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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  November 13, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

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the vital role in solar energy harnessing, offering 75 percent of global carbon credits essential. committed to environmental protection, enhancing investment climate. digital licensing. your better tomorrow the the kind of them are a kyle, this is the news, our life from the home coming up in the next 60 minutes or hospitals and gone for city on out of service. the biggest to a, surrounded by is really forces several palestinians, a killed a many wounded as, as well. again, strikes the jabante, a refugee camp in the middle, and no response in the south. and entire family is killed in con eunice,
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and is really strikes lessons another residential building. and then now the lease of social media posts is where the army says ambulances and foss, this hold on just a minute, targets as well, says it's for tons, funds was a position in nothing. and from where most is when known assets, tara trade, the . so we begin in golf, a city once densely packed up in the hub in the coastal territory. now the seas flies weigh the troops and tanks. every hospital in gauze, the city is out of service, and as, as well, steps office air attacks, those images are left with almost no way to go. the positive red crescent says it comp weeks out cook's hospital. that's the 2nd largest in gauze city because of his really bombardments the agency had sent a convoy to evacuate patients such as it was forced to turn back on staying the
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nose as tight. i've had gauls as to bali, a refugee camp. the death toll is not yet clear from the as densely populated camp is being repeatedly targeted since the will began in the southern city of con, eunice strike has flattened a residential building as killed an entire family. the as well had ordered palestinians to move to the south, promising it would be safe. i beg, has more now on the situation in gaza. forced to work in the dark feud is running dangerously low in casa, its health authority says hospitality and goes to city active service. a business trip i've been functioning as of the money ought to be. we have no electricity except in the emergency section. the native city section is out of service, but that meant the hospital is out of service in terms of the sections are out of service. but there's no linked up in the world. more is ready as part of the,
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the risk is putting got more people from under the rubble. many places have been struck repeatedly, leaving no case safe in this trip. these babies have been moved from up to a hospital to an old victim of them. here's a dangerous jenny, hospitality and i'm going to have you repeatedly targeted by israel. this is one of the few functioning hospitals. the as incubate has the new bones underwear of the war, that rate to that side and of the threat to their lives. this was a lot of you if you sit that is to get all caught about, the lack of coupling means of transportation causes many problems to pregnant women and to the infants already suffering. they arrive here with more troubles and suffering. samuel sections are also done here. the intensive care unit is always full. there's always shortage and beds. once they will only 6 incubators for 8 premature babies. but for now, they seats, boning tuvell and an uncertain future said bake. i'll have to do
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with you an agency for palestinian refugees is now warning, but it's all prices and guns that could shut down within 2 days and was gone as a chief thomas white's race on x. the humanitarian also has a a price and we'll go into a holes in the next 48 hours as no fuel is allowed to enter gaus. he also added that to a fam main wars and distribution contractors ceased working. they simply ran the out of fuel, and that will deny 200000 people possible will. so, let's get the latest now without correspondence in hon. you this, in the south of the gaza strip tart, i assume talk festival. can you tell us what the situation is? at hospitals, particularly what you're hearing about inside goals, essentially what we're hearing now now. no operational medical facilities a yes, as you can clearly see the becky ground,
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that the situation in gaza hospitals is really chaotic as right now. and, and also hospitalized where i'm feeling, says, trying to back to way it's new, back to and who have been killed by these very ongoing compartments in the south of the gaza strip. which supposed to be a safe area for the majority of the bacteria from the north and central areas of pitcher tree in terms of the situation and the north and central laws are hospitals . the situation that is beyond the composite are running low on food, water and even medical supplies. main while they are trapped by the usability maneuvering troops who are destroying the majority of residential buildings in the surrounding vicinity. obviously felt hospital, their industry felt hospitals, doctors, patients and even displaced. people are not able to get out of the hospital unless they're going to be bombarded or a shoot to by the use. very snipers are the medical services the are in our witness thing, a graduate of shrink in terms of the surgeries and even made to come up ration are conducted from time to another due to the lock. the medical supplies,
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as there is no, any further humidity or you admit you can control you had been delivered to this central medical complex as is ready for all encircling the north and central areas of gauze and city. and inside the hospitals, dozens of the bodies have be decomposed due to the lack of power and even a due to the ability of medical teams to evacuate boosted bodies to be peers. and one of the symmetries in deterred 3, which really go back, please sign dr. humanitarian conditions and see, remember the conditions inside the hospital is a really deteriorating as they are having new access to the outside world. and even there is no any safe passage out of the hospitals as far exchange continued between palestinian scientists and because what it meant to bring troops now at the current moment and we'll start hospital central gaza strip has been dropped and encircled by the is very forces this hospital is located for providing different type of medical treatments, the patients, uh, these people. this still right now,
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patients inside the hospital, which really give a, please find that the mediterranean and medical conditions in these hospitals is on the age of collapse, as there is no any international intervention. so now have been made that through rescued medical teams, i'm patients inside those medical center and i'm tired even as these medical senses . i'm not able to take any new patients. and of course we're seeing the number of casualties continue. we've just seen new strikes and the jabante, a refugee camp. this is a place that is being struck many, many times. what are you hearing about this late to strike, just in the last few hours the generally the attacks on the news with the gaza strip of central areas did not stop since the beginning of this round of slicing, but the value of refuge account imposter queued up because it, it to be one of the main course, integration of the is valued residents list attached as to use for the operation claim docs. it's i sent off for the uh, published thing and fights is and main while the majority of people who have been killed during these very attacks since the erection of this round of fighting were
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civilians. as there are more than a generally in the 2 or 3000 boston and kids have been killed more than 1000 women also have been also a to by the is very fires complete residential houses have been completely destroyed in valeo refuge account. this comes very populated as a strike kelly to massive destruction even in life and even in prefer to. so clearly this, uh, this uh, refugee gap has been multiple hit by the as many of the patient forces, as people are still short drinking schools. and even in the vicinity, i'm the odds of demolition. and i was a hospital in the north of the gaza strip chart where we looked at the pictures of gauze and we looked at the sky line. we looked at the the day today. images of the coming out of the city, the air is filled with us. so we, we know that people are on the ground and living with constant chaos on sets and see not knowing where the next form is going to hits this noise. that is on
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a constant high level. what is it like living in the gaza strip day today? at the moment? we're living in this big or prison dropped from every single sites from c lands and off. it's not just only a matter of living. we are talking about 2300000 palestinians are the bride from different kinds of basic mississippi's also before departments and before the direction of this round to finding out we the continuation of the is without taxes and the goal district. the situation is imperative on the ground just now with the routes of people speaking from the north and central areas of golf strip to decide to ensure our trees. there are no over consumption of food and water. basic items which is reduced is getting a mass of dwindling from the top of the market. people are forced to line up for long hours to get some access to few lots of the threats to have a few number of people to know that to bring back again to that children
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a broken. and one is um, facing difficult in terms of having a treatment at the hospital situations in the hospital. this is a really over rouzan, overwhelmed with patients and medical teams, apparently functioning on trying to provide a treatment for the, for patients on the age of people. people generally in the 2 or 3 are really disparate and they are just uh, counting day is like when this nightmare, when its own goals and switch them back again to the houses. but meanwhile, there is no any clear answer for that's okay. i'm tired of assume of watching that from con eunice on life in the gaza strip. thanks. very much tart within 711 and there's really strikes have hit positions near the older ones. struck close to a convoy kind of a group of john list. the town of yahoo and i was, is there a come to mind was injured separately as early as right, so if it's a residential area and then up in east village of hines, an alta for weeks, the lebanese on foot has the law and is very much you have been exchanging fun
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across the board, them. these exchanges are becoming more frequent and intense, but all logic contains within a narrow stretch of tower tree. they don't hold up reports from the southern lebanon. vintage bill is known as the capital of the resistance. it has symbolic importance to has beloved much of the town was heavily bombed during the lebanese armed groups last war with israel in 2006, but its fighters held their ground nearly 2 decades later. there again, as for vintage bill has no to have been caught in the crossfire, but the group support this believe israel wants to expand the conflict is really doesn't hide its intentions. of course, it would like to expand the ongoing war, but in the presence of his beloved leader has industrial law and our resistance fighters. we are not afraid, not far as an active front line along more than 100 kilometers of border. a few
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kilometers deep on each side. the cross border fire is known as the 2nd month and hezbollah as promising more of this. as long as as well continues its war on gossip . the group slater house on the seller has talked about increasing operations in terms of size frequency and the type of weapons. but making it clear, this border will remain what he calls a support front. for garza, israel has been increasing its threats. not just the guns has been lost with living on as a whole. with the defense minister, promising to do to the lebanese capital, they do what it did to casa, the one size houses using the rest of it, made in libya, will. so as bullet has made it clear that the battle ground will determine the course of the conflict if is real escalates, it will respond in kind. if they target civilians has buller will do the same. despite the occasional strikes that have hit deeper into each other's territories,
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this still largely remains a war of attrition. that could change as well. battles him as fighters in gaza. there i was, was either. so there's nothing on this. i'll speak to him to tell her she joins us from occupies the east jerusalem. and i'm to this this situation. i mean, it remains extremely tense on the as well that one on the board of what's the very latest that you'll hearing from the right laura? so just a short while ago, these really are for saying that a carried out strike against has bullet positions in southern 11 on those positions include a weapons depot infrastructure and the command center. this is all part of a continuation of exchanges of fire. we've been seeing after the northern border since the beginning of this war, but it's really officials are now saying these are more than just tit for tat exchanges and provocations. they are turning into aggressions. now we've been
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hearing from is really officials throughout the entirety of the war. but most recently, these really prime minister sending a warning to his butler saying that those who play with fire will be met with larger fire and indication that they is rarely as are ready to strike larger positions at any time. and remember, these really defense minister, jo, i've galani speaking not too long ago saying that these really air force is actually only using 110th of its power in the gaza strip. and that the plains, the noses of those planes are pointed norris and ready to attack at any time. he also sent a strong message saying that the city of bates could look like another dancer. and remember, the americans have been both privately and publicly trying to sway these rarely as not to have a larger pre emptive strikes inside of lebanese territory. out of spears of this becoming a more regional war. and they're saying that they should keep their focus in the
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south rather than have another from to open up in the north. now, just in the last 24 to 48 hours, those exchanges of fire have escalated and reports indicates because of stronger weapons that are being used. and remember we saw 21 injuries. they are now 20 injuries. one of the people who was injured just yesterday critically have since died from his wounds and among the injured r 7 soldiers as well. laura, okay, so that's what's happening in the northern border of israel. it's now tunnel attention to gauze likes. we know that to kids is guessing permissions to set up a field hospital in the egypt. how's that gonna work as well? it's up to you has sent a ship carrying enough equipment for around 8 field hospitals. it has a doctor, an addiction waters and egyptian territory around 40 kilometers away from the
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crossing. and the idea here is to set up those field hospitals as quickly as possible. after the permission from the egyptians, which was granted, the ship is carrying a lot of equipment like ambulances, operating theaters medicines, any other type of supplies. and you would really need to set up a medical facility with the issue here is going to become how do you move the patients not only through that are processing, but surround garza itself as the palestinians. there are escaping bombardments around the clock. so t a here sending the ship with enough medical equipment to set up these field hospitals and hopes of treating palestinian patients sooner rather than later. okay, hum. to sell hoops. thanks very much for bringing us the latest the from occupied east jerusalem. this is where the um, it has been defending its for dentists attacks on hospitals and ambulances in garza and then now deleted social media. post it said ambulances. i used to transport
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patients in need of medical, cat and hospitals, or places where patients receive treatment right above it goes on. how, how much use this evidence is to transport it. operatives and weapons described as a number of civilians and hospitals, a terrorist infrastructure, and not to use for medical purposes. it points out that this is against international know, and it says, tons, hospitals and ambulances into legitimate minute treat targets donaway to as part of sent in the form and legal advice to the palestine liberation organization. she says, israel has made simpler allegations before. there's never been able to prove them is really army has been dying to try to make things that are otherwise illegal to try to turn them into legal. and we all know that it is illegal to be at hospitals and is illegal to ambulances, is illegal to denied care to the sick and to the wounded. and israel persists
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because it can. and i think is very important for us to put this in its proper context. the same allegations were made in 2008 in 2009 again in 2012 again in 2014. they have never been proven. and what we do know is that house to the doctor's international doctors, doctors from international organizations. everybody has come out and said that this is actually not being used for any, for any military purposes. and therefore it is illegal. therefore this is on israel to prove that it's legal. but even if we try to do that, we have to bear in mind what is really doing is trying to commit genocide against charleston and, and this is why it must be stops. now a, a funeral of a palestinian man killed by his ready forces earlier on monday it has taken place in hebron. health ministry says is that lights? how many was shots in the hedge drawing a series of is way rates across the occupied westbank. witnesses say he was driving,
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never building was a military operation, was taking place. us and in farm is in the occupied westbank. i've seen prices collapses, that prodigies ends up dumps and local lockets. it's another form of collective punishment. but as smith reports from bass, a in the occupied west bank of the crops are ready for harvesting the palestinian, the farm as of last access to the main customers in his route. since october, the 7th, as well as military has effectively sealed on the occupied westbank level so that the little bit of a jolt in valleys, probably science, food basket. well, we produce most of the west banks problem. it's got that purse codes, that's all bushing and everything comes from this range. anything else i felt when the crossing street the rail are closed. all of these goods go to the local market, which causes the process to drive. on some days we don't sell anything. i need to
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check is just getting to mock it is a challenge. palestinians are forced to take so cute as roots through the occupied westbank to avoid is rarely supplements the quickest route for us to days 40 kilometers. it should take 30 minutes, but it's only open to his regular palestinians will have to take a major d tool and let them know, and i'll have it on the, at the 110 kilometers to on june. in the past 5 weeks, more check points and road closures of a p, it doesn't, isn't, that isn't with nestle. but as the some check points are only open from 9 am to 6 pm, this causes problems. and it also causes harm to the small villages. we have to teach or through 90 minutes later we get to the market. it's almost deserted. as before, october, the 7th. this was a wholesale market with route from israel and vegetables from the west bank. but now israel is put in a check point just outside there and thats choke top access to the market because
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its stopping palestinians using a main road that passes through a nearby village. and these ratings have done that to protect the setlist who live all around the prices of vegetables have more than 100 shifts have been cut. some businesses have closed down highly economically, constantly afraid so much so that when we come to work, for example, like i'm from novelist and i have to leave home at 1 in the morning when the check point is an easy. because if i get a late to, i could be still for more than 2 hours, which impacts my work here. i settlements expand new ones appear. those weights of check points get longer and longer significantly disrupting businesses as well as the lives of the palestinians. forced to enjoy them. bernard smith, i'm just sara beta and the occupied westbank. that's cost style tuesday and bus robbie. he's in ramallah, in the occupied at west spine concern. tell us a bit more about what daily life is like. the just how difficult is become for
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palestinians as well. just in the last hour, we've had an updated dest told for the number of palestinians killed here in the occupied westbank in is really raids in his. busy reactions since the war began on october 7th, and it must be noted, there are no, there is no home us presence here, but that number now stands at 188 more than 2500 people have been detained. many of them without any charge now behind each and every one of these numbers is a tragic and harrowing story. earlier today in in, in hebron we reported it just a little while ago. a 66 year old man, as you said, was killed a taxi driver, and it was a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. visa card, he was driving his cab, came upon an area where there wasn't, is really re taking place. he did not know what was happening, was clearly surprised. tried to reverse. the footage clearly shows him trying to
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leave. and what ended up happening is use reilly's killed him with a head shot and video of the aftermath shows him slumped over in the driver seat of his taxi. wrong place. wrong time, these things keep happening during these rates of the palestinians here say that is right. these are extremely trigger happy and they never know what's going to happen these situations. and another story that creates a great deal of tension for is the 1st palestinian families living here in the occupied westbank throughout palestinian territories. there's been, is really media reports. we must say are unconfirmed at this time that another palestinian prisoner, someone who was arrested in february, has died in his rarely custody. that would be the 5th case of someone dying in his really custody since the war began. now they've not named who the prisoner is, and that is an important point to make because there are 7000 people in detention. that means 7000 families who do not know if it is their relative. who is this
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deceased prisoner who has died in custody? there is an enormous amount frustration we see rallies happening here in monroe square on a daily basis. they're not always big, but people say it's the least they can do to come out and raise their voice. they are frustrated with the regional neighbors here for not doing enough in the, in the region. they're frustrated with the international community. the frustrated with 8 organizations that they know are unable to operate in difficult circumstances, but still are critical to just by saying that the un and other age groups have less them when there are needed most not just in gaza, but across palestinian communities that are under it is rarely occupation one palestinian describe to me that washing from the occupied westbank, what's happening and gaza is like watching daily a snuff film, another palestinian man described being so frustrated and saying that it is impossible that all of this that is playing out. that is clear to see that is clearly one violation after another by the israeli government,
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by is really military of international law as of international codes of conduct when things that are happening are clearly wrong. and it's difficult to understand why people can step in and he said that it is clear from what is happening now in this episode of the occupation that the strong are simply turning the truth into lies and doing whatever they want here in the occupied territories can garza and wherever they can operate, he's specifically criticized israel and israel's allies like the united states and other countries in europe. same best, 58, reporting that from ramallah and the occupied westbank thanks very much. same or so it has here on the opposite around the united nations, those as flags to haul stuff in honor of more than a 100 companies killed in garza, the the,
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quite the storm system we have over the southern us. hey everyone, that's where we begin this weather report tapping into a gulf of mexico moister here. so we know this one's going to pack a punch. some forecast models are showing a months worth of rain in new orleans over the next 24 hours to central america. we go, the trade winds that picked up so that the steering rain rate in to the caribbean coast, up and down central america in time it has turned quieter for western canada. the pacific northwest snow is rolling across the rockies from british columbia into alberta. profits in canada, and then we've got a developing storm system off the pacific that's going to feed some rain into ss on tuesday. but this one's really going to be with us throughout the week. spots of snow moving across ontario and come back. but ottawa and montreal look, your temperature is around 0. so we could see a period of freezing rain here, but otherwise, just a light dusting of snow on the ground. storms move from venezuela to columbia,
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out of the amazon jungle. this for the most intense stuff will be and some record heat for the month of november, a saw so young, $41.00. we also set a record in salt paulo. but look, i've got this star here because we could set a new record today on monday with a height of 38 degrees in sao paulo south of that in se brazil, some pretty big storm stair of the it started out as a normal day. but as is often the case in the occupied with back it, turn it up loud, do you want to do thoughts? and so we were happy, it was a good day. then our car broke down. we got out to see what was wrong. the soldiers thought we were going to throw stones. they started shooting at us. i have took 3 puts in his right arm, the abdomen, and his left foot just a few months ago. a man and his brother where the, where did team doing and now you rate the currently more than a $180.00 minus has given these ranges many pres,
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littlest throwing stones at soldiers listing mentioned to them are potential headquarters. so this is the mentality by which these are, you know, sense of the 10 that as they mentioned, that maybe after their families are taken to prison inside israel, parents need to apply for a visitation for me through the red cross. and that could take up to 3 months. in the meantime, the minor is cut off from the world of the other. daniel, what turned out is there a has reminder of lots of stories. this is where the strikes have hit. giovanni, a refugee comes in northern gauze,
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residential blocks and being flat and the death toll is north. yes. clare, this tendency populated comes as being repeatedly targeted since the role began. it's where the aspects of his positions in self 11 and damaging residential areas and the 11 east village of an alta 11. he's on group has full, i'm usually minutes. he has been exchanging far along the border. i'm you and agencies supposed to be in refugees is warning that is oppressions in calls. i could shut down within 2 days due to a lack of fuel hold on 100 human black because they've been killed in the territory since the south of the full well and my colleague for the about the both spoke to juliet to my the and was director of communications about the possible and to the agencies operations in the war. it's on the face. uh, definitely one challenge, the seeds, the tightening to all of the seats and the restrictions. but we have on the number of trucks that we are able to bring in very,
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very little to no fuel fuel is running out for under the largest humanitarian agency and then the, the shelters. i mean, we're close to 800000 deeper now, taking shelter under the very same flag that is being lowered around the world this morning. they came to those un facilities under our facilities in search for protection on for safety. yeah, you talked about the siege and the safety of people who have sought shelter at you and schools, schools that have been bombed. so what, what is the focus of your work right now, given these difficult conditions on the ground, the siege and engage the city of the siege around hospitals, say, what are you focusing on right now? a comma, our facilities, that's where it impacted. we can confirm that more than 60600 have been impacted most recently yesterday,
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one of our guest houses where we have staff sleeping and staying in in the gaza strip so that they received 3 data hits um yesterday morning and we were very, very lucky because it was just uh, an hour and a half after our staff left the guest house and went to work. so um, this is increasing a 70 percent of those facilities that were impacted upon the south of one of the gospel. in fact, in the middle areas or in areas like from eunice or in the south, it's an indication that nowhere in gossip, nowhere is safe, not the north, not demit is not even the southern areas. our focus right now is to provide assistance to those families who came to seek refuge and protection under the very same un flag that was lowered this morning. but across the world, united nations flags flying at hoff stopped to pay tribute to you and stuff killed
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in the will on gauze. a minute silence has been observed in that on the will has seen the highest number of un personnel killed in a conflict in the history of the organization. remember that's because i have a now to kristin's name and she joins us from the u and headquarters in new york christian focused through what's been happening that in the past few hours, the yes,
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while the united nations has been paying tribute to fall and colleagues from the unreal staff, a $101.00 you and workers killed since october 7th in gaza. that's the highest number of you and workers and such a short time. as you an official point back to 2011 was 46. you and workers died in a suicide bombing in nigeria when that office was attacked. so this morning. the flags here at u. n. h. 2 were lowered as they were at un offices around the globe in honor of those workers. some of them were killed while standing in bread lines, others died in their homes with their family. the un is one of the largest employers in the gaza strip at peak. it had 13000 people working for them, many of them palestinian nationals, many of them themselves. refugees,
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the uh uh, now at this stage there's only 5000 who are still working, but they are working against in these very difficult conditions. obviously still trying to serve the people that need them as we just heard under those very difficult conditions in addition to the flags here being lowered, we had a moment of silence inside un headquarters that was attended by secretary general antonio terrace. and the deputy secretary general amena mohammed, they didn't speak at this event instead focusing on the lives lost. but the secretary general, of course, has been very outspoken in calling for a cease fire and respect for international law which does protect aid workers underneath it. okay, for us to lead me, bring us to seeing the un headquarters in new york. thanks very much kristen for the spring. and now our senior political. i'm a small on the show. i get to have you here in the studio. and so even as we have
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the you and remembering the terrible loss of employees on the ground in gauze, it remains polarized and paralyzed up the topic come through and nothing to stop these depths. absolutely. unfortunately, there's a, there are a good number of uh, of uh, veto carrying members of the security council that are blocking any actions on the part of the united nations, both to take up the necessary resolutions and to carry them through. in garza, the position notably of the united states and the united kingdom has not been exactly productive for the work of the united nations. and i'm not just talking, generally speaking, in terms of israel and whether it does, it does not do it just in terms of the continuing war crimes in the guys district. because a lot of those, you and staff, what could also in their homes and the beds wasn't just uh, you know,
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the question of, uh, yeah, i thought of getting more missed part of the thing and so on, so forth. it is the indiscriminate nature of the bombings. is that the, that the united states and all those need to talk about and, you know, and oppose and allow the united nations to carry their work history. now, the un secretary general, mr. good. this i think was quite right. what he said, do you and as you know, as a building on 42nd street in new york, the one as a staff, it doesn't have the power and it doesn't have the money. but what it does have is a voice. and that voice echoes the charter of the united nations, which is the essence of what makes us or the community we as human beings on this earth, we come together on that a charter of all our nations together. and on the 2nd values and principles, 2nd laws and the laws of war, the fortune difficult invention and so on,
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so forth. these are the ones that the united mission stands for. i'm. i'm loading the flag, is not just the voice screen from the united nations. doesn't have the money, doesn't have the power, but it has the screen, it, the screaming got all of us to stop the madness to. so what is the, what's the impact? do we see happening from the ass ways we have, for example, is way of best as the un trying to thomas the whole of unaware, working inside, gone so as being from us info traits as saying many of the people killed? well, how much members, how much damage does that to you would expect that after decades of lies that this would no longer work. right? but we are faced continuously, whether it's during this officials and others with this, right. and is just, you know, making statements usually falls, but even when they're not full. so they've just made at the moment or something
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happening. and they meet at the distance of this as a from responsible to what you would expect them to do. right. i mean, that's what countries do. they lie different much life for the countries right? for the interest of the country. we expect that, but the problem of so many buying into it, right? knowing that there's a track record knowing there is a tendency, you know, especially in cases like this, what is yours? i'm going to lie, you know, but that doesn't mean that each and every time one of them, you know, i thought is another a, you know, full so that we all used to jump and start asking each other non stop the same questions again and again and again, as if that is that during the day, know the agenda of the day is the one that was mystified when the is ready to slide these there is want us to look right. what do we need to know? sunset on left. that's what exactly is happening on the ground and guys, the staff and guys living with their families, sleeping at night with their children. they are not targets,
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even if they don't have much when they are not taught. they're not supposed to be fine. just like, is there any soldiers not fighting? they should not be 5 that i mean, then what are the lowest for, right? what these where it is to. i think this will one full search after another repeated unfortunately by important people around the world. like the a 2nd stays the less pressure then, and so on, so forth about hospitals being basis for how much not only under in been on on the internet is that which means that the entire workforce of the health and education sectors in the schools and the hospital, but those are all complicit with how much housing, munitions, and fight. there's also the full sewage and we don't need to pay that much attention and use focus. what is important? okay, mom to shop for the moment. thanks very much for joining his head in the studio. now the pentagon has confirmed the us will planes have carried out to more strikes
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inside syria, defense sex of defense, lloyd austin says a wrong box on the groups in the cities of i will come out of my a didn't with the targets. he added that the strikes were in response to wished attacks against us troops in iraq and syria. you know, we last night our us forces conducted precision strikes in eastern syria against 2 facilities that are used by ron's i. r g c and affiliated groups. i just want to remind you that the strikes are intended to disrupt and degrade the freedom of action and capabilities of these groups, which are directly responsible for attacks on us forces interact, i'm sure that's neil quinn. multiple probably tests of being held in recent weeks cooling for a safe spot in garza, despite many being organized by jewish peace activists protest is her face. accusations of anti semitism on sunday human rights activists. coil west address
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the crowd in front of the you when the stress that's pulled for palestinians does not mean hating anyone else. the the the babies that do with somebody else. it just doesn't do it. we don't we don't have to wait. we are going on wednesdays of last room, political activist, also an independent presidential candidate for 2024 and he joins us now. hey, on the out of their life from you, you'll get to have you with us. i find it interesting. cool. now that when you say you support a palestinian say you felt that you also had to highlight that it doesn't mean you hate jews. is the debate so repaired arise,
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the but you need to make that clarification as well as the literally is the guy i myself, are comfortable, great black people been terrorized dramatize and hated for 400 years. jews themselves have been hated, care a and traumatized. 2000 years, palestinians have been hated to arrive and traumatized by his re lease was 75 years and more. so you're dealing with 2 groups that have been hated to arise and trauma tags and you have to be clear that is not. it has nothing to do with the type jewish page. when you talk about love pressures, palestinian brothers and sisters who were undergoing a bowl of ball bearings, genocidal attack and assault on their bodies on their dignity on their humanity. and it's so easy for me is really government is so easy for right wing conservative bolt in the american society and the empire to accuse me in the be anti new was
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simply because we love palestinians. i make that very clear, but it won't stop our commitment. it won't in any way. they have an off by we want to opt out as the others is the know we care for you. we're concerned about you. we're raising off points as we get in the street. we go into jail in the united states government that a shot through with is more bankruptcy, essentially upset, spiritual, upsetting, and what the hell out because of an era, then we are going to call the own government, want some more good apps here at the end of the day does that do coming out and saying that you support palestinians. how actually can you make any changes to the situation that the god people and guards are facing right now a well one is precious sort of we have both the seats fire. we have an exchange of hostages and bell cindy, vertical presses, and those who are detained in is really jail. and then at the end of the c and the end of the occupation, it gets that diverse thoughts and in quite
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a while of this whole situation. and in addition to that, my, this is also a matter of one's own personal integrity. how do we live in such a ball bearings world and have some sense of morality and spirituality? how do we remain committed to just as the agent has been? but just as in love, given the wyoming grimness of this situation, then we see what our precious palace thing is, having a on the go, this kind of ball bearings. how are you using your platform now as an independent presidential candidate to boost your message? that one is we have to share the law has there's been attempts to rationalize and justify is really occupation is really subjugation is really deep relation. and we have to be critical of, of palestinian brothers us in the evening in killing innocent people. those are more crimes, i'm critical of that and the grading do the bare and to do it. i'm critical of that, but i'm keeping track right now the structures and the institutions. and as
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a candidate, i want to rise above the hatred rise above everything. and in part of the legacy of marketing has been a new haven. rabbi hedge lynette woodside is what the accent just is the accent just what this just doesn't look like equal dignity. equal rights. equal access the resources of the jews in that region of the world. when you look at the democratic policy right now, what do you see? do see a policy that has these values or do see the divisions? i'm thinking particularly of the silent signals where she to slaves, she's the only policy in american, in congress. and she was silenced with me when she was trying to speak up on these issues in your last day. and with my dear sister, she doesn't very much. so now when i look a democratic party, i see bankruptcy is, is ethically bank for that is willing to enable genocide, israeli government,
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willing to enacted us government willing to an aid. but we have to be very, very clear. we have to be very, very honestly have to be can't, we have to speak very, very fearlessly. and unfortunately, we even have a wave of black leaders who are so scared and intimidated and afraid of atec. they afraid of the anti defamation league. they're afraid of any kind of pressure brought to bear on them so that they don't have their own status where they come in with a true where their commitment to jessica, what kind of integrity do they have? 10, they put a smile on the page. the martin king of malcolm x can be put a smile on the face of ella baker. those are the moral and spiritual standard. and i want to be true to the standards of moral and spiritual greatness would have to do it all calm and view man that they had to do with a precious humanity. and that's the challenge right now. and his moment of overwhelming women, this one that you are arising well to corner west many thanks. indeed for taking
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the time to join us here on i come there. i know i may just shake up in the u. k. is conservative. government sees the home secretaries while a problem sucks comes also see triggered and good by accusing police in london of being too lenient with protests. as supposing palestinians is being replaced by james company who was fund secretary, not a new for the secretary is former prime minister david cameron has been tons. number 10 came as a shock to many. he said in a tweet all next, but he hopes that his experience as conservatively to for 11 years, i'm prime minister for 6, will help him meet the challenges the country faces funder gig has moved from london as a surprise. what time? so the former prime minister, david cameron, who as it were called left politics in 2016 in the off them off of that divisive breakfast. that referendum, he came out and campaigns full the u. k. to remain in the european union. the
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current prime minister, risky su not campaigned on the other side, full breaks of itself. but it's widely acknowledged that these 2 men, to spite their opposing views on breakfast, a buzz very much place in the centre parts of the policy that both centrist and that approach will be quite different from how the rights of the policy wishes to go forward. now, so a problem on it was very much positive that todd rights who could side of the conservative policy. and with that, it's hoping not the rest. right. but she came out with including the article that she published in the times last week is going to be a sign of how wish you see not cool have less of those difficult issues to deal with. i'm more focused on the sony political, a foreign policy issues that he will have to be contending with at this particular fractious time. in the meantime,
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recently seen that could also be giving an outline of his vision. his foreign policy vision lays for a monday evening and which he will on the line, the necessity for 2 state solution. not just as as a way of convincing berkeley to it. but for that to be absolute promise for that to be an establishment of the 2 state solution in order to result diplomatically the issues in the middle east. sonya guy jago alda 0 london, as well as bring by now all senior political analyst, mullin. michelle a bond. that was chuckle round already. it was let's see, david cameron, looking for the doors and the tenants. that cabinet leasing? absolutely. last time i was in london, he was looking for a to them office somewhere there may fraud or what have you. i knew, i don't know if you had the money even for it such as the but it's politics thankfully, but clearly yeah, it's, uh, it's quite interesting that he's getting back in that and i think there's probably a need for
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a person like him. regardless of what he thinks or his logical leanings or whatever, but that this very particular government assume that government lacked a statesman, a sort, a real expertise on foreign policy. i'm not sure mr. cleverly was. that plugs are on foreign policy or that experience or season. so i think mr. cameron comes in with the, with the 2nd half to this, to the job. he does experience, most importantly, in this very particular case, as the u. k. is, you know, is that the center of the storm on the question of ukraine and the question of palestine is right. it's not a sign. i think because of my, i think cameron has the experience. but he also has the relationship with president by the me. when he was prime minister, the present by then was a vice president under obama, and they had that a port between them. it wasn't that long, but they did. and it was important. and i think now more than ever that you can needs to connect with the united states, not one year as a follower. but as
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a partner, because for a long time, the u. k. was sort of america's eyes to the rest of the world. and actually sometimes translated uh, american to english or american through international. right. and it's there what is that island on europe where that's where the bridge to the rest of the world. so i think having camera in there probably helps a better guard, but he's also seen as the man who bought brakes it to buy some he stuff and the reference. and even though he voted, he voted in the campaign to remain within the you to carry is that bads? he's also going to go down to, well, especially within countries, within europe. that one go. i think he's what since he is or remain or, and i think it's weird go well because he is our main are and i think the biggest mistake of war was agreeing to such are for i'm agreeing that 52 percent would change, you know, british destiny if you well in europe i would that with such ease and us. but i
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think the question, the idea that he was that i mean that i think remains important for you. i think what's interesting, in fact, is that his presence today with the foreign policy report for you with been a government that is still dealing with the inhabitants of bags, that i think it's actually a sense that message that that is a, is trying to sort of you know, go past brags, it's been more the to normalize relations with europe because it really needs it badly. once again, the u. k. is suffering without europe at this point in time for the simple reason that is going to be responsible for all the stuff that was responsible for before, but without any of the privileges that they've had before in europe, which is got a kind of book sickle anyway. but i think my cap and i think cameron cameron was in the us, but i think cameron would be, i think it would be easy to be a positive addition to this government. certainly. and he was raised the pro, 5 of the pieces of government, one to 2 important dossiers. okay. put in
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a product that's okay, that's not a problem. that 9 have a sacking was what sparked all of this re shuffle something say that she's positioning herself to take the top job. what do you think? but i'm not that much of an expert in bridge politics to know that. but i think she has become, i think she pushed the envelope for that too far. and i think uh, you know, thankfully in britain there is such a thing as a system. and there is such a thing as a bureaucracy that works. and there is such a thing as liberal ality, and she should should be, couldn't just go on assuming accusations against the police and writing articles without permission from the prime minister. and basically stepping on the system because she was opinionated. she accused people hate, but everyone were not everyone. a lot of people concerned that her to be the hate minister in that you could the hate secretary as aware. and in so many ways she was pretty divisive, not just controversial. so whether this divisive person who's now not liked by many
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in the tories, certainly by none in the labor, would be able to need and the okay, i don't think very much, but will say interesting times in day monitor. so thanks very much for joining us. now at least 11 people have been killed by fighters from the allied democratic forces in eastern the democratic republic of congo and local people say they would tied up and killed with miss jesse's. of is a belief to have drowned just they tried to flee across to allow me a river into you've gone to the comedies army, says it killed at least 6 adf members following the attack. the on group is one of several appraising an eastern congo. and it's been blamed for killing thousands of people over the last decade. in somalia, thousands of people have been killed and half a 1000000 falls from the homes by flash floods for weeks. the east african country is being passive by relentless rains, causing extensive damage to infrastructure due, and so somebody was facing once in a century, flooding was more than one point. 5000000 people could be affected. extreme weather
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has also hit neighboring kenya. thousands of people have been evacuated from their homes in southern iceland, i have a fed, molten rock could rise to the surface of the us. the reason is being rustled by tens of thousands of us quakes and recent weeks raising phase of a significant full kind of a reduction. local people have described lost evacuations as well as constant trends and of cause widespread structural damage to buildings and raids. licenses on what the ration and north american tectonic plates need making it volcanic and size makes hotspots. okay, let's take you back now to as well as will on garza and an ice cream shop. and connie and this is bringing children some joy, despite the horrors of the will. it's running on solar panels of the israel caught electricity and fuel supplies, or a condo pulse. this is the only ice cream vendor left in garces,
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the ones popular treat is a welcome sight i said, is that have it's so hot in the middle of all the fighting. i like think ice cream . it's really tasty with electricity and fuel. in short, supply gulf and has been cooked in darkness, the shopping hun, eunice runs from sort of panels. how much of a whole lot. when i sold the extreme shop open, i read home us my parents for some money and came to bio. and i really like it. joy is rare among these children who cnn lives. unravel an innocence crushed by the i eat ice cream to feel alive, especially because i am scared that night crammed into un schools. in the dark. in northern garza ice cream funds, we use as molds with stomach trees run out of space intensive variety buildings post policy itself that the un says building the health of 1000000 people
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a crammed into the schools and clinics. and the trick, who was a allowed into casa, is a drop in the ocean food of water, a how to come by soup kitchens to be set up to help volunteers hits the traditional cooking method. but there isn't snow to go around christmas. we don't know what to do or how to feed our children over the shops of run out of stock because a strip is being besieged for 16 years. and now it says, well, there's not even water for us to walk before present. the future looks very dark for now to spend it provides some much needed response from the misery of war and stuff. i don't, i feel like having ice cream and it's hot. so i bought some, i haven't had ice cream since ago began this allows children to be children, learn come on to 0. and that's it from me laura kyle:
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solve this resolve. i will be back in just a moment with most of the days news for you and ongoing special coverage from long costs. the no. i'm not located on the phone. look into them. look, i'm gonna pull them up with me in the little say that they will see the
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levels that the shed actually on the officials level. these are the in all these little to i say that i say that friends. actual to say that monday that actual the how to get us out of town. i just saw it on the thought of a good. yeah. do you the some of the, just what on the, how to use these real is still refusing to allow international journals into jobs to cover the carnage they're all that they can report on 1st hand is be, is really saw palestinian reporters risking every things to get the story. yeah. 15
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members of his funding, 5 kills and and asked dr. sharon, what's happening? we don't cover the news. we cover the way the news is the listening post the the down or kyle. this is the news. how no i from though. how coming up in the next 60 minutes, newborn babies wounded trumps in a was a and as is where the forces around the dogs, as vegas to hospitals or hospitals and going for 50 hours of service. and then now deleted social media posts is really all me says ambulances and hospitals, all legitimate targets.

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