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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  November 29, 2023 12:00am-1:01am AST

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the global, the battery industry, we definitely manage our abundant resources and play a role in solar energy, harnessing offerings, 75 percent of global carbon credits, essentially committed to being fine. mental protection, enhancing investment climate digital licensing, your better tomorrow the, the couple i'm 0 venue. it's good to have you with us. this is the news, our lives from bill coming up in the program. this our finally home, the youngest, how this thing and prisoner to be released by israel is reunited with his family. come us release is 12 captives on the 5th day of a ceasefire with israel, m c. i a chief along with the heads of intelligence from israel and egypt. some are in contort to discuss the possible further extension of the gaza. see also the
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world health organization, warren's more people in gaza could die from disease than these really for me. just calling to the reopening of, i'll ship all the in another palace thing and family has been reunited as a result of the ceasefire. d o between hum us and israel, the volume. this is the moments 14 year old a month, so they may return home after spending months and is really prison away from his parents. he is the youngest palestinian prisoner released yet. um it says that he would often go hungry and they're still countless palestinian miners liked him in his really prisons. but as the ceasefire deal continues, 30 more palestinian prisoners have been reunited with their loved ones today. and so they may spoke about what he experienced while he was imprisoned. we are very
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happy, however, our happiness is incomplete. because we mourn those who have lost, we more than those who are wounded be more than those who are missing. our joy is incomplete because of the suffering of our people think i'm more off monday at the thought or decision. i would like to ask you about the situation and present before october 7th and after october 7th. that was the situation after october 7th. the 1st day of the war, there were a number of beating female inmates were being beaten. and one of the squads in prison was planning on attacking us, however, that you were not allowed to do so by protocol. however, 20 days ago, the s protocol to leave and there was another division that was in charge of the prison and in charge of our department. did you receive any warnings prior to your
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release from prison? to from? did anybody warn you against celebrating against meeting any people what? what did they tell you and are you scared or anxious for the coming days? yes, but they told me no celebrations. and that the day of my release, i'm not allowed to leave my house. i'm not allowed to raise any signs or banners. i'm not allowed to use a mega phone. we're not allowed to hold any celebrations. and if i break any of these rules, i will be taken back. let's go down to charles strep, said in ramallah. so charles, we just heard from osmond there until a may 14 year old. the youngest policy in prison are to be released. he was released today, 30 palestinian prisoners are scheduled to be released today. have a all now left there there. and they all been released or is that still happening on the well,
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we are waiting here for the reception of what we understand to the remaining prisoners that haven't picked and dropped off. we understand various locations on route from off of prison to here. this is a meeting point in room allergic. se crowds a gathering. there's a number of families, hey waiting to receive their loved ones. we joined a now by one of those families. uh mr. uh it uh, deed his voice, but now was arrested 22 days ago. so let's, let's speak to the it now will it take it out for the i just need to english a good to see you like to have you speak and you tell me how are you feeling 1st off of praise, be to allow. busy but does it uh, for me, ensuring the release of my wife and the release of her fellow detainees and high hope that eventually all the detainees, females children, elderly, will be released. and i hope that all presents will be cleared of all the thing
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these that is one number to some of the keys. so i've just done what. busy mean, it's very hard to find the words to express how i'm feeling on it, that kind of disease. thought of that, and let's say, for example, applicants or something happened on social media or so on, that you need to give us a warning. ask us to take it back. they don't show up at night at our house and carry off a 45 year old woman in front of her kids to jail and start the 3rd gaining her. and so one, the people of israel, the very say that there are, you may not, they say that they are democratic, they talk about freedom expression. where's the freedom of expression? there is no freedom of expression any more. so that is one to one thing i keep on saying, and i will keep on saying, come what may ever since we were children, we used to talk about a month and what he used to say. we are a people of heroes. and we will main that people, if heroes uh, with
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a lot and we will remain so until our less the price. of course. uh, i feel joy, but my joy is incomplete. praise be to unless i should just, i should just explain. the no was arrested and charged with in site, but she was uh, hosting things on facebook and it still was tiny. uh but you have a 2nd question. right? yeah. cool. johnny be, don't be so how would you describe your life without your wife's presence in the household? well, it was very difficult. life was very, very difficult. without her. the double. i've lost my mom. i've lost my father and the same thing for her. and she's also lost her parents. and so the period that we spent without her at home, we had took our own food. we had to put things away. we had to do our own watching . it was very difficult, very, very difficult. i had to be responsible for 4 children, even though i have a day job. and then after my job i had to go back to home and sometimes i had to
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order food and it wasn't always good. so life was very difficult. and hopefully this experience will never be repeated in the future. and i can only hope that god, that all the things will be released to me and perhaps be to other you asked me how her life was life was difficult, truthfully. thank you very much right. of course was last question too much the you can there is a possibility to mount after them. uh yeah, i just have to call it is always possible that she gets arrested again. she taught me a little more. busy well, actually there's one in the article in the agreement that was signed because the following the previous agreement to roughly 67, the detainees were released that sort of to, she'll meet the prisoner swap were re risk. however, now there is an article that stipulate that the detainees who were liberated cannot
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be arrested for the same reason for which they were initially arrested. they can be arrested for different reasons. however, the article clearly states that none of the detainees that for liberated as part of this prisoner swap, can be arrested for the same reason that they were initially arrested for. and hopefully everyone abides by this article. because like i said, she's enjoying her freedom. she's about to enjoy her freedom. imagine her being very rest that again. then the agreement will have no importance. however, they were very cautious and they made sure to include this article and i hope everyone of i by it. thank you. so can just thank you very much. thank you very much for speaking with us and uh, god bless you. so there you go. yeah, the opinions of, of one man, the return of his wife and his young family. now obviously he got a to arrive on this bus that to we expect to arrive any minute now or
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a child stratford. thank you very much for your reporting there from ramallah in the occupied west bank where you're still waiting for palestinian prisoners. some of them, at least to be released, will speak to you again. these really military says 12 additional captives have been released by hum us and have left guys uh they include tenants release and 2 foreign nationals. they were released by the military wing of homos into the custody of the red cross. israel says that they're on their way now to is really territory. so our high rise is until of even more. from all way on to sunday. all now in israel, they are going to be assumed reunited with their families, that usually waiting for the designated hospital on the day. and that's when they 1st get to see each other all the more than 50 days in account services. we've had a statement from the prime minister's office, confirming that 10 of those released is really citizens and to tie nationals earlier. we've been hearing. 1 of other nationalities,
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but i could potentially be because some of those is really, is maybe jewel nationals, which is often the case you could either the vm is the french ambassador to the united nations. he is with his live now from new york. so sir, we're at a key juncture in negotiations right now because there is some momentum to extend the ceasefire. we're on day 5 of the ceasefire. there's already been a 2 day extension. there couldn't be more, but we're not sure what those friends want to see from the u. n. at this juncture, as well. uh, what's happening now, it's moving in the right direction of close friends. when it comes uh that you may need to impose the release of what stages we need the these pauses to be renewed again and again. but we need more. we need to reduce of all those stages. we need to move to a permanent humanity untruth. and we need to move to assist fire. this should be
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the priority step by step, but see shouldn't be the priority. okay, how do you get to a permanent ceasefire? well, we need to convince every one of the 2 set of issues. the 1st one is the right, the fees ready to defend itself. of course, after what happened on september, on october 7, we don't do not change this, but the protection of citizens, one, the, and the humanitarian relief should be probably dies, of course. so we need to add the civilians to be protect the not to be attacked. we need to, you may need to release to increase and to get there, we need a full for which this fire as soon as possible. when you say we need to convince everyone reading between the lines, are you saying we need to convince the united states as well?
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we need to convince the 15 members of the security can see it, of course. and we need also to convince the parties on the ground. it's even probably even more important. so again, the priority should be to protect the civilians and to provide them with enough you may need to in relief because the situation in does uh do you have any transportation these up sort of the dial and not to get there? we need to renew the currency stem. the currency statement is nothing else. it's just going from a 4 days to 2 days. and we need to study the situation and to get to a permanent file. so there could be a strong diplomatic move by the united nations, and that would be if the united nations security council issued a new resolution calling for what you say. that means calling for a permanent ceasefire. do you think that there is momentum for this? said that you in security council, and i hope that that's what stage would you be able to do that uh,
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isaac there. what is even thoughts on friday now is to release the remaining or stages. of course we welcome the release of the stages. so today yesterday in the last uh, 5 days, but uh we need more and we need all of them to be released yesterday. we were lucky enough to have a 3 franco each. right? yeah. and the good. so teenager released, which is good. but we need all of them to be reduced, and we need to, uh, 4 flights you may need to get access to the street. it's not the case yet. we need more money as you know, friends. so november 9, organize a pigeon confronts we raise 1000000000, the 4 guys a we need this money to get in to get us to and the people to get there. we need to a truce and we need to as a next step of ceasefire. so i hope the security conceited, we'd be able to develop this one. now, i want to keep pushing you on this
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a little bit. it's the position of the united states and what france, the conversation that you and the french delegation might be having with the american delegation. the reason i ask you this is because the us has been protecting israel's interest within the un security council has vetoed multiple resolutions in the past. if uh, if the us wanted to call for a cease fire, then there probably wouldn't be enough for meant them for the u. n. a. see to do that. so what are your conversations with your american count? the parts of the moment as we move from one day to the other. uh there is progress again and again, we need to go to thank you a guitar with the same group, 2 thing the united states as well. the thing that i see i see for what's happening, know the stages of being released to the emoticon that you may need to get access is improving a uh, in the gaza strip, which is good. but it's not enough. we need 2 things. we need
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a full fledged you might need to. yeah. and the excess we need to complete the projects in of city dance and we need to move to a uh citizen month. and these crises, ones, if i uh, is under control, we need to stop find any real serious conversation on the ability to configure your, in this a, a for the stein on these right. and you switch, and when you say you said several times, we need full fledged humanitarian access to the gaza strip. what right now is preventing that specifically. what do you want? i asked because the secretary general said there should be more than one crossing points. open that means more than just the roof of border crossing. yeah, i think the secretary generally is right and it's just a good opportunity for me to think of him best so that he you for he's at fault. we need to more than one crossing points. this should be a 2 or 3 crossing points,
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if possible. uh, it would have dramatically the situation on the ground and whatever can be done to open up the, the axis be on the right side would be welcome to. so i think this is a legitimate request. china is top diplomat is traveling to new york to share a meeting, a what is described as a high level meeting around the un security council on god. what do you expect from that meeting? because usually when you know, when foreign ministers travel when the top diplomats of these big countries at the un travel, it means they're expecting to achieve or at least hoping to achieve something fairly significant. well uh china is uh in the chair and those who predict on suited for the month. so for november, the chinese find these 30 said to come tomorrow to attend the month. see the debate on the, on the middle east on the east side in palestine, which is good. uh,
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what we should expect is, uh, i did show them, but it's a good price shop to do 2 things. resolve the prizes, which is a uh, i pending right now in guest uh, number one and number 2 prefab, the ground fault real food fridge and put it to kind of negotiate as shown on the 2 state solution as soon as possible. and you could ideally via your, the french ambassador to the united nations joining us live from new york. we thank you for your time and for joining us in the program. the so thank you for letting me on the heads of the c i a and is really intelligence agency have arrived in doha . so talks with kentoria officials. they're also joined by the chief of the egyptian spies agency. guitar has been the main mediator and negotiations with how most of the release of is really captives and palestinian prisoners guitars, ministry of foreign affairs, as the focus is on extending the ceasefire and securing a permanent solution to the conflict or whatever. and it's the,
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the method that indeed the come up with respect to the extension of the ceasefire. the state of kata has been working from day one of these crisis to intensify mediation efforts with the aim of reaching a truce, and then a permanent ceasefire. the extension we have in place now was part of the agreement with extension depends on the release of 10 captives by a moss on a daily basis. and we have confirmation that 20 can be released in the next 48 hours. in the meantime, we will closely with, with the consent parties to have the cruise extended and retained for the confirmation from us that they will continue to release cap tips. our white house correspondent kimberly helped get reports on this from washington dc. the head of the ca, william burns in, had our meeting with the guitar, a prime minister, as well as the heads of the intelligence agencies for israel as well as egypt. the
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goal of this meeting to try and see that the temporary cease fire is extended another 2 days. and with that, another swap resulting in potentially 20 more cactus released from her mos in exchange for 60 palestinian prisoners from is really jails. the go also of this meeting a we are told is to discuss more broadly what governance will look like and gaza once the military campaign. israel vows to resume is ultimately complete. in the midst of all of this, the u. s. also advising is real about it's concerned with regard to the displacement of palestinians in the west bank as well as gaza. they are concerned that the concentration in guys is specifically when there is a resumption of military activities that this will lead to even higher civilian casualties. already in excess of 15000. that's why the united states working with
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israel using its leverage, to encourage it to be more strategic and surgical in its campaign to ultimately try it or radically it how mosse and its grip on gaza. now we should also point out that there is an ongoing humanitarian effort that is being led by the united states, 3 military flights. c, 7 teens already won underway headed towards the northern part of egypt. this will be what a 3 flights they will be carrying this current. 124.5 metric tons of food medicine and other vital goods that are so desperately needed. but the united states says that when it comes to this global effort to help the palestinian people that it remains wilfully under funded, the appeal by the united nations only has been met by about 21 percent in terms of commitments. that's why the united states is urging other international partners to step up and make good on their pledges. the right just before we go to town
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a couple as human sign units inside the gaza strip. i do want to tell you what you're watching in the center of your screen. these are a live shots of ramallah in the occupied west bank, where we are seeing the palestinian prisoners 30 pallets the prisoners expected to be released today and of the number of them to the occupied westbank. and that is what is happening right now. so there was a bus, we saw them just a short while ago, and this embarking from the bus and they're being greeted by the crowds that you see there. we'll go back to our correspondence in ramallah. in a short while. tarik, though you're standing by tarry cowboy zoom in gaza, i keep coming back to the same question with you, which is a really basic one which is about food, food, and water. the world food program said that in the last 5 days, they've been able to get food about a 130000 people more or less in the gaza strip. the population of the gaza strip is
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2300000. so we understand why all the un agencies are saying the help that we've been able to bring over the last 5 days is only a drop in the ocean compared to what people need. so where are you, where are the palestinians getting the next meal from? where's the next, the main source of food right now as well . uh generally uh, the goal is to spread out was uh, completely under the is really, really just compartment which destroyed several facilities that were providing different services for palestinians, including restaurants, paid free like the city of even a places that were a whole. so you can set it to be a good place for providing for services for the majority of gas. and so literally now with the uh, ongoing is rarely, uh, tight and preventative fluids. uh, generally entry that entry inside the goal is, is to a now with the allows the allowance that had been made uh that type of combined with the ceasefire. the,
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the majority of humanitarian aid that had been to the gaza strip had been directed to the united nations, which is the responsible entity for distributing. besides, generally the, the number of display sleep on has lines and, and the majority of palestinians are only depending on the age that have been delivered throughout the united nations. and it has been distributed through its centers. of course, the gaza strip. now the style of palestinians, the milestone of living inside gauze, the student has completely sounds upside down, regardless of forces right now to, to, with the situation according to the very minimum rate of living. they are just having few loads of, of friends within that date. and the also minimize the number of meals that they are having at on daily basis in order to be able to afford food, their families for longer days, all kinds of different meals and foods. so literally what palestinians and guardians have faced and experienced long as the suffering cost weeks of the bottom,
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it was really a terrifying. i'm sensitive to be human conditions. where did these slow moving humanitarian aid expected with the extension of the to it's mike selectively helped to mitigate the pressure of the policy and have as the as the united nation set. generally that is because it, it to be a drop in the ocean on the r coolants. so said that an increasing number of your military troops to enter the gaza strip in particular to the north of the church, which cause it to be very dangerous. and even to be very, a separate and separate needs also for the site. so clearly what those us check needs is that it needs, at least for a day, more than $200.00 tops continuously for 2 months in order at least to meet the demands. it's 2300000 palestinians who were deprived from the basic needs for out of the as valid. i'm going stripe center tax inside the deceased territory. sorry, keep talked about palestinians living in the northern part of the gaza strip. now
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for as bad as the situation is in the south. it's even more simply north. that's where the is really ground. troops are. that's where that's where there's been the most bombardments and the most disruption based on the information that you have and based on what your sources are telling you how our people in the north doing on day 5 of the ceasefire of the. well honestly, people in the north end, the situation, even most of the gaza strip, is much more di, in comparison with the central and even southern areas of garza. the people have been, most of the goal is to and especially those who remain and did not decide to leave and to evacuate the houses because they did not find any safe. sure that the situation was excessive. pacing we are talking about it for more than a full on 5 weeks of fighting. there was no need trouble of a few guns or even a humanitarian aid delivered to the north of the gaza strip throughout the spurious
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1000 square. depending on the local assumption of food that existed in the local market in the, in the notes of the gaza strip. meanwhile, the occupation forces have deliberately destroyed type real means of light is best suited palestinians were forced to depend on very primitive ways of having kind of access to food. and even though you were forced to collect tools in order for you to feed the children i've, i've heard from some people in the most of the gaza strip via phones that generally they were, they are eating only one meal the within their day, which just said it to be very in human condition. we're also the really, the, the religious attacks continued an old confrontation that we have most quite to. and the easement occupation forces in this area is very intensifying so clearly the humanitarian a back to now also had been delivered to the north of the gaza strip. still very limited with the comparison with the needs of the north of the territory as this area needs a very edge and it needs to be supplied. invest in separate regents and then also
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the, the gaza strip in order to at least help people to survive off to the destruction of bait. 3 restaurants, complete civil infrastructure in that region. a sorry god was the forwarding from han eunice inside the gaza strip. thank you very much for that to the latest. and so i've gone to the topic now again addressing what you're seeing in the center of your screen. this is the live shot of ramallah that's in the occupied west bank, where a policy and prisoners are being released. this is live just seeing the, the yellow and green flags as well as the policy and flags. so the yellow and green are the rival set. and homeless factions, interestingly, pre october, the 7th free a mazda is attack, you wouldn't have seen the most flags being waived in the occupied westbank because it is run by for time to palestinian authority. but over the last nearly 2 months, this has begun to a fairly regular occurrence. so the policy and prisoners being released today, or 30 palestinian prisoners being released today,
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some released to occupied east jerusalem where they live. many of them in the occupied west bank. and this is the life see now the extended ceasefire and gaza means that some people have been able to return to see what has happened to their homes. and for many returning has been a shocking, painful experience through neighborhoods or nothing like what they remember stephanie decker reports. imagine that everything you have, everything you worked for is destroyed. what of it going in a moment? yes or no, jetta says he is in shock. university professor, he was forced to head south with his family. on the 3rd day of the war, he tells us it took 15 years to build his home. yeah, and if in the degree that it's a bus of shocking, took me a lifetime to build this house with me and my brothers and just like that, i'm back to square one. just kind of and there is no insurance here,
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no compensation. what is going is going to cease fire has given a brief, safe space for some people to return to their neighborhoods once a bustling community. now a carcass of war this year, destruction and scale of loss, impossible to comprehend. this is new hon unice in the south. many have been displaced from the north, have not been allowed to return by as ready forces. we all ski officers 9 year old son how he feels that i'm really sad, but we're staying here. he says, one, imagine i lost all my books, i miss my bed and my toys too. they say they prefer staying here in the u. n. school which had become their temporary shelter. and we are a family of 4 and our house has made up a full flows. the ground floor was a commercial shop. my brother lives with his family in the 1st full while the other
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brother on the 2nd. my family and i live on the 4th floor when i was sitting in what was once the kitchen that was the fridge and that the oven. this is the only area where we could says the rest is a total wreck. this family just one out of tens of thousands who have lost everything. guessing tells us they still thank god for what they have for those who survived. and for the little things they can still find in the rubble, they just found photographs. he tells us just small details, the part of their memories of a life that will never be the same. stephanie decker, which is 0, as we can go now to charles stratford in ramallah. charles, we've been watching the live shot of ramallah where you are in the occupied west bank. we're not far from where you are. we see all the cars and the relatives of policy and prisoners who have just been released. we can still see the bus. i understand that you are now with one of the prisoners was released today.
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that's correct. just cheryl. the policy is actually just round the corner, we call and get all the satellite cable far enough round to show you those pictures light. but as you rightly say, i'm joined to buy one of the freed prisoners and her name is honey beside a site, and she is a professional singer. she was released today had the ticket offer. the kelley my i'll just english a show. she showed up and bought a lock so that i use because of the household for you. i being really fun um on the home even start to describing my feelings because we were in darkness and we saw the lights. i wasn't expecting to be at a lease online. i was surprised that there was a deal and even a cry of joy and of pain because we left other present notice behind. and it's,
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it's a torture. and the prisoners are so going. and they don't give us a break, the breaks to go outside and they throw gas on us. i have b, but i am very sad that i left all the prisoners behind. and hopefully they will also be released and they will be freed offsetting me, a suitcase kind of what that fits those you and then so then what does that, how does the situation inside the prison very difficult to sound good or bad had of channels it inside his head, if i lose money for those, because the worst was different situation, then after the war we were locked up for 24 hours. no practice outside. they treated us with approved to to and they were beating us up a lot, a lot of beating. and especially during the interrogation,
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they didn't treat us with respect or did you need to. and they, and sold to us, even the female, the president noted in the morning to prison. it was very difficult. and that's why i can't even believe that there was a deal because we were struggling a lot and the people who are behind are still is struggling. and i hope i may pray for god that they would also be released because we went to sort of a lot of pain because the words can't explain what we've been through and even the tiered guys they through or not. i was heading to the island because if a mean to my god, to, to have to call or are you afraid of the shuffle up was supposed to be angry, arrested in the future. i show up instead of 4 minutes a model that every po cnn from a man or woman, and that there is
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a possibility of being arrested for be so right. why would the rush thing awesome? the 1st place and just for post on the internet, jack and when, what's that? and i think it's a trivial issue. they took all the girls with them from different areas just for like both. so we put on the line when we were arrested, there is no freedom of expression. and all these inver, the gay sions, my impression about what we are under occupation when we have the right to express our feeling on the right. and so many girls are struggling because once they are in the prison, they don't cry and they are, they go to the shower on the prison, which is a lot of torture. and the thing that us know, what on a we have been is through a lot and i do really hold all the female and male prisoners to be released. she was a, i mean i'm the hooked a little stuck,
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was she with the so we are the and if they have to can the, by the people who are your plans for the future. what are you getting to do with your life after the president? well, they didn't keep a new dreams for us after what i would just throw in the present one day inside the present is equal to a whole year. i just for the freedom of expression for writing one pause, who gives them the right to torture us for one she pulled out from different areas from last time from different areas. they are just like smoking us up. it's very difficult insight. so i hope they will come after me and they wouldn't be stayed behind in the present time, especially for growth. it's even harder than men and the oppression was very severe from the prisoners. and the presence of shots was us. they wouldn't even let us outside the cell,
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the maximum 10 minutes. fluid is very little and every said is limited. and that's because we don't have a nice and there are. so why we don't have any in 13 men to don't have a nice and you are not allowed to do any sense. you have to just shut up and do nothing in the system. it's really hard to see. i see it. we are in the past. i used to talk about the prisoners, but after i experienced the, i don't really know how challenging the situations are. there is another prisoner's, her name is no one who's been there for a long time. i hope she would be able to at least take off the collab. rita was highly as isaac. thank you for the speaking for us and may god class. yes, thank you. you go uh no, the hiring report of what life it is right each i always like full. busy certainly
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hunting and yeah, many of the women that have had a similar experience. but you know, charles, i wanna follow up on that and, and get your impressions on something. um, i wanna see if it, if it lines up with the impression i'm getting listening to your interviews, interviews that hotel has done. mohammed has done in jerusalem in the occupied westbank talking to all these palestinians who have been freed. there is so much commonality between what they've all been saying, whether they are women, whether they're young boys, regardless of what specific present they were in the person you just interviewed, said she was in the moon prison. i mean, there was a lot of convergence between all their account saying that after october, the 7th, they had a few to no breaks to go outside. so they couldn't go outside. she said that they were beaten and sometimes that they got less food. the just conditions got a lot worse after october. the 7th posting in prison is that also what you've been
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hearing? i know you've interviewed a range of people who've been released. yes. that's exactly right. that's what pretty much everybody has said. um and as you said, you were listing some of the some of the risk treatment that, that these prisoners experienced. whether it be the compass, the fact that they had no contact with, with the families. the fact that yeah, money occasions they were deprived of food, those needing medical treatment with health conditions. what would deprived of that? it certainly seems old evidence would suggest to that. yes indeed. city, the situation deteriorated, sleeping and quite dramatically since october the 7th since such time as attacks since the beginning of the war. and you can widen the contextual side of, of this by looking also at the increase, for example in is right. the middle tree, right? right, the way across to westbank within a similar time frame. um you know,
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$3290.00 a rest of palestinians since october, the 7th, you know, and such a small fraction of them, of course being released in the last full days. so one can already imagine the kind of experiences that we've just been listening to her need and describe the a currently being experienced by literally thousands and thousands of palestinian prisoners that figure the 3290 is already around hall's, the amount of palestinians in these ratios, that's just the number to be interesting since october, the 7th. you know, a 168 at least have been arrested since deceased by began. and yeah, 242 palestinians killed in these rates across the west bank. so yeah, i don't think it's any way inconceivable that those kind of experiences as we speak a be experienced like thousands of palestinians inside is very child just to bring
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you up to date on those rates as well. um we're hearings say, believe it very serious reports coming out of the city of janine in the news of the occupied west bank. now we know janine is often described as a center for the opposition the on the story on resistance in palestine. but we are hearing that there is a substantial on going is right, the middle 2, right? this time, not just focusing on the refugee camp inside the city. but according to our report, completely, the why the city itself, we're hearing reports of these really miller trees surrounded the 3 cities hospitals. and they have describe the city as a closed miller trees own. so. yeah, we can only imagine that this is an attempt to make more arrests without projecting too much to meet the fact that the hospital is being surrounded, which suggest possible, is where the military interest in arresting possibly injured fights is because we
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know that happening crashes in previous rage and this is almost and not the of the with jeanette and so yeah, an ongoing right. involving many more races potentially involving more injuries, more dis, ongoing as this prisoner release continues. and charles, the numbers you gave us on uh, the number of palestinians arrested and released a 180 released over the last 6 days, 3290, arrested over the last 67 weeks. i've never thought to do the math, but i just did it as you were talking to is a ratio of 181 to 18. that means for every palestinian prisoner that has been released over the last week, 18 more have actually been arrested over the past 6 weeks. and charl strep, but thank you very much for your reporting from the occupied west back of the united nations general assembly held a special session on the situation in gaza, palestinian and bassett, or re admins, or address members calling for permanent ceasefire and an end to these really
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occupation, the only tools would allow sincere efforts to begin to address the humanitarian catastrophe. being inflicted by is the occupying power in gaza. only at thrus could lead to the release of people headed in captivity and avoid the region. an escalation. this throws must dead into a permanency as fire the massacres of palestinian children. women and men cannot resume should not to resume. you should not allow it to it is you. and we also heard from guitars, ambassador to the un, who called for a criminal investigation into israel's actions. and gosh, well, if you have the for the don't hold on, it. does the state of golf chart reiterates its condemnation of the rules.
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international crimes committed by the is radio occupation against the brother, the people of palestine. we condemn in the strongest terms, the systemic targeting of hospitals, schools in residential areas in gauze. this is heating this violation of international laws and conventions, especially beautiful for geneva convention. we re, to re, to our coal, to establish the international committee, to investigate the crimes committed by that is where you all could patient a guest civilians in the gaza strip and speak to gabriel elizondo. gabriel, you are joining us live from you and a headquarters in new york. i'd like to talk about 1st what's happening today tuesday and then what might happen tomorrow. so we're seeing this meeting of the un general assembly and we hear different voices obviously being expressed at the u. n . g a. what is that process, and what is the purpose of that? this is an opportunity for a member states to give
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a speech and to give their views on what's happening in, gosh, i mean, this is a meeting that happens every year was scheduled before the latest escalation from the start october 7th. but obviously it's taken on adding significance now. and so we have seen various different views here, but it all sort of comes back to what we heard a little bit from the palestinian ambassador there calling for a permanent ceasefire. i think you're getting a sense from all of the countries that have spoken at more than 30 since early this morning. of worrying about what happens once to cease fire in what israel do then. and what can this body, the general assembly do to try to perhaps alleviate anymore a civilian suffering in guy? so uh and quite frankly, there is not a lock the general assembly can do other than another resolution that is not
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legally binding in international law, but send sort of a referendum to the world if you will. but the clearly you're getting a sense, a little bit of worry you could tell from many member states we're talking about wanting to extend this cease fire, if possible, to avoid any more civilian casualties. gabriel, you were also telling us to look out for the fact that china is top diplomat is traveling to new york to cheer a meeting tomorrow. and you were saying when the highest vigorous come, that means that they're expecting to achieve something. what might that be? what do you think is happening tomorrow? well, you know, we're not expecting a un security council draft resolution that's going to take more time. but the fact that the chinese are formed, mid stir is going to be chairing this meetings. the fact that other foreign ministers are coming to new york to take part in this meeting. the fact that we're
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hearing, likely that covers a prime minister will be here, means that a top officials from the security council on these major world powers. they do have the ability to pass the resolution that is legally binding, clearly see an opportunity to make headway here. and i think that they're really feeling that they're a little bit up against a clock as a cease fire, potentially runs out as early as a couple of days from now. we don't know of trying to see the moment is now to try to extend it. and so sideline meetings here in new york at this, in the un headquarters here of meetings on the sidelines of the security council meeting can lead to real progress here. so they said we're not expecting a security council resolution per se, but there could be some advancement or headway towards that. and in conjunction with potentially trying to extend the ceasefire. gabriel levels on the reporting
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from un headquarters in new york. thank you very much. the warrant garza has been high on the agenda, the nato summit in brussels. the alliance is chief against oldenburg, has denied that nato is applying double standards when it comes to russia's invasion of ukraine on the one hand and israel's bombardment of gaza on the other. step boston reports from the belgian capital, as nato cheats against oldenburg drumming up support. for ukraine at a time when much of the world's attention as move through the middle east and the war on gaza. the messages from an 8th or is that it is important that this conflict that sold escalate to a bigger regional conflict on the message to the wrong this stuff they should not use search to, to, to seize the instability in the conflict. and i'll see to uh, to further escalates on the the have to reigning the process. i'm also on the,
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on his ball. and so we have the pricing houses that we are all looking to contend with us secretary of state is anthony blink and health closed door meetings with turkish foreign minister hopkins fee. done. i'm out us to discuss the war on guys and the future of this trip. ahead of his 3rd visit to israel at the end of this week. when asked if the west is not using different standards when reacting to russia's invasion and ukraine compared to israel, some apartments on gaza. stilton back reply to human to terry and law applies to all conflicts. but he also said that dot com be compared to ukraine, because ukraine napa posed a threat to russia and then so that may not satisfied. those who wonder much for most fence against israel sections, nato member states are deeply decided on israel's response and gaza with belgium and spain, calling the number of civilian casualties unbearable and unacceptable. and germany still firmly behind israel's actions. the visions that explain the muted response
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from nato step 5, some i'll just 0. russell's of the world health organization is warning that untreated diseases spreading and gaza could become more deadly than the is really bombardment. the w h show also says it once goes as largest hospital al, shift to resume operations, and is concerned for the safety of stuff under is really detention. israel targeted al shift the hospital, claiming it was a command center for homeless spiders. the military entered the facility just days before the ceasefire. the guy that does a has experienced massive infrastructure damage from which rights group say it may never recover. because as health ministry says, the health sector has completely collapsed. most buildings are damaged or in a state of decay. around a 130000 leaders of fuel are entering garza daily as part of the ceasefire agreement. that is nowhere near enough to keep health facilities going. for example, 12000 liters and needed per day to run the l shift the hospital alone. if you were
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then 10 of guys us 36 hospitals are now still functioning with only 1400 hospital beds between them. israel's attacks on residential buildings and gaza have had devastating consequences for palestinian children. many have lost their entire families. others have been severely wounded. you know, side reports from one of the few functioning hospitals in the territory. miss, i'll see think their home is all which i mean members from the night her entire building was bomb. the 6 year old is the only survivor from her family. she recalls the last night in her mother's arms playing it. oh and then we were sleep. me my mom and my sister and my dad by the balcony. when the 1st broke it hit, my sister screamed and i held my mom tight, the old building so they pulled me off the bubble. the 1st one, my mom,
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my dad and my sister a dead. i want to go to the i get a sham and her family were living in the state after a few decals which is located in the so called safe area israel or did people to move to in the south. now sham is in hospital with severe 3rd degree burns in over 60 percent of her body and she says she cannot feel her toes. but the pain shift deals from the loss of her parents is much greater her mission. and she needs a number of operations to recover from the bones in her body. the most important thing now is that she's transferred abroad for ocean treatment. she's only 6 years old. what has she done to go through all this? she's deprived of the simplest right to see the would mother. all the hospital can provide for sean. it's some cream for her burns. sham is one of thousands of
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children who are victims of these really air strikes. this war has killed thousands of children and injured thousands others. most of those children who survive how to deal with this pain and trauma of losing their parents or loved ones. in another room of the same hospital, we find 4 year old in the year. he's already had a number of surgeries such a young days. but the surgeries could not save his like it was and p p. m u was playing with his 2 year old brother when a messiah struck near their home to shop, now cut 90 percent of his little like doctors tried to save it. but because of the lack of medical resources and kept ability, they felt the muse is forced to take a lot of morrison to ease his pain. but his father is worried. it could affect his
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long term health and below the fear he was a child to love to play. he loved to go out a lot. now he's become handicapped on top of his illness. mobile is real, couldn't leave him with his 2 legs to walk on them, to play with his bike and run like other kids as a chicken. and though many of the injured children and causes for these sanctioning hospitals are in dire condition, they need urgent medical intervention. to save their lives, something they want find here. in the c l just the uta did and fella in south during casa. the college students at brown university in the us have held a vigil for one of the 3 palestinian american students shots in the state of vermont. 20 year old, his chum, our attorney, and 2 of his friends were attacked by a gunman while taking a walk on saturday evening. one of the victims has now been released from hospital,
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a suspect has appeared in court and pleaded not guilty. investigators or treating the incident as a possible hate crime. the still ahead on alpha 0 in other news, 41 workers trapped in a mountain tunnel in india, or finally free up to more than 2 weeks. the the
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of the, it's bring you some of the days of the news. emergency crews in india have rescued all 41 construction workers who have been trapped in a collapse tunnel for more than 2 weeks. teams in the northern states have power
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calmed drilled through rock and concrete, and fold each work or out one by one. rescuers use pipes to give the transfer workers, oxygen, food, and water. why they were trapped in south africa. 11 people have been killed in an elevator accident at a platinum mine. it happened interest in bergen to northwest province. the mines operators as a lift carrying workers to the surface malfunction and then fell back into the shaft. 75 other employees were injured. it certainly owns information minister says 20 people have been arrested in what he's calling and attempted cool by rogue soldiers. the assault on sunday in the capital free town targeted to a prison in the military barracks. at least 20 people were killed and nearly 2000 prisoners escaped. witnesses save the soldier's voice to anchorage president julia smiled a b, o and frustration at the high cost of basic necessities. special court in pakistan has ruled did a trial for former prime minister amber on han will resume inside the premises of
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the jail where he's being held, but will be open to the public. it follows a high court decision last week that his trial inside the prison is illegal. hon was expected to appear in a public court on monday, but police say that he was denied an open trial because of the threats to his life . on his face, the string of charges this year, which he says are politically motivated. a plans for a meeting between the leaders of greece and the you. k have crumbled. after a dispute about the elgin marbles artifacts, athens once returned from the u. k. greek prime minister carry uncle smith's attack is expressed what he called a noise, said british appointment. it's originally sooner for cancelling the face to face. at the last minute, greece has long sought the return of the statues. they were removed from the parthenon by a british diplomat. 2 centuries ago, with permission from ottoman authorities. 3 says that they had no right to give them away. that's it for me. so then the 8th of this news hour will be back at the very top of the hour with continuing coverage of israel's war on costs of the live
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pictures they are of ramallah as palestinian prisoners are freed. the, the latest news as it strikes on the japanese refugee camp was so powerful that it uprooted the foundation of this multi story building with detailed coverage, these premature savings, having to show one incubator medical stuff didn't have the resources to cope with them on, on 5th as john and this is really forces of healed more than $200.00 people in the occupied westbank since the events of october, 7th, frustration is crow at all. the jewel, many aspects of your business growth o business from insurance for your employees so they can provide the loved ones with a secure future to insurance that protects your business assets and tailored strategies
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to meet your investments. objectives, projects grow and sustain your employees and business with old mutual. oguchi will do great things every day. it's the moment the village is inside the see through got you and it will be waiting for that. one of the many isolated communities around the mexican coastal town rebecca pool. cool. good. yet to receive the aid of the hurricane. notice hit the area now and they'd be fine me a ride. they told us what they'd be going through our sick trojan vomiting because we're having to drink water from the stream. she has the monkey eyes and marks on over her body. everything has been destroyed. the majority of the families are looking for the future in the schools, the church, the village horn, because there is nowhere to shelter the community here. really glad to save it for
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a more to arrive. they say they've been cut off for about a week. they will, so the sites that it's not going to be enough, they're going to need a lot more. the, [000:00:00;00] the hello, i'm several venue. good to have you with us. this is the news, our lives from doha coming up in the next 60 minutes. finally home, the 14 year old palestinian boys released from an is really prison and reunited with his family. he's among 30 palestinians freed on tuesday on the 5th day of swamps under the ceasefire between israel and home us earlier from us released 12

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