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tv   News  Al Jazeera  November 9, 2023 3:00pm-3:31pm AST

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is with us for this development on i'll just say right, there is no title like cover in the world news like we do. the scale of this camp is like nothing you've ever asked us to help. but we want to know how these things affect people. we revisit please state even when there are no international headline, houses are really invested in that and that's a privilege. as a journalist, the more wounded people arrive at an overcrowded i'll shift the hospital and got the city is really bombs explode nearby. the answer of any, it's good to have you with us. this is alice has 0 lines from the also coming up tens of thousands fleet, the south gaza and that's fine. no safety is the air strikes and fine eunice killed
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at least 4 people. katara is helping negotiate a possible ceasefire and gaza and release of his really captives. the ca director is expected in to hospitals and at least 9 people are dead. and 16 wounded and is really rates of age and mean refugee camps in the occupied west. the street battles between palestinian fighters and his really forces are intensifying near the center of gauze. a city that is, as israel continues its relentless bombing campaign, more than 10500 palestinians have been killed since the war on dallas. it began on october. the 7th will be live with our correspondents in gaza in just a moment. first bill, this report from michael i just before dawn in garza slays light up the sky, ofter and nights of bombing, the jabante,
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a refugee camp in the north. an sub district in the waste or under attack near the entrance to god, his biggest hospital people run to safety. the rising sun reveals a smoke filled sky. 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 that they compose on this child beyond recognition, we the ministry of health, together with the justice ministry, prepared different grade level. but a no one is untouched by israel is bombing, campaign name of the call family. some of my family members are killed. some injured and some missing were now looking for one another. in jabante a, at least 9 people were killed. many more i'm missing, most likely buried under of these really forces have entered garza city and all
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battling palestinian fights in suite by st. in the house by in scenes reminiscence of the 4th displacement of 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 uh, border crossing with egypt. this is the gates we had is nightmare. i cannot even send them to see what people are going through. on the other side, the humanitarian crisis unfolding and gaza is unprecedented. many palestinians are forced to eat scraps of bread and drink whatever water they can find, even if it is contaminated. and then 6 water ahead of my bed. i wish i could go back home. i hope i can go back to school and see my teachers. i don't know,
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i wish i could go back and play with my friends. i hateful because it took the lives of all my friends when nitrate tends so to israel is bones. and nowhere is sites like level which is 0. well, earlier i spoke to journalist and who diary, who says that she's staying in gaza city and that's because she feels she has the responsibility to tell the world what's happening there. it's very intense. nothing with miss such thing. i never thought i would print reports. uh well see what's going on and i really find it like, you know, i'm in the god. oh sure. never imagine this is going to happen. i never imagined i'll be here. i'll be very suffering to stay involved. i don't feel like i want to leave my house. i don't feel i want to leave my dog. i don't want to be the people who are still in our hospital in the last of those in honor was was we, we know when i see and i see people every single day evacuating from here. but at
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the same time, there are thousands of palestinians doctors used to need. we are talking about hundreds of thousands in the indonesian hospital in the another in buffalo strip. we're talking about more than 40000 policy means in the hospital. there's this tax over each other in the fall under our facility, our facilities people are still here. there's a lot of large number of people who refuse to leave the street and put it back to it through the south. and i really see people in the cities where there is only one or 2 restaurants operating people are crowded over there, at least is the light in the other is not empty. there are plenty of people still here and, and what are the for need your, are our international news organizations are trying to persuade that everyone, just the bible? sure. this is not true and they have been to everyone. this is not true. people are still here. people still refused to do the gaza strip the nothing gall district
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because they fear that this is a new that but the houses here is honey, who joins us from han eunice now inside the gaza strip the southern part of the strip. so honey, the un estimates of 50000 gallons, fled from the north to the south on wednesday. are you currently still seeing residents of guys the city arrive right now where you are? yes. well, within the past hour we were at the entrance of the rage, a. com, but raised area. this is the beginning of the central part of the gaza strip, where we wouldn't miss 1000. a palestinian is coming in from garza city and the northern part of goes up pouring into the central part of the southern part of gaza at about 1 o'clock. we left the area and on the road we could see people are still walking, trying to get to the city of han. you and it's been rough as the thing you do is
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they get to a large hospitals like doctor hospital or the european hosp. but the robot, if it could be a good refuge for them, we from the mass bombardment taking the place in garza and the north rent is part we the throughout the time we spend at the entrance of the bridge, we've seen people with high vulnerability, elderly children, and women and people in wheelchairs, wheeling chairs and people who, oh, suffer from some eclipse is chronic disease and life threatening a condition. we spoke to one person who was in a wheelchair, who they think fit, describe the experience on the road that as they were not allowed to take a taxi or have someone to give them a ride, they walked all the way across. seem to check point the military check point set up by this really a time while raising their hands with the white
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a flag and their id cards with them. and they were not allowed to carry any of their belongings. the looks on their faces do, is that what was the looks of the frustration, anger, and, and desperation that this is the, these are the situation that they are, they're living in right now. and so it's like a coming from a, a heavily c bar to the area into this role. it's a lot had been road that was still on there. he people environment into a human relation that they have to go through to get to defend drug by now we often huntington. yeah. where if he had the place to go to and he said he doesn't know where to go. okay. that it will. that was exactly going to be my question. they come from the north. they've been displaced by fighting the fleet to survive and saved their lives. they arrive in the south. where do they sleep tonight? i mentioned, i'll be res. can you mentioned that some of them hope they might find space and
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hospitals? how does that work, do you? what door do you not on? do you have to ask for the authorization to go pretty much wherever they are space? how does that work? well a lot of the people who were coming to the invisible brisk m d were wondering if there were any of these on or well the shows or owner where the crew on the ground was waiting for them. because the thought the, as soon as they get to that area, the central part do, would be taken to under what designated the schools as as shoulders for that. but unfortunately, there was no one and it was there to wait for them and to take them to a refuge. we know so far as honor was school, that turned in to rescue and to evacuation centers are fully packed. the are over crowded. a place is in a and there really is the is 750000 palestinians. within the past 4 weeks have
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been already into the central part of the south on top of the already existing existing population of the southern. find some of these people for the majority, i can save, let's say you have no idea where to go. some of them said we're going to stay where we at here. we're not going anywhere. i'm in the, in the central park or, or the southern part deep to the sides of the street. and we are going to be honest with you it's, it's worry because some of them might end up the sleeping on that side of road as homes on the side, roads and inside those cities. areas are fully packed, which families have already evacuated from the north and garza city. so they're already displaced. and you're telling us that a lot of these people coming from the north, if they don't find a spot, whether it's a hospital or under our school, they might end up just sleeping on the street. honey, my who with reporting from a fund, eunice in the southern part of the gaza strip. thank you very much for that. a medical sources of toll down to 0, that 9 palestinians have been killed at least 16 wounded in ongoing is really rates
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on the janine refugee camp. this is in the occupied westbank health officials say that for those wounded or in critical condition. well, how many times whom is in ramallah mohammed, what would you know about these raids and janine the 0, the rays are ongoing. they have only intensified in the last few hours since they began and were told that in the last 1015 minutes, the residents and the jeanine refugee camp heard at least 3 loud explosions. they believe those were the result of armed drones being utilized by the is really army to, to target specific houses of palestinian fighters were also told that these really army has been dropping leaflets to residents of the camp. a warning them not to support any of the fighters in the camp and telling the residents that these really army will continue to raid the camp and the city of jeanine until they read the area of all palestinian fighters. we know that the clashes are only getting more in
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tense. we're, we're hearing that the is really army has continued to send in reinforcements. and there is a lot of concern that this may drag on for several more hours. one of the reasons this is not where the isn't just because of what's going on at this hour. but jeanine was the target of a huge read by the israeli army. and the overnight hours, these really army intern, janine, the city and the refugee camp and the overnight our stay there for a couple of hours. it happened again today. we're told that they've been going house to house looking for palestinian gunmen. so right now it's a very fluid in volatile situation and we will get you more detail specifically about what's going on in the janine refugee camp with regard to that rate in the hours to come 0 mohammed, i wonder if you have a sense of what the bigger picture for is real is because they've been conducting raids almost daily since the october 7th attack on israel is there. do they have
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a clear strategic objective for what they want to do with the occupied westbank at this point? well, 0 is really military official. have been quite clear about their intention and when it comes to these regions the past few weeks, we've heard a few of them say that the gloves are off when it comes to the occupied west bank. and what that means is it, these rarely armies essentially saying that they are going to continue to conduct more intense rates into parts of the occupied westbank until they clear the area of what they perceive to be militancy. now of course, when you speak to palestinians, of course they tell you a very different story and they say that they are being targeted. they say that this is collective punishment, especially against palestinian civilians on the part of the israeli government. many of the palestinians of i've spoken with the past several days and said they believe that the israeli army is essentially taking revenge out on them for the attacks carried out by have us on october 7th. now. all that being said,
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the reeds were already intense, even before october 7th. they had become essentially part of the fabric of daily life throughout many areas of the west bank. throughout 2023. in the past few weeks, they have only intensified the volume of the rates going up exponentially. we used to be one or 2 rates a day. we're being told now by sources within the palestinian authority that there are at least on average 40 reads a day in the occupied westbank. we must remember even before october 7th. this was already the deadliest year on record for palestinian throughout the occupied westbank killed by either settlers or by the israeli military since october 7th, a $171.00. palestinians have been killed all throughout the occupied westbank, serial. and mamma, just as you were talking, the life shot has just changed because the shot from jeanine dropped. but moments ago our viewers could see as you were talking,
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thick black smoke billowing in the skies of janine that you would just describing those rates. there really are mom and john hume reporting from ramallah in the occupied west bank. thank you. this is still a head on alice's era operating under intensity or strikes and scarce resources. dumpsters struggles to keep newborn babies alive and got the the hello welcome to have a look at the international forecast. we still have some very heavy showers of running in the close central pos of south america. and this weather system here, producing some really big storms over the next couple of days, actually steps to go further south with him. it's muggy conditions that we post on breakdown, pulls into power, required, see the weather there, to the fall,
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se offer brazil at that stage, and that so we're gonna slip a little further south, which as we go through friday, temperatures pulling away a tough, but still plenty warm enough, big down pulls also coming into your require at that stage, scattering the showers as usual across at west, inside of the amazon through columbia, on his way to sing some lively showers bigger down pools, as well as some of the shelves to steal affecting the puerto rico and also the dominican republic is a scattering of showers all have a side of it into the east, not as not too many. here i have a towards the cuba and to make again some showers, but not too many southern concert, jamaica catching a shadow to me. one or 2 showers the into central america. some of the pitch as we go on into friday, right. becoming a little more active. meanwhile, across southern parts of the us, we've got some snow north of the board. so we're making his wife or the east woods and cooling behind the
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devastating strikes followed by through all week rescue because that's 1st responders. know, the mission could be the the, the until then. humanity drives the one day which because of the civil defense which rescue mission, because on the the, [000:00:00;00] the, you're watching else 0 reminder of our headlines this. our israel has
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a game and carried out. 0 strikes near the l. shit. the hospital and gaza city. the hospital is the largest and the strip and one of only a few that is still functioning. it has come under near constant attacks is really forces of baffling palestinian fighters on streets in the center of kansas city. he is really military is urging people living there to move the southern gaza for their own safety, yet it is continuing to bomb that region. at least 9 palestinians have been killed and several injured in ongoing raids by severely forces. and janine, that's in the occupied westbank health officials say 4 of those who did are in critical condition include a female medic who was shot in the back a french presidency mentor. and nicole has called for a humanitarian pause in gaza as soon as possible. and he announced french aid for palestinians will rise from $21000000.00 to a $106000000.00. mccoy's hosting world leaders and heads of age groups that discuss
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getting humanitarian aid to people in gaza. the talks are aimed at mobilizing funding and emergency assistance as well. they tell us who knocked nadia gazza for the humanitarian a to be meaningful. we have to absolutely bring an end to this war because what does it mean to receive a meal for dinner and be killed the next day? time costs blood and walk them in dumb and calls us 6 children and 4 women a killed our, the palestinian people need international protection in tulsa in jerusalem. the west bank, beyond the international community has to distance itself from the policy of double standards. we have to bring an end to this war, an end to the occupation and concept and to the displacement of the local population. the. this is the, the steps will put this in. the civilian population has to be protected and it's absolutely essential. this is non negotiable, this is an immediate name of the longer term, and it will be
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a conditional prerequisite for the fight against terrorism. the situation is pretty serious and it's getting worse every day. in the immediate future, we have to work on the civilian protection. for that, we need a very quick humanitarian pause or break, and we have to work towards the sea spy. even for the good houses. here is a passion, butler who is in paris. what are the main aims of this conference natasha? well, my name is all really to find ways to protect the civilian population in garza to provide them with more humanitarian assistance, basic things. so i was the food medicine, electricity, or essential things that people desperately need that. and then once a sense of urgency coming out of that conference, which is now wrapped up as delegates, discuss the situation on the ground. you heard the french president's emmanuel micro all saying that they can be no negotiation. the protection of civilian life
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is absolutely essential. now some of the things that were spoken about raising money, trying to find more douglas from suspension more money, more than a $100000000.00. it says april provide a to palestinian civilians in terms of the military and a whole scope for ultimately sending a hospital ship. some one i did this thing, tools about is opening up a maritime corey to or from so i personally you member states to cause us in which people could be supposed to be evacuated if needed. and a could also come in, but logistically that's difficult because of school support, infrastructure and all that is necessarily bad for those all the sorts of things that have been told of us. and we also had the french fries and somebody mindful all said for any of this to be put in place of schools, we need a humanitarian pools and the slice and that he says he has national commands. he also has the works towards las vegas. these fly between a, my son is well manufactured,
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butler reporting from paris. thank you very much. it with gauze as hospital stretched to beyond capacity, caring for premature babies has become a near impossible task. l 0 has been inside mubarak hospital in fun. eunice were dr . is a fighting to save 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 shots for these? so fragile they con, live, outside their incubate is distilling even 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 respiratory digestive and immune systems. we need electricity, water, and intimates to treat them properly as my own tends to that comes to needs knowing
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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 to bring them to football in 2 months. at least one didn't make it is the weight. so but his remaining critically a baby one like and let's see, i swear to allah. i was dreaming of my children law until the best 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,
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but suddenly the baby cost away from on 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. ponds and 70 percent of causes power. great. this is rose told several hospitals to evacuate stuff and patients before that pump and the un ascending the alarm. because as mothers and babies, we have assess that there are 50000 pregnant women in gaza, not unable to access regular multi maternal health care at this moment. and $5500.00 newborns were born during the course of the last month. the u. n is quoting for a ceasefire, for hate to be elected in time for the people have casa from young to old. to get the help they need, will reach out and out of there. at the head of the united states, the central intelligence agency of a c i a is visiting guitar on thursday. william burns will meet government
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officials to discuss ongoing negotiations over the potential release of is really captives held by almost in gaza. of the 15 captives could be freed in exchange for a ceasefire. reynolds reports from washington dc. the ca 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 moss in gauze up. the talks appear to set her on a idea of a 3 day pause in is rails attacks on gaza in return for the release by almost of 10 to 15 hostages and analysts say the talks appear to be gaining momentum. there's a lot of start moving in the right direction on the hostages. that will be a main focus of the burns is up to and how mice and, and it's through a lot of times they'll take this maximus positions, we won't do this so much,
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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. burn 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 garza and the release of some hostages. as the war rages on, robert ols. l. g 0, washington. it is really military official, has denied that there is a humanitarian crisis in gaza. listen, we know the disabled situation in the gaza strip is not an easy one. we know that there are a lot of challenges. we know that they don't have a lot of difficulties,
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but i can say that there is no, you monetary on crisis in the go this route. we all the new, well, we didn't pick up. this will come up, choose to open this will. oh, okay, i want to put that to our guest in the studio. what do you said your professor of law at the university of colorado school of law? that's. that's an interesting one. there's always obviously competing narrative in any conflict and especially in this one. but this particular line by the is really government that it's difficult, but there is no humanitarian crisis and gaza flies in the face of just everything that we know and have been reporting. yes, i think the, you know, this has been these really line from the outset. there is no humanitarian crisis when they're asked about it. spokes people for these really government consistently deny that there's a humanitarian crisis. it's an interesting one, as we said, because it seems to be completely at odds with reality. also, we might ask the question, how would these rarely officials know that there isn't a humanitarian crisis given that they are not interacting with the civilian
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population except via bombing. so it's a kind of a head scratcher at best, and i'm also kind of curious as to what sort of what, what sort of goal is served by denying that there's a humanitarian crisis in the sort of general in the general upshot of all these remarks. yeah, one assumes it's, it's about the narrative and about the story that is being told this, we're going to pivot, i want your take on something completely different. we opened the show with a report from gaza pictures from guys or from michael apple. and he was making the point that in fact let's bring up the pictures is going to be easier with pictures . he was making the point that there is a parallel between what happened and 1948 creation of the state of israel, which palestinians referred to as the knock book catastrophe. when an estimated 700000 palestinians were displaced from their homes and the pictures that we're seeing today with people, palestinians, there you go. so those, the pictures you see on your screen right now,
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how seamlessly northern gaza to save their lives, leaving their homes behind. and fleeing to southern gaza and there's this split screen, the black and white pictures from 75 years ago. verse is the pictures that we're seeing today. and there's this, it raises the question, are we looking at some form of new knock box? well, you can never deny that for palestinians the neck, but is constantly with them in terms of their consciousness and in terms of their fear that it may be repeated. so when you talk about this largely refugee population, i think it's 70 percent of the population of the guys is $50.00 for a 2nd cuz i see the black and white pictures know top top right for a viewers. that's the 1948 at the time of the state of israel was being created. palestinians displaced from their homes and then central left on your screen. that's 2023. that's people. dozens fleeing the north into the south. sorry. go ahead. yes. so i think, you know, for palestinians the next best sort of never leaves them,
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especially given that 70 percent of the residents of the gaza strip are refugees from what became is really 1948. so that sense is all was with them. and then there have been episodes over the past 75 years and 1956 when the israelis occupied the gaza strip temporarily as a result of the 1956 war in 1967 ariel sharon was then a general he he went into the gaza strip to so called pacify it and destroyed, you know, many areas this, most notably in the jeff value refugee camp where a whole city blocks for wiped out in 1982 when the sign i was return to egypt, there was a refugee camp on the border that was wiped out that was called canada camp. so displacement is always part of the palestinian fear. and given that nowadays we've been, or in the past few weeks we've been reading about behind the scenes, american is rarely plans to try and get the palestinians of gaza to be sent to egypt and displaced egypt. this is
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a truly acute fear that people are living desperate people in the gaza strip are

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