeing
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clearly are reminiscent of what happened to 1948. that's something we will definitely address later. before i let you go, i want to ask you, is the fighting, right? do you feel there is a front line somewhere in gaza city? i mean by that a line of contact, and that's where the fighting is taking place. on either side of that line or is it more diffuse across the city? you know, it is a line i've seen. they are trying to be stationed in the center of the city at surrounding. so that's why they came from receipts for you to outside the refugee camp. they're being there because the way the way from the outside to refugee. so that's why there's a lot of shit, a lot of extracts from a sausage. but what's happened is in the other, she's the people, there's nothing, there's no b. so there is no houses. it's, it's, it's a b 9 people go there like you, it's a sidewalk for people once inside the sea and it's for the company. so they're
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already, but they're having a very hard time crossing from count, despite the fact that they have been warning people from these steps where people i'm calling them to buy people are still there. and that's why there have been a lot of time and it's taking them a lot of time to engage from the shop that messages up for me. and for my to me, it's very obvious what they want to do is they use what they're trying to reach. and i think it's, it's, there's a line and there's a month there trying to look best or really interesting information from inside garza city, which is not only surrounded, but he is really military, as you've explained to us. and according to our reporting as well, is really military has been pushing into gauze as largest city. and you have to say you're doing a stella job at reporting. and you are telling us at the beginning of this conversation, you're staying because you want to do that job and you want to tell that story. so we're glad that you took your time to tell our viewers that story. so thank you for
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that. what are you just before i let you go, you at some point in the day, do you keep that best on all day? yes, because the, the windows are, and there's really stationed on the building. so like when she would come again, i don't know if you told us that earlier you told us there were a sniper stationed on your building or not. my building on the building is in from an inside of us. okay. alright, so we take the windows because we are very scared that if something happens with the windows. yeah, you don't want the windows to be shattered. if there's bombing, we're showing him him, could you look, i know it was really hard for you to come up, live, get the connection going. we almost couldn't make it happen, but we're really glad that you could make it happy. thank you very much. and you think, you know, the head of the united states, the central intelligence agency is visiting guitar on thursday. william burns will
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meet government officials to discuss ongoing negotiations over the potential release of is really captives held by home us in gaza, up to 15 captives couldn't be freed in exchange for a ceasefire. bob reynolds reports from washington, d. c. c, a director william burns has been travelling for the past several days in the middle east. he went 1st to israel, then to egypt, and now to carter a country which has played a key role in negotiating. the release of hostages held by a mos in gauze of the talks appear to set her on a idea of a 3 day pause in israel's attacks on gaza. in return for the release biome us of $10.00 to $15.00 hostages and analysts say the talks appear to be gaining momentum. there's a lot of movement in the right direction on the hostages. that will be a main focus of burns is up to and how mice and, and israel at times they'll take this maximus positions. we won't do this unless
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all of that happens. but both sides are also talking about women for women, children, for children, elderly, for elderly fighters, for fighters. so when you have that type of rhetoric, there is a glimmer of hope that some hostages will survive and be released. a burden spent much of his long career as a diplomat in the middle east and is well known to the leaders in the region. he is also reportedly traveling to jordan and the united arab emirates as well as possibly other countries, all in a bid to provide some respite to the inhabitants of gaza and the release of some hostages, as the war rages on. robert oles, l g 0. washington for talking to president richard cypert, a one is calling on asian leader, is attending an economics summit in his beck, a stan to speak out against israels war on dawson little. now the children are being killed and gaza, and all the leaders are staying quiet and not saying anything. they're being killed
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in front of our eyes. and we as muslims, should raise our voices if we don't do it now, when are we going to do it? french president, the remainder of my call has called for a humanitarian pause in gaza as soon as possible and said there needs to be a push for a cease fire or mccoy's hosting world leaders and heads of age groups to discuss getting humanitarian aid to people in gaza, these are the pictures from paris struck just a short while ago. the thoughts are aimed at mobilizing funding and emergency assistance. receiving the steps for putting the civilian population us to page connectivity. it is absolutely essential. this is non negotiable, this is an immediate need and then the longer term and opiate conditional prerequisite to insure for the fight against terrorism. today, the situation is extremely serious and it's getting worse every day. and me,
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in the immediate future, we have to work on a civilian protection for that. and we need every quick humanitarian and also for break. and we have to work towards a cease fire. well, a potential butler is at the, at least a palace and power as the passion tell us a little bit more about the state of the aim of this conference. i mean, is this mostly fundraising? let's see how much cash we can get for, for guys in reconstruction efforts down the line. or is there a more precise humanitarian plan? i'm guessing it may be the latter based on what i just heard my close a to look at. so it's a bit of everything we've been watching delegates of all i have. of course i've been talking for some time now amongst them representatives of the palestinian authority. israel not invited to this conference, but they will be a brief says the at least said when he comes to the aim, this is all about trying to get more humanitarian aid to civilians and garza who are suffering so much. so we're talking about things like food, water,
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and electricity, medical assistance also looking at ways to try and get that age in more easily and to get some of the more wounded people seriously. where did people out to cool? some of that is easy. it's also about trying to raise money, looking to donors, to put in move funds so that this age can happen. and one of the proposals is going to be discussed today is one that was put forward by you member state as cyprus, the closest you meant to stay to, to gauze. and as i say more about opening up a maritime cory door. so what that would mean is that the united states, for example, use a c in order to use that as a route to goals, but that is folded problems as well because goals that doesn't necessarily have this will support infrastructure that would allow that to happen. safe delegates looking at how the c route could be used. but if a could that means more a to come in. that means you could have more floating hospitals. we know that
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phones is ready preparing a helicopter to ship with medical assistance on board for the region. and that could be one of the things that could help people in the area. but of course, today's a conference. all of these things are just being discussed. we don't expect to necessarily any concrete solutions out of it, but they all i, there is, is there is this sense of urgency that the population and goals and needs more health. and that's all as regards the humanitarian effort, right. getting a maybe raising funds will definitely raising funds as regards the findings, specifically talk to us about the language being used by the french president in the early days of the fighting. he wasn't talking about the ceasefire now. he's saying, and we just heard him say, we need to quote, work towards a ceasefire. i'm not sure that's quite the same thing as calling for an immediate cease 5, a lot of what's the fonts as being
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cooling full up to now is a humanitarian sci fi i'm. that's pretty much something that we've heard from a number of you members stays cooling, full humanitarian poor. so what that would mean is, let's say, perhaps a few days, a pause in the fighting between how my son is well in which you mount his hair in aid would be able to reach people in gauze or in which people would be able to be evacuated. if possible, it's all about focusing on the humanitarian needs of the civilian population that is different from a loan last increase by which means basically in. busy to the fighting, but that is what we had present my call cool for today. he says that the international community must put in place immediately a humanitarian sci fi to allow aiden thought. it must also work towards a a ceasefire alone. the last thing sees for and now we've not heard. most of the member states talk about a call for a ceasefire such up to now as i said,
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any humanitarian pause. but there is a sense that of course, fist fighting needs to stop. and the more needs to be done to work towards. and that's what we heard from the french president today. and natasha butler reporting from the leaves a palace and central power powers, where that donor conference and humanitarian aid conferences taking place. thank you very much, natasha. i wanna bring in with the site, you're a professor of law at the university of colorado school of law. thanks for being with us. you're obviously following all of this very closely the talk that we've been seeing. it's not new for, for quite a while now about the language around stopping the fighting. there, it seems like it spends a whole gamut from humanitarian paws, which is localized and temporary to cease fire, which would be everywhere, all the time. stop the fighting. but when you take a step back, all of that seems really divorced from what's actually happening on the ground. yes, i think that's right. and i think what we're seeing is, you know,
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countries especially european countries in, in america. i think the discourse is a little bit different, but you see with this a conference now in paris, i think europe and countries have been alarmed with is really actions up till now which have been so violent. and the percentage of civilians that have been killed has been so high. i think there is a level of shock because of the rhetoric, you know, in the early part about those killed women and children, women and children, which is, you know, that's in the international law around what kind of a signal that they're not combatants. and so, you know, when you put that all together, the european countries, especially friends with those rhetoric after october 7th, was very, very, very pro is rarely, you'll see that what's happened since then has been so alarming that they've now changed their tune. and, you know, these terms are not well defined in international law, a few monetary and pause and cease fire. they're kind of, you know, left up to the, i'm the sort of the international community, the warring parties to kind of massage if you will. but certainly to mandatory and
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pause is less comprehensive than a ceasefire. but already we're seeing a move in that direction on the international stage. but still living is really, are rejecting that type of even even a brief hold some of the fighting. they're rejecting kind of out of hand without you know, concessions from my mouth. and i don't know the only player, the us also saying no, see, start humanitarian pause. yes, push push, push for that, but ceasefire. no, no, no. well, i think the american position is very, very perplexing because i think they're stuck with their rhetoric and they're stated, you know, stated position of being a complete and utter support for the israelis that runs the gamut from the president to many members. not all, but many members of congress about no ceasefire, and these really have to be allowed to finish the job and destroy i'm asked, which seems to be coming really divorce from what's going on on the ground. and, you know, meanwhile people continue posting. just continue to be killed by the you know,
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hundreds and thousands. so it's, it's a pretty particularly, as you mention strange situation where, what's going on the ground doesn't seem to match what people are talking about is like 2 different worlds. right. then the reason i bring it up, of course, is because when you, you're bringing in a world leaders and decide or is and, and you know, key figures. i believe it was the egyptian foreign minister. i saw walk up the steps of the french presidential palace when you're bringing everybody. and you're, i think a long drawn out conversation about exactly what kind of cessation into fighting. but then you turn around and as we try to do, we open most of our shows with that with what's happening on the ground. you just, you just wonder whether we're talking about the same thing. yes, yes. and, you know, we also have to confront what is kind of the international elephant in the room of the united states, having a long, extensive history of protecting israel from any accountability any, you know, sort of and, and the american leaders have been very clear. they're not gonna, they've been asking these really, i'm suggesting, you know, president biden secretary state blinking. they've been, you know,
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generally suggesting, well, and now make me stating positions that they don't like this rhetoric or they don't what, you know, they're, they're disagreeing. but have they pushed them to do anything? when asked about that? they say, well is real as a sovereign country. we can't tell them what to do, which is of course, a little bit for flexing from the outside and given how much aid and protection the united states offers these rarely ste. yeah. that, that's a question we've been asking and recent days on the leverage that the us has, you're staying with us because we have a lot more questions for you. we want to go and check what's happening in the occupied westbank, where there been more rigs. medical sources have told l 0 that's 6 palestinians have been killed and at least 8 wounded in ongoing is really raids on the janine refugee camp in the occupied west back health officials say 4 of those wounded are in critical condition. they include a female medic who was shot in the back. this is really media report. the army use the drone and those raise. it also dropped leaflets, urging people not to support the palestinian fighters. mohammed john,
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whom is in ramallah. what more do you know, and what more can you tell us about these, janine res monona, cheryl. these are extremely intense raise. they are only intensifying. we're told that in the last half an hour, more is really army reinforcements have shown up in the janine refugee camp. as you mentioned, at this hour, we're told by medical sources at least 6 people killed, at least a people wounded. there are concerns that that death toll will rise as the clashes continue. now we have heard from my witnesses on the scene that these really army has been dropping leaflets in the area, essentially telling people that they should not support terrorism. that they should give up any fighters they know might be in the camp and that these really army will continue to re janine and the refugee camp there, as long as palestinian fighters remain in those camps. we should also mention that as more is really army members move in, were told the clashes are intensifying. these raids began
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a little over an hour ago. we should mentioned that there were intense raids that went on in the gym. janine, in the overnight hours, those lasted a few hours, even in the overnight hours. now they are only getting worse. and the latest count we've heard from the sources inside of the janine refugee camp is that since october 7th, there had been at least 30 palestinians killed in jenny. we are waiting more details. it's a very dynamic fluid and volatile situation. so and will bring you those details as we get them 0. look, there has been raised at a very high eclipse in the occupied westbank ever since the attack and israel by a mouse on october 7th and, and to state the obvious is had a profound impact on how palestinians are living and how they're feeling. also in the occupied westbank, you've been reporting on that. tell us what you found in your report. serial everybody i've spoken with the past several days,
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whether here in the model or even the other day we were in the to cut them refugee camp. just a couple of hours after and is read by the after a read by the israeli army there. everybody i've spoken with has said that what is going on right now when it comes to the rates route the occupied with bank that it is having a devastating impact. a huge psychological tool, especially on the civilian populations throughout the west bank. people have told me they believe that this is collect the punishment that is being made it out upon palestinian civilians. many of them telling me that they believe that this is the is really armies way of taking revenge upon them for those attacks that how much carried out on october 7th, we should mention that even before october 7th, this was. busy already the deadliest year on record for palestinians throughout the occupied west bank. and since october 7th, just since october 7th, there been a $171.00 palestinians killed throughout the west bank. that's the same number of palestinians that were killed throughout the occupied west banking. all of 2022, but it's not just the rates 0. it's also the fact that there are more trick points
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that people's of freedom of movement is being limited even more. it's taking a huge pull on the populations. here we went to the village, a bit is an occupied west bank and we spoke to one family that told us they feel captive not only of their own community, but also in their own home. here's our report for side that's going to your home. feels like a prison. that was the case long before october 7th and he knows it will stay that way long after i'm in this house have been nice. anything more been suffering since 1979, but every now and then events happen. and the to face of the occupation is revealed as subtler terrorism intensifies. we face it in this family like the rest of the palace and the people i'm going to. woodson fees of his houses in the occupied westbank village of bit is that it was built decades before this illegal is rarely settlement, again, imposing a harsh new reality. first,
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encroaching on his farm land, then completely in circling what his family sees as it haven. this gate was installed in 2008, and for a while, members of a family have to wait for hours at a time in order to get permission from soldiers to leave or return to their own home. and is rarely court eventually gave that a family constant access to this court door. but after israel launched its war on gaza, the family has been told that their access, well once again, be taken away. this morning, the garden provides a few minutes of respite for side that and his son that tim, in addition, but these flowers that came in no matter how beautiful can't hide the truth. one of living under constant surveillance and with perpetual harassment. eliza tele, any of the older guard post man by settlers, they tried to prevent anyone from getting into the house. they tried to prevent the
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kids from playing into frontier or closing the gate will be a problem for the family. my children won't be allowed to go to school. once had that's daughters return from the classes. they're still able to attend. he reviews their test results for and beams with bright and then play time. but the siblings are rarely a forwarded, the kind of in a sense that typically accompanies childhood when a so their grandmother, a witness to brutalities in both the past and present, tells me how much she fears. what might come next to me, the sugar left, all that, how can i not worry? of course i worry. these are my children. remember their tapping goes. what more can they do? so that tries to remain optimistic, but believes it's unlikely, his family will escape. it's isolation and that, well, what they see is a jail might not be real. the sentence they're serving certainly feels that way.
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i'm a gym to them. i just need a bid is the and the occupied westbank staying in the occupied west bank at least 2 is really settlers have been injured in a shooting in novelist. these really armies as palestinian gunmen shot the pair in their car near the settlement of it's a more one was earliest at the hospital in a critical condition. the scene has been sealed off, still a head on l 0. anthony, blinking the us secretary of state, repeat the call for a humanitarian for as in gaza. while on a trip to south korea will be live from sol after short break. stay with us the the hello. that really is no less off in the unsettled weather across here at plenty. a proud of right spilling in from west to east. best of the sun. shine will be across
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the eastern areas. we got high pressure, most of the ridge of high pressure here, keeping it long as you start with at least for the next couple of days. but ray will make his way in from the west for the long, cold, from this blue line that is making its way across the western europe. and it will bring some heavy it down pools and across so many pas as we go one through 1st i brought up across front some snow that right with the outs. pushing up towards scandinavia. some went to weather here was weather and again, some snow into it. and the light and sweet and this cloud and ray will continue to drive its way further in the face, which is a saturday is unsettled, some heavier rain rolling across the yard. we had the possibility of some flash flooding as these that live the storms setting over the next the dial. so how does that? as i said last, each why i don't particularly want 10 celsius. they haven't came not too bad request at 18 celsius. that's not too bad to draw. i have little on the fresh side . cool enough i would towards the north west of here at night. there's still some showers there to 1000000 pounds of spain and portugal. well,
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the average about area could count to cheryl to over the mix style. so majority of a shout was still there. of course, a good part of west africa. the it is murdered. when you throw a fire bomb into someone's home, that is significant in numbers, the insignificant idea logically that is significant, even as a crime get very significant by dictating the government's the fuck of the policy that was shown up can terms of the radicalized div series on our to 0 on charles dawn, you want to raise a 400 sites, a dramatize podcast from i'll just here to investigate, re here from some of history's blogs, notable women, and unconventional and extraordinary office. i am free that gun,
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no communist revolution of everyone in china, new my state. you've heard all of them power it's time you have from these and 6 of hindsight is out now subscribe way. if you listen to comcast of the, [000:00:00;00] the, for watching else 0 reminder of our headlines this, our israel has again carried out their strikes near the l, shift the hospital and goes to city. the hospital is the largest in the gaza strip . and one of the only a few still functioning it has come under near constant attacks is really forces a baffling palestinian fighter is on the streets in the center of gauze and city.
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the is really military is urging people living there to move the southern gaza for their own safety. and yet it's continuing to bone that region. a french president amended and that cause calling for humanitarian pause and gaza as soon as possible . it says there needs to be a push for a ceasefire. back home was hosting world leaders and heads of age groups to discuss how to get humanitarian aid into goss images of palestinians escaping from the north to the south in gaza. or reminiscence of those taken in black and white some 75 years ago. that's when they were forcibly displaced from their towns and cities in palestine. when the state of israel was created in 1948 palestinians refer to that as the mac thought, which means catastrophe. a similar experience to what they are suffering today nor a day as a political analyst and ryder. and she says, many of those leading bombardments today, remember escaping as children during the 1948 war,
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as many posts and in say the neck, but is not a memory. it is a reality. palestinians live in different ways. most of the residents in the gaza strip are refugees and descendants of refugees. many of the elderly that we've seen make this a journey. this arduous journey over the past few days. i have lived through neck, but they might have memories of children, of making a very similar journey after being expelled from their homes. so this is a, a traumatic, an image and experience on a collective scale. every palestinian watches this watching, this is a traumatized that the books all the pain and agony of this conflict. and it also brings into sharp focus. the fear of the philistines have the ultimate plan that israel has for the gaza strip is to estimate click lensit of its palestinian inhabitants. and,
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and maybe that also explains why us officials have been very keen on saying in the past 2 days, that there would be no permanent displacement of palestinians from gaza in an attempt to kind of calm those few years. not just the palestinian, but of countries in the region who don't want to be seeing us taking part in or facilitating that dispossession. so what do you say the professor of law at the university of colorado school of lawyers is with us. i wanted your take on this because, you know, this is going to play out in the wider conversations pro, you know, supporters of palestinians are going to probably broadly agree. this is reminiscent of the knock, but critics of the idea of the counter would be completely different scale completely different time i ask for the circumstances i let you wait on that. how, how do you feel about this, this idea? so i think that for palestinians, the neck balloons large, the idea of dispossession looms large every time these riley's kind of moving in
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any situation and displaced, people destroy houses, you know, kick people out of there where they live with their homes and in the gaza strip. is particularly acute, given that this is not you know, the neck but happened 1940. so you know, $94849.00, and then and then it's kind of over there in the gaza strip. you know, in 1956 went there, the gaza strip was occupied by these rarely military during, during that, that middle eastern war sort. so called tripartite invasion of, of egypt and the gaza strip. and there were atrocities committed to, you know, there was a massacre committed of by the israelis of men in con eunice at that time. and also in 1967 after the, the $67.00 more these rallies went in. and you know, they had engaged in under then general ariel sharon pass what they call the pacification campaign. so value a refugee camp, which is much in the news these days having been hit by the serious and deadly air
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strikes. you know, there were areas of it that were completely destroyed, you know, the whole whole blocks, whole square blocks completely wiped out. and then that was, you know, in evidence up until recently and you know, in 1982 there was a settlement when egypt was when israel returned the sign night to egypt, there was a settlement on both sides of the border called canada camp, which was again complete leads destroyed and those people displace. so displacement and gaza is a thing that is, you know, is it is a phenomenon that repeats itself in the neck because obviously the strongest given that 70 percent of the residents of the gaza strip have their origins in areas that became in 1948 the state of israel, so they are registered as refugees with the us. so displacement is part of their, of their ethos. you could say, but it's not as if this has never happened. asked, right? yeah, yeah. so, so you are connecting those dots looking at the long arc of this, of this conflict and of history saying yes, those dots are all connected. other piece ok,
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stay with us because they've got more questions for you specifically on the future of gaza and the day after we'll talk about that because us secretary of state anthony blinking is meeting south korea's foreign minister and so both blinking and part yet and so that they share the view that humanitarian pauses are needed in a war on gaza. and on wednesday, blinking outlined the us as preferred scenario for how the war should end. and that's what i was referring to just now. he said the us hopes that gaza will be unified with the west bank. under the rule of the palestinian authority, eunice kim is in. so can you eunice, bring us up to speed on everything we need to know about what blinking has laid out? right, so this was a joint press conference with south korea as a foreign minister pops. and he said that he and blank and were aligned in their one condemnation of the surprise attacked by him mos on israel in their extreme concern of the significant civilian casualties. as
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a result of as rarely air strikes and as was the case that the g 7 form industries meeting in japan of just one day before that they wanted to see urgent action in the gaza prices to bring in that much needed humanitarian aid through humanitarian and pauses now before aborting his flight to sol from tokyo blanket. did i explain to reporters why washington supports this humanitarian pause. one being that it would help protect civilians too, that it would allow for and residents to leave and 3, perhaps that would it. it would help facilitate a hostage exchange between israel and homos, but he also outlined some red lines including no forest uh, no forest displacement of palestinians from gaza and no re occupation of the territory by israel. and certainly no return by hum us to govern the strip. now
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during that press conference. and so his message was more pointed to concerns in the region as the region has been closely watching, how washington's priorities are moving a made to ongoing conflicts and its implications. now, uh, blinking and did speak to those concerns saying that washington is commitment to an open in the pacific remains iron clad. and that it is committed, committed to continue building a vital global partnership with south korea as well as japan, eunice, just before that, you go the statements about unifying palestinians under a palestinian authority. it was there anything more, i mean, palestinians in gaza and palestinians in the west bank. was there anything more from blinking on that or was it just that one word? and so there wasn't too much that he spoke on that particular topic. it seems that he had crafted his responses to the questions, as well as his opening statements to the priorities in the region, which is,
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of course, concerns around china's aggressions, as well as the north korea factor, and it's relationship with russia and it's military trade. okay, i just wanted to double check because that's important and it's also going to set up the conversational have with, with the units kim and so thank you so much. um, the word was unified or unification. use that was the word used by the by americans stop diplomat, anthony blinking about what in their best case scenario. what the us hopes could possibly happen. uh for, you know, for the day after when this war at some point will be over. uh, your thoughts on that? let's just start there. yes, so that's a, that's a great question in the i'm smiling because it to me, i don't, i don't find the comic. i don't find it's funny because this whole situation is so serious and, and deadly. but it's does strike me as odd that the secretary of state of the
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united states of america is talking about how he hopes something could happen in as if that, you know, the united states has no leverage over anyone in this, in this conflict or in this in this current situation, especially given the massive amount of age, the united a, the united states ends to israel and, you know, and including, asking now congress for 14000000000 dollars more of aid. so, you know, i think the, the verb used hope is a little bit off putting that's the 1st thing. the 2nd thing is, we've been down this road before. so many times where, you know, the united states has, i think assisted is real in trying to grow craft what the palestinian future should be and whatever you think of what's going on in the end, the sort of, you know, come ask them the various resistance movements what they're insisting on is
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a say in their future, not that it'd be dictated by great powers, by israel, etc. so i think there's a little bit of a distance this, and it's given how deadly and violent this, this class is, and how much violence these railways are using and how much, how much dog and resistance the various groups in gaza are, are engaging in to insist that their future not be dictated to them. and what seems pretty clear when you parse the statements of the leaders, whether it's blinking, whether it's the is really is whether it's even though is listening to the joint. daniel and egyptian foreign minister speaking with lincoln the other day. nobody has a plan really for what comes after. and they've been asked this question and various iterations of this question. and there's, you know, you said, hope is a strange for the use. and nobody seems to know really what should happen. multiple ideas have been floated perhaps a u. n. force, perhaps a regional force, but now blinking saying, well perhaps under the palestinian authority. and again, we're in this situation where there is a party that goes into conflict with,
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i mean, i think it's pretty clear, no idea of what happens next. yes. and i think what you've been seeing is if you read the reports of what sort of the behind the scenes, what we're not seeing in public is american officials have expressed, you know, their alarm that these really don't have a plan. they don't really know what they're doing other than their stated goal of we're going to win and we're going to crush them ass, which, you know, again as very alarming given the scale of violence and also what comes next. and what's also interesting, all along the way in a kind of a, in my view and negatively interesting is the fact that who are the people who are not being asked what their future should be. it's the palestinians, certainly not the people of gaza. and the people of the west bank the maybe even less so i suppose, i suppose blinking me. nothing. not speaking on his behalf, should i suppose he would counter? well yeah, that's the whole point of having them represented by the palestinian authority. yes
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. but as i think we've seen and given that the palestinian authority has refused to, you know, call for elections or has called off elections in recent years. they realize their position is extremely weak and they are extremely unpopular. even on, you know, in the west bank where they are certainly in, in gaza. i would assume that's the case as well. so i think the idea of having an unpopular force that for many palestinians is considered basically a sub contractor for the israeli occupation. i don't know that that's going to be really a winning formula and even my mood i bass as you know, sort of detached from the people as he is, has said he has no interest in having the palestinian authority work as a kind of a, a policeman for some new form of israeli occupation. so there's that, there's that aspect of this as well. yeah. and if you come in, if, if you come in to gaza on the back of a oven is really tank essentially, then where's the, where's the legitimacy was the big question around that,
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all of this for the moment, by the way, it's just fiction. i mean, we should pointed out the reason we're discussing it is not because we just like conjecture is because the great powers in the region are all discussing it. they've all been asked the question, and we're seeing the dissidence in the answers. and we're seeing big question marks that they themselves are raising. what do you say? thank you so much for being with us. this our now the world health organization says risks of disease and guns are growing more than 33000 cases of diarrhea have been reported most or among children under the age of 5 damaged health facilities. and the lack of medicines have made it nearly impossible for the basic hygiene and disease prevention measures to be maintained. one is the, as i'm the mother of young men who, how much are charged. we were displaced from c, j a neighborhood. genay said a camp during the bombing and we were living under difficult circumstances. my son is suffering from dehydration and diarrhea. we couldn't get help needed at the new
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state health center. so after a week they, we decided to come here to all cooked hospital. he's not taking medicine that will hopefully help me. so we're sheltering out of school. the whole situation at the school is very bad. there's nothing for children. they. it's not keen on know, basic needs like food, virtual covers to keep us room. there's really nothing. you can see the state, my son is in this situation for many children like him and garza, with gauze, his hospital stretched beyond capacity, caring for premature babies has become a near impossible task. l 0 has been inside mubarak hospital in fun unit squared. doctors are fighting to say, babies born into war or challenge reports. these are the infants that shouldn't be here. not yet, at least they all the pre to babies have gone so they've prematurely entered a well, that's taking the lives of even the strongest around them. so what chance for these so fragile like, con, live, outside the ring?
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keep i just of the, some of the most, you know, department, they are 12 newborns, most of whom are premature and of low weight. they also have problems with a respite, treat, digestive and immune systems. we need electricity, water, and intimates to treat them properly. as my own tends to that comes to needs knowing his capabilities can i make these so much in a hospital as badly surviving itself? death but his tiny patience is one is ready, palms dry, cool. power failure away on most of the in this in the 9 none of these newborn babies inside or outside the intensive k can live without electricity . they will suffer severe health problems. and most of them will die within minutes, particularly those who depend on ventilate since then. and it allows between them
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simple in 2 months that one didn't make it is the weight so that his remaining critically a baby. i wonder why can lipsy, i swear to allah? i was dreaming of my children low unto that. thus i was counting the minutes to see them before the death of my 1st baby. i asked the medical team here and they said he was fine. they asked me to buy diapers, which i did, but suddenly the baby cost away most of them. more than half of the strips, $35.00 hospitals are out of service. according to god's, as health ministry, it says is rouse, bombing has shut down voltage, ponce and 70 percent of causes. power. great. is rose told several hospitals to evacuate stuff in patients before that problem. and the un ascending the alarm causes mothers and babies. we have assess that there are 50000 pregnant women and gaza, not unable to access regular multi maternal health care at this moment. and $5500.00
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newborns were born during the course of the last month. the u. n is quoting for a ceasefire, for hate to be less in time, for the people have casa from young to hold to get the help they need. well retirements now does there and that's it for me, nick clark as your news at the top of the out, the house on this structure was actually destroyed in 2003. and the reason for that is that, sorry, honey was actually convicted and sentenced to 7 live sentences by his paws in the killing of his right and soldiers. while these res, this is a, came in here and this now very small home actually represents a nightmare for this 5. we're let me just show you these ran these actually drilled into the wall. now why did they do the, the testing the thickness of the walls?
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so they know what equipment to use when they come to demolish this house or somebody is having us. there was no reason for these ratings to come in to that house at this time. right? now they simply don't know why these radius wants to demolish. now. this house could be demolished in the next 2 hours in the next 2 weeks. they simply don't know when that demolition is going to come. the water is life. but in palestine it's an instrument of occupation. with is a way of controlling the majority of palestinian water resources and destroying hundreds of sanitation structures. simians are being deprived of a universal human rights. people in power investigates with an isaac walter in palestine on a jersey you know, examining the impact of today's headlines. medicines that are running out every single,
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some ideas our patients lose. we could see all the hospitalization. does the buddies explore and abundance of the world class program? i don't think we have another decade before. machines are smarter than us. it's time to raise your life international. so make us and world class john and bring programs to inform and inspire on challenges here. the more wounded people arrive at a night of crowded l ship a hospital and also such as these rarely ponies explain the 11 o'clock. this is out 0 line from the whole to coming out tens of thousands flee to south gulf. zip a. find
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a safe to use this drugs and con units kill at least 4 people cut or is helping

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