tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 9, 2023 10:00am-11:01am AST
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seat caps its full feet release over cold, say periods, one more batch of prisoners when people want a permanent, he's fired. the, [000:00:00;00] the, you're watching the news on our life or my headquarters in delphi and jerry, you navigate. so here's what's coming up in the next 60 minutes. the us blocks the un security councils proposal for an immediate to monetary and cease fire in gaza. criticism from the palestinian ambassador to the un condemning that photon saying
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its consequences will be disastrous. ceasefire sees via save lives every day, lives lost as real, carries out another morning of frames across the cities in the occupied wes thing. and we take a look at that school on the mental health of the trains, palestinian chris, the newly disastrous, and the disgrace. that's how palestinians are describing the us veto of a draft resolution at the un security council, which is calling for an immediate and israel's war on gauze of the vote was called after the un secretary general. antonia gutierrez, invoked the rarely used article 99 of the you when charter kristen salumi reports from the un headquarters in new york. the secretary general made his case for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire and gaza,
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noting it's not just bombs threatening civilians, but also a lack of food, water, and medicine. the risk of collapse, of humanitarian system is fundamentally links to the complete lack of safety and security for all the stuff in gaza. and with the nature of the intensity of community federal potations. which as easy as we lead me, think of sex 2 people in desperate need to drop the united arab emirates, put forward a draft resolution co sponsored by 100 countries. it is brief, it is simple, it is crucial. in addition to calling for the ceasefire, it demanded the release of all hostages. 13 out of 15 council members voted in favor, but the united states vetoed it as long as the mos clings to its audiology of destruction . any ceasefire? is it best temporary? and is certainly not peace and nbc far that leaves them us and control of gaza with
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an ard palestinian civilians. the chance to build something better for themselves. the united kingdom abstain, citing similar concerns. russia and china was to be united states, and that's a colleague is to show before the, our colleagues from the usa have literally, before our eyes issued a death sentence to thousands, if not tens of thousands more civilians in palestine and israel. while others, including us allies, lamented the implications for international law as well as civilians made it was more in foot proof. unfortunately, once again, this counsel has failed with a lack of unity. and by refusing to commit to negotiations, the crisis and gaza is getting worse. and the counsel is not completing its mandate under the charter, it can move us to sit on. the palestinian ambassador said the future of the palestinian people is at stake. if you are against the destruction and displacement over the palace to name people,
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you must stand against this war. and if you support it, then you are enabling this destruction and displacement. regardless of your intentions. the palestinian and basset are about to take. they issued to the general assembly while the united states and other players in the region said they would continue to use quiet diplomacy to get more aid into gaza. kristen salumi aus is era the united nation the 1st us veto on palestine at the un security council supporting israel was in 1972. it's blocked un resolutions on the issue $35.00 times in more than 50 years. 2 of those videos have been during israel's ongoing war on gaza, including the vote on friday. the us has vetoed resolutions on israel $47.00 times, and all including over israel's invasion of southern lebanon as well as its
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occupation of syria's goal on heights. israel's relentless bombing of civilian infrastructure continues across gaza. the ongoing assaults has prompted urgent colds from guys as governments, media office for international intervention and more aid on images showing extensive damage to the medieval. all muddy mosque have caused more anger among palestinians. villa marks reports in russia, the aid trucks passed through but do not often pull the un is here but to not always help. 6 and so with adults, a line 6 men outside the field, stung by the my husband dismissing, i don't know anything about him and gaza, we're the communications are down. we don't have money to spend or to eat and nobody is helping us. the situation is dangerous and where should we go. 2 smiles
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here, all still possible, but with his 6 young children now. so things in a single tent. so not also economy wants the well to intervene. highest nice on the bottom right is that we don't want more. we're tired. we want to station life. know how many family and friends every last reading the tale, civic con units, hospital a tiny baby. and it's and it's charlie face and go with dust and despair. meanwhile, gauze as largest most historic, most rendered into rubble by the bombing. well spiraling smoke smoke as the sky line. the gunfire goes on. far above the cross keeps clean. there is little light left for those down below the marks i'll just say at a. well, israel has declared an area smaller than london heathrow airport as
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a safe space for guys as displaced people to move to palestinians are being asked to evacuate to a part of the south western town of milwaukee. the so called safe zone is only 6 and a half square kilometers in size. i'm not smaller than britain's busiest airports. let's get an updates with hanging my fluids. he's joining us from what i saw in the southern gaza strip. piney, 1st of all, tell us about the latest air strikes that have taken place in the south where you are a yes during role overnight that the early hours of this morning, more air strikes and marble bargemen destroying more residential homes and causing more people to either die or becoming displaced and this is the, uh, the uh, the, the, the aftermath of, of, of every single air strikes targeting the gaza strip just within the past of 12
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hours. then an early hours of last night. and your law was of this morning all the here in the city, a rough i city to residential homes in 2 separate locations. the 1st one in the southern eastern side of brother were residential homeless, complete, destroyed, and damaging the surrounding other homes. that least 5 people reported killed and multiple other injuries to the central rough, a 100 area that is supposed to be safe. and that's in fact where many evacuated who live ton units within the past few days are poured into the central parts of rubber as it represents. not only a quiet area, but also it's, there is a market. there are a thriving business life somehow for people here to get them to get the supplies for their family, their home a residential home was targeted and destroyed. and i once again the kind of bumps that are you destroying the vicinity of that house,
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5 more people were reported skilled and many others reported with a critical injury is causing the vast majority of the people who move to that area to move, once again, evacuating to a different part of robust city, this time to the western side, to an area that does a designated as an evacuation center at earlier our this morning and hun you. and just in fact the, the, the bombardment has not, has stopped at all ongoing val, money, including if collision is schools where 8 people reported killed an entire family at the center of hon. you. and is dodson area that has been under heavy bombardment for the last 2 days, 13 people reported killed and many other injured reported to nasir hospitalized. the house that was tardy dar targeted is the vicinity of nasir hospital just making it very difficult for whatever it is remaining in the hospital. any of the civilians or the medical team, just the situations are being,
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becoming very difficult for people to remain in in the how the hospital or the vicinity of the hosp. with the northern part on garza city, a big came under heavy artillery showing again time shows within the past few days, but more intense as early hours of this morning. so honey, on that know today on the issue of evacuation that you were mentioning a moment ago, these really armies telling people to go to this area and my was the 6 and a half kilometers. we now know that there are millions of people who have been displaced and who have been forced from their homes in gaza. give us an idea of that area and, and how it can possibly accommodate all those were displaced. this is little 1st of all, let's just talk about the fact that the robot has now running out of space and
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mainly people for the past few nights have been sleeping in the streets. and we've seen this with our own eyes here at the vicinity of the can we do a hospital where people set up tents here, but the vast majority people just to slipped on the uh, the sidewalk, just put a mattress and a sleep gwinnett. and despite the fact that it's cold, nowadays, the areas that people are started pouring into is the last day or to the west of, or off. i see the, it's the 3 to the western side of from where i'm standing right here is a small pocket of, of a large it a large sand area. that's what we're talking about, like the basic supplies into the and, and, and basic it facilities. now it is a true surrounding that area. there are you and headquarters. there are other you and facilities, but those are designated and, and made just to support whoever is evacuated inside you, you and facility is not to that area. people find it very difficult to get their daily supplies, little on the fact that it is a smaller area. and what we've seen is a large number of people just running for their life in that
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a small area. lacking every basic supplies in a very basic need that could give them surviving. in addition, there are just people who have been evacuating more than one time. just the fact that people were targeted in central rough i floss or lou our this morning move to that area. find it very difficult to set up a transfer for their family members. they just become an evacuation areas are becoming very, very small. the strength and size then become less save the. they are, they're not equipped with, with facility that could help people as it is to stay in their life support for the coming days. and, and in addition that if the situation could have changed and this eric particular area, in fact, it was you in your could become a targeted areas as what happened in hon. eunice and the western side of on you and is, and also in the central part of the ga strip and the north and garza city people do not
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a trust is really narrative. they think it's falls and it's confusing. contradictory and vague for the most part. thank you so my tiny, my move reporting from alpha in gaza. foreign ministers from several eric nations enter to you have been holding talk for the us sector, estate antony blinking in washington. they're calling for an immediate cease fire. patio haine has more from the us capital, no public statements, and very few smiles as the us secretary of states. it's down to meet with the foreign ministers of turkey, po, son, cutter, saudi arabia, jordan and egypt. the resolutions offers this meeting happening just moments after the us vetoed a ceasefire resolution at the united nations against a ceasefire. that is their main demand. we believe there is a model obligation towards the international community to stop the killing of this to get in better stance evidence. and it's the 1st time,
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at least in my lifetime that have seen that quoting for a ceasefire, it became a controversial issue. there's was the unified message to the press and policy experts wording that what they see as a double standard and refusal to call for a cease fire is costing the united states credibility worldwide. i'm not sure how the deep is the understanding here of what's happening on the ground. the guns . i mean this war has broken every record. the largest number of journalists get the largest number of of us because destroyed last largest number of medics killed the largest number of un employees. kenneth, they argued the biden administration is not using its influence with israel enough . our message has been very clear that needs to be at an immediate cease fire that needs to be a cessation of hostilities and we need to have immediate access for humans hearing aid. that is not acceptable. we did hear them say that there will be
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a need to hold the international community to account without detailing exactly what that might look like. but they did warren, that the hatred and the region is growing by the day and the long term impact. they are afraid this is wiped out 30 years of work and that an entire generation now will no longer be able to even imagine the possibility of peace particle heading out to 0 at the state department. well now joining us to hear about us, the medical burg is a professor of international relations and associate fellow at the mina program at chatham house. thanks for your time with us on al jazeera. so if we look at what happens if the un security council look after $63.00 days a for on guys on more than $17000.00 palestinians killed, i'm sure you're aware how i'm still in charge of that as well. because of that, it sounds like the by the administration will not call for an immediate cease fire . um is it fair to say that the us is admitting by not calling for a ceasefire? that is real, hasn't achieved its objectives?
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that's what i think is no one is in charge of, of guys. i know it's a was on this one of the public there what is aging there. she's just mention we've, we've had a little bit of coastal civilians and this is the, the, the, the cocks of them i feel like now. so, you know, the to know whether these are let you have the subject to, we need to know what the objectives, because it's done quite tops. the best stated objective was to dismantle how much they have to come in. does it mean militarily this month and engage politically? i don't logically, don't see how much is not going in the sense because it's also a political moment. it's, and they don't and you why this paper and paper supposed to. so the us is still giving israel the chance to achieve whatever their objective. so let's just say i mean the and then discussion because on diplomatic and military discussion, they show the information that we have a 5 and i don't know what the pays and the thing that's we've having little time, i have my doubts about this. but then how do you explain what's the secretary of defense lloyd austin said recently, he said that is real risks. replacing a technical victory with
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a strategic defeat. if civilians continue to be killed at the scale and then they go ahead and they, they re, to this resolution resolution. what is the us us thinking here it's, it's for a difficult addiction that is a complete philadelphia between what the say made it to them and the loud. we don't know in other ways, 2 weeks, 3 weeks. we hear that's the by didn't mean the session talk about the i'm think the new which might be very long, 3 weeks full by the students leaving. and because if, if it continues on down to verse is completely fine, you might eliminate some old militants come us many times. we might even capture the lead those of, of how much in gaza. but what is the plan to be on the dates? and by eliminating the police status, the police students in the guys are in the west bank has went in probably the region they have, but it might be some tactical achievements. but so the physically, if he's and wants to live in peace with its neighbors. and 1st and foremost, the other students, they might extra cosmo home then, then any good, right?
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and if you look at us and that's on yahoo himself and sort of internal is really politics. there's a new opinion pulled of us. this was published by my rev on the 8th of december. it's showing the public support for nothing. yahoo is a 31 percent. so nearly we're now 9 weeks into this war. is nathaniel his position any better than it was? is it worth? is it the same? what do you think? i think it's important that it should be because of the exchange of hostages for full reason those. but these are going to is, at the end of the day, by the end of the, of the will. she will have to go because, you know, as a society told her they could in full, you know, despite the cool option navigation, you know, there is a cold case, the spice do a lot of, of, of the nepotism. and then lots of other issues of locating is that, but the ones forgive him for what happens as much as the ones forgive how much, what happened on on 7. so 4th of october. but the question again, this is a plan. now, in my mind, you should have gone on the 8th or 4 or 4 door bill because the one that fails them . kenny lee,
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these are the enters into such will when these tied to accelerate those cell phone with the means of reputation beyond. if he's full of contradiction, what happens to guys of the day after he says that it's not going to be on by hamas . it's not going to flip, but i by they bit p a and he's always not going to occupied. so what does he suggest? so it's, again, it's a, it's, and it's a typical nathaniel, completely clueless and both of the physical issues and that same pull that i was just mentioning was saying that if elections were held today, nothing. yeah. has the crude party with loose 2 parliamentary seats. but the ultra nationalist religious zionism party with gained 4 seats. and i know that you said this recently in an article that is really, society has become more hawkish recently. right. so 1st of all, tell me what you're basing that on. and also is israel going to see the rise of an increase number of ultra nationalist zionists going forward? you think what it's very difficult to assess this isn't this public opinion polls in the middle of the world because we need to give you time off to do on people's stuff,
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to maybe to reflect what happened and the reasons behind it. it always is or pause that reflects something that happens the time of, of the questions and down. so, but i think in many ways we see that actually the, that is most opposed to people like benny guns and moving to the south and the guy . but we need to ask about the opinions, delma vocation mold in the voting, talk to him, because if you ask and there was some or sofas to shows that most of these are the 57 percent. if you support using mo, forcing gaza while. yeah, most of i think that it's only had the very excessive false using in gaza. they want to see more a false using gaza, how it's going to translate into into vote. it's an interesting question and how do you know that would be the alignments of to the will we alignments, we've seen these are the political system and will, this bulk is actually going to offer as, as, as a plots full. i hope it won't be as hopeless,
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but you would expect it's unfortunately doing. it will time. we see how we change off to the will. okay, thank you so much justin makeover. thank you. thank you. now is really forces having caring out rains in the occupied westbank and the latest operation. 2 people were arrested in drama, la copes here as well as the city of hebron were also targeted. the territory has seen increasingly violent daily raged since as real began its war on gaza. more than 270 palestinians had been killed in the operation since october. the 7th. there were also raised in nablus early on saturday. several is really armoured vehicles drove through the city. there's been no reports of arrests so far. and in bethlehem's village of madison about the soldiers patrol the streets on foot. their reports, some of them were smashing the windows of cars parked in the streets. the human rights groups are calling, excuse me for an urgent investigation. after video emerge of palestinian prisoners
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and gaza stripped and blindfolded. israel says they were suspected fighters, but there is evidence. many are civilians, including a prominent journalist. i'm how much reports, dozens of detainees, you know, must surface blindfolded strip, and surrounded by soldiers loaded onto the trucks. destination unknown. he blew, boyce describes the seat, the pro, but a scene and activities of fumble critical. the 1st thing jump in my mind when i saw the pictures, the 2nd one was to be honest with you. are they treated, you know, make any sense those, the way to address that or the present or so for i think the, this in the here, ma'am, this is a torture. if the amount of torture and the boat of them that it's
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a water crime declines, it goes to humanity. is it all he calls this main suspect that fighters but at least one guy, a guy who is a junior this up and you see a lot of be a deep suckle here along side several of the civilians that had stayed in northern does that b, i has a disabled daughter and a very old mother so logistically it was very unpractical and you decided to stay. we identified him amongst who was detained. we also identified at least 2 kids under the age of 16. both of them were 15 year old and we identified 2 employees of the united nations on grad school. man. we identified at least 3 entities. how about schools, the images, criminal, and disgraceful? and is really government spokesman. so to defend the detentions, we're talking about military age men who are discovered in areas that civilians
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were supposed to have evacuated weeks ago. we've been calling for an evacuation of those. how strong holds is a said the men seeing here we're facing corrugation but blindfolded, half nicky, kneeling and did that mediation is driving outreach? how does them have the data? for 2 months, there's been a study build up of hostilities on the israel 11 on border. tens of thousands of people have flipped their homes on both sides of the border as the, as really army. and the lebanese group has developed trade fire. there remains worried that the situation there could escalate into a broader conflicting golfing the region. then i heard the reports from bay roots. isabelle strikes are increasing in intensity and frequency. it's using force, as it looks for a diplomatic solution to cross border tensions with, as well as well once the lebanese armed group to pull back from the
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border team. this is by life. if his bullet chooses to start and all that war, then it will by its own hand, turn by root and southern 11 on into gaza. and con eunice isabel is looking for security guarantee is before the 10s of thousands of its residents can return to their homes. in the north of the country, they were evacuated when hezbollah open the front to help relieve garza from as well as onslaught. the french and the american invoice have been visiting be route, trying to mediate the political arrangement and the cross border fighting a z. i looked at the, there was also the visit of the chief of french intelligence who reported the ship lebanon could face big stretch if his block doesn't move north of the latania river and implement the end resolution. but those threats came to nothing. having isabel says un resolution 1701 adopted after its last war against hezbollah in 2006 was never implemented. it calls for this argument of all non states armed forces in
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lebanon, and the region from the border to the tiny river, free from arms and fighters outside state control. no union does. lucian can lead to that without sort of a lead to the intervention. i mean, obviously this is not the desired by these, right, 80 nor by the americans. at this point, the us is also pushing to resolve border disagreements that gives, has been the reason to remain armed. has the law has not commented on as well as the mountain to pull back from the border, but its allies have been defiant. they say the international border is clear and known and not up for negotiations, as well as the one violating resolutions have a huge 01. and if israel want security, it should create a buffer zone on its side of the border has below, has said this border will remain an active front until it stops its attacks on
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garza and the situation is gradually escalate to the area of military operation has widened with the front line moving several kilometers deeper inside both countries center for their eligibility to build the still ahead on al jazeera, from a separation wall to segregated roads, we explain why it is route is accused of imposing parts fives on the occupied, west space 2 or 3 other times that joe biden, his license last week concerning the east rarely occupation of dock, and we need the social media influencers and once supported us president joe biden . but have now become, has lotus critics. the had a lot of the, let's have
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a look at the weather across europe and it's one from rolling in from west to east officer. and now that bringing on settled in some very well wendy and wintry condition says one pulls away from the southeast. we want a dominant feature working its way from the west to more central areas, bringing some very heavy rain. you can see it looping round and a boomerang shape is going to bring some snow to the out. some frosting icey conditions to places like germany. we have got warnings out then some very last 3 wins to coastal areas of the island, the volume of that range, stretching down a cost front that could bring some flooding to places and it touches down into northern areas of spain. now on sunday, we'll have another one that starts to work its way in across the island of island and bricks, and it's gonna bring more heavy rain to western areas of front. and you can see wintery conditions pushing no way further east, in terms of temperatures. however, it is looking woman for cities like london and paris temperatures. here above the average,
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we will see some improvement across the central area. so places like vienna coming up to 6 degrees celsius, the woman down in the south, cold in the northeast. but some improvement for to moscow minus 11 degrees on sunday. on counting the cost a lot of phone workers, this function is rails agricultural sector into crisis. as a war on gaza escalates, gold is flittering. but what about oil? plus ready to resign? to save the planet, we explore the growing trend of climate quizzes. counting the cost on out to 0, holding the powerful to account as we examined the us as role in the world on which is era. admits the world slow down, we stand for as homes with tips of global nichols reserves. indonesia is points to
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leave the global easy battery industries. we definitely manage our abundant resources and play a role in solar energy harnessing offerings, 75 percent of global carbon credit suspension committed to environmental protection, enhancing investment climate to digital licensing. your better tomorrow. the color again, here's a reminder of the top stories on al jazeera, this hour. the united states has vetoed a draft resolution up to you when calling for an immediate humanitarian cease fire
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in gaza. 13 members of the security council voted in favor of stock draft, and the u. k. of stains is where the bombardment of the slightest refugee camp in the center of garza has killed thousands of palestinians. israel as targeting areas across the gaza strip. more than 17 and a half 1000 palestinians have been killed in the last 2 months. is really forces have carried out raids in the occupied wes thing. several locations have been targeted, including the city of phenomena, palestinians across the territory have faced the surgeon range since the war started the . it's been 2 months since the start of israel's military on slots in gaza. and the us government has kept repeating the need for a 2 state solution between palestinians and is really is once the war is over. but how viable is a future palestinian state given the reality of israel's ongoing occupation? let's take
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a look at one of the most visible manifestations of that occupation. the separation wall walls are meant to keep people out. in the case of israel, it's not just to keep palestinians away, but also to separate them. in 2002, israel began building a concrete barrier in the occupied westbank. it's meant to be more than 700 kilometers long, and it's around 30 to 40 meters wide on an average. israel says the wall protects its security. palestinian say it's a symbol of segregation and racism of so far. israel has managed to build nearly 65 percent of that separation wall. that's despite the u. n's, highest court calling. it's illegal. israel has use the wall to antics even more palestinian lines around 85 percent if it's root runs inside the westbank rather
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than along the internationally recognized pre $9067.00 border also known as the green line. it completely cuts off east jerusalem from the west bank and it cuts through a $150.00 pounds thing in communities separating them from their farm land, west jerusalem. they're marked in blue and east and yellow. and then there's the so called seen zone. that's this area that's wedge between the green line and the separation wall. about 50000 palestinians live there and they need is really permits to even live in their own homes. israel has built $71.00 illegal is really settlements with more than 85 percent of the subtler population. they're allowed to move freely. the upshot is, israel's legal separation wall makes it contiguous. palestinian states nearly impossible that abraham reports from the occupied westbank.
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this is the view that no scene has been looking out for the past 20 years behind the wall or the trees she planted and can no longer reach. people in the world wake up agitated from a bad nightmare. but here we are awake and agitated every single day. these really separation barrier cuts through her family's land upon the village. you do so then i never could understand. i heard the dick is working and sold them up, reaching the trees. it was a deep pain in my heart. they didn't care when i lost the trees that i carried on my shoulders and planted one by one decades later is really forces are back for more. in august they handed several families and upon the you confiscation orders to expand the war. they fear that is where we use the war on garza to grab
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more land. i had the shed did the this is our land and we have the proof. they say you're close to the legal is really settlement, but i was here before the wall. the courts and power are in their hands. my future is over. i fear now for my children and grandchildren. future israel started building the wall during the 2nd palestinian uprising known as the fall. the palestinian sea is rarely used security as an excuse to confiscate more lined. the walls length is more than double that of the 1967 borders sneaking into palestinian territory, running as deep as 18 kilometers inside the occupied left bank. the un says it's almost complete and will take up around 10 percent of palestinian lands. the international court of justice has read the war. is illegal, roads like this one are all what's left for palestinians. he often have to take
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longer routes to reach their destination. for palestinians, the wall is an extension of israel system of control as part of a wider network of roads. supplements and checkpoints built to give us really the upper hand while making their lives on bearable. why did they need that? but he just need the occupied left thing. so top you and human rights experts say that israel's occupation of palestinian territories is a form of apartheid. israel has built around $300.00 jewish only settlements an outpost on palestinian land and the occupied westbank and occupied east jerusalem in breach of international law. the palestinian authority has limited control over areas a and b while area c docks. most of the west bank is entirely under is really control nearly 700000 as really is live in illegal settlements to connect them. israel has built a system of roads, some of which are exclusively for jewish,
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is released across the occupied westbank. palestinians in that territory are banned from travelling on the segregated roads or even crossing some of them by car. there are at least 645 is really road obstacles, including a 188 check points across the west bank. tens of thousands of palestinian workers have to go through is really military checkpoints. every day. they say it's degrading and unjust is ro controls every aspect of palestinian lives through a complex system of color coded ives based on their location. is really ideas within is really passport our issue to palestinian is really, is those who stayed within the 1948 border areas. a separate id is issued to those both born in jerusalem and they don't have is really passports, green i d 's or it's just to palestinians in the occupied west bank and the gaza
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strip. and palestinians with the west bank idea can only move around the occupied westbank while a person with a gaza idea cannot exit gaza without a permit. which is difficult to obtain. this system has drawn comparisons to the one in apartheid. south africa will bring into that, but he now she's joining us from a village called some 9 dots in the occupied west bank where you're overlooking and in the goal is really settlements need that that is expanding and taking more and more palestinian lands. yes. but in the supplements behind me called eddie ill considered, of course, illegal under international law as old supplements here in the occupied. las vegas started being established in 1978. so here we're talking about 45 years of sticking labs and still it's expanding. let me move away from the fixture to
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show you how much it has been growing. how many nonsense has been taken over, and these are the land of egypt, and also of the close by villages here need. it says faith also, which is important. why? because selfie has a lot of on the ground water. so many here would tell you that the building is not random. it's tricky. just to be able to get more and more resources from the palestinians. if we have a little bit to the right, we can see the water reservoir. this is only exclusively being used and allowed only for as when days. but if we move the way back to where we are hidden jermaine, we'll be able to see how palestinians have these walters tags, build up their houses, to be able to gather and collect some of the walter to be able to harvest. and there's a huge disparity when we talk about the share of water that's allowed to palestinians and that, that's allowed to is really. so when we talk about those supplements,
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we're not just talking about lab drugs. we're not just talking about kicking palestinians out, but we're also talking about resources that are being taken by that day. and let me give you some context and all of that, just this year i'm before the war, the war in august, we were saying that israel has advanced plans to build supplements more than any other year with plans to advance more than 12000, nearly 13000 supplements units, so those supplements are alive, well expanding the expense of policies that i am reporting from them not even occupied westbank, thank you. or israel's occupation of east jerusalem. and the westbank affects all aspects of life for palestinians as you've been hearing. and we ask some, what the occupation means to them. how cool? let's do that as little i have heard was did the positive i still, that is on the phone. so the,
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you just download, you, i, i just, this has been ha, sounded a lot of some of the some i, you see the, it's all up really sending the little been in a while. i'm totally a live shots and the i you stuff just the dead fish all the benefits or why the ottoman is picking up in the middle of one of them had a mine because of the move in the had the issue at the with the, with the me or what the g a and the zoning. me, i know most of the networks here for the blackboard. well it didn't. how well i just who, who she because you to and i'm sure i'm begging in because all plan the kind of how i was just looking. i am in the of the negative to mean anton's allowed tens of the 10s below. i'm a can medusa i will to the how are the zip finally got the got there. since the war began is really forces have intensified unexpended,
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their rage and the occupied westbank. at least 3670 policy indians have been arrested. that's according to the palestinian prisoners society. that's $58.00 arrests for each day of the 2 month conflict. israel is holding 80 percent and so called administrative detention. that means they can be held indefinitely without charge or a trial. but un says, that's a record number 6, palestinians have died and is really custody the highest number in such a short period for decades. palestinians housing is really jail say they're denied adequate food down water, many report, beatings, abuse, and torture vipers and guards some se, vera threatens, with rate, along with their families. israel has also limited visits from family members on lawyers that's against international law. without that, having it's caught up with the palestinian prisoners who faced abuse while
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incarcerated and sent this reports from the occupied west bank. he might be home but still acts as if behind bar pacing up and down his hands in front as if handcuffed his head filled with i'm answered. questions that has had i seen i am still in prison. i am psychologically tired and even pain. my body is number non stop headaches. i filled out a tricity down my spine. i couldn't get out of bed because of the pain. they used to hit me all of it, it, buddy. so besset was 15 year old when he was 1st arrested, sentenced to 2 and a half years on charges including resisting police. but as a teenager, he often rebelled against prison rules. it's led to several due time extensions, totaling 11 years behind bars. 7 in solitary confinement the last 18
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months with no visits or outdoor time. the impact is so deep, bass and was appear to be released, begging to be returned to his. so that's him. frame long beard and the shoveled hair. and a lot of pent up anger. i am his mother, but he didn't want to come to me. he didn't recognize us on the way home. she attacked us. hey, tests got out the car and run away. he was annoyed with me even though i'm the only one who saw him in jail in the p affected me. not able to deal with the return to normality by some needed urgent treatment. this is the house, but the webmaster was admitted 4 days after his release is the only psychiatric hospital in the okay, by the west bank. and we're here to speak to his doctor to understand the long lasting impact of solitary confinement and attention the doctor say basle displays the symptoms of deep trauma need. that's a club national. and we think this behavior stands from what he lives,
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right. and any physical contact was aggressive, there was torture, immunization, the grading treatment. so this kind of present of feels that any human touch is a negative just yet i will, i'll put into the cost of the fact that the last been 2 sentences in prison. one as a child and later, a 12 year, one for participating in the 1st and decided that you know until today and it's been 7 years now. my phone has been on silent. i like the quiet. i prefer to listen until i don't like public places too much. any noise is around me just of me. i don't show it, but i feel different inside your 10 weeks later, vassal is still confused. how did a duct on addressing me as his doctor? last in time, setting up acknowledging his parents by the respective family of about them and i am an old friend. he was born 4 months ago. so who does people look tough to me? is fed me and took care of me telling me to call them mom and dad. but it's not
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possible since i'm in olsen and they are right. where is that most of your parents who had been waiting for over a decade to have their son still denied that moment. this is one story unique, but at the same time, not uncommon to duck reality of living under military occupation. that is only getting more brutal by the day for the how many of the 0 in the occupied westbank, the palestinians or remains on their lands after israel established itself? is the state of 1948 say they've been treated like 2nd class citizens for over 7 decades. despite them having is really citizenship to these like are, has more to a, palestinian is riley citizens. they are the descendants of palestinians who did not leave the loans when israel was created in 1948,
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at least 750000 palestinians were displaced during what became known as the not the old catastrophe. those who left became refugees and neighboring countries and around the world, they remain so until the stay a while around a 150000 palestinians remained on their own lands in will eventually became israel . they live on the military room for 18 years. these really military did not allow them to move around freely, and they were quiet to have a permit to leave the cities and villages. today, there are 2 millions 48000 palestinians is riley's. they account for 21 percent of the is ready population, which is around 9000000 around 60 percent of them live in northern israel. the remaining 40 percent divided between this center on the south. the listing is really say they often face discrimination at the hands of israelis that includes
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not being given a federal and quote, unlock of job opportunities and facing land confiscation. they say there was no equal opportunity in israel for palestinians. and salaries. benefits raises what conditions, which is led to a high rate of unemployment, israel's land confiscation policy, and on equal to distribution have also heard the main source of income, which is forming, palestinian townsend israel, which is the rundown, and neglected are a good example of this on equal treatment. many palestinian is riley's, they they so like 2nd class citizens on the times of trouble, like as well as one cause and now the government cuts down on the palestinian community from
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a resting protests to social media censorship. palestinian is riley's often denied the rights to express themselves freely and shows still authority with the palestinians and the old supplied west bank and gaza. a south african veteran anti apartheid activist. ronnie, casseroles is calling for a cease fire and gaza. he's a founding member of the armed wing of the african national congress on former minister in the 1st post apartheid government. for decades. he has spoken out against scientism and gathered support for palestine saying that apartheid has to stop. my name is rodney castro's and the south africans. i served in the liberation struggle with my adult life. i became a minister in mister monday, the government growing up in japan was big. in the 1940s from a jewish immigrant families. and i was very affected by the
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nazi holocaust. but i began looking around as i grew. so the africa and i couldn't be a seeing the way black people with treat to the shop full mexican took place in march of 1960. and i felt the thing that i had to ask my mouth change, and i'll go deeply involved in the struggle to the bright south africa. will you have one price group to pick 2 rights repression of other races in order to maintain the supremacy and to protect you in the system. and that's a profit. so it can be applied anywhere in the world. and it has been in politics, is wrote a set to the colonial state to originally, and then the prostate state as well, just back so they've forgot. so you took them that 70 some of the years of the
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thought that these rel from 948 in which the 8 to 10 right. in vineland some messic is interested in huge. yeah. into people they've pushed 700000 or more palestinians in the it's ms. kayden say to clear the territory of palestine. this is genocide. and we see in this process of so many, many dates through the bombing campaign in the self to with tanks, in hopes of tillery reducing 2 thirds of the housing to russell. it's absolutely what, surely, it's the phone the both and we the world is in fact standing up of thousands of protesters have shut down. traffic in new york city is financial. have
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wall street calling for an end to us. monetary aid to israel be protest or is gathered after the un security council of fail to pass a gaza cease fire resolution because the us veto dot bill. they call the us veto, appalling and heartbreaking in the last election, b u. s. b u. s. selection, that is, joe biden was helped in drumming off the youth vote by social media influencers. but many of those people are now turning their backs on him because of his support for israel's war on gaza. gabriel is on the reports from houston of during the last presidential election. george lee urged his more than 2000000 followers on tick tock to vote for joe biden. as a thank you, lee, along with a handful of other social media influencers, were invited to washington earlier this year to meet the president and get it behind the scenes tour of the white house. it was cool to be able to meet 1st lady
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by being able to meet joe by means of it to present him by being able to meet the amazing butlers and cooks. that was, that was note, but that was then. this is now binds embrace of benjamin netanyahu, and israel's killing of innocent civilians from their constant bombardment of gaza has left li, angry, and frustrated. so he's taking his social media to call out the president, is all 3 other times that joe biden, his license last week concerning the is rarely occupation of gaza at times. it's just leaves the show expressions that get his point across. and based on what i've seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team and leads sympathetic to an online effort by some air of americans to boycott voting for bite and next year. no, the data shows a lot of air, but americans are pondering to 2024 election boycott under biden's middle east
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stains because it is so horrific and humane. millennials and gen z social influence, there's are increasingly seeking out credible reporting on gaza and finding it from palestinian content creators. people like montez advisor, and others like him. people on the ground are documenting less. you have like, citizen journalists who got like monetize who was literally 24 years old, is broadcasting us and putting this on tech soccer, putting this on instagram. and people are watching it. he was, you know, people who are his exact age in other parts of the world. as for lee, he feels that god's a war has been in a wakening for social media influencers like himself. a lot of my followers on social media, a lot of my fellow categories, talk about how the information overload that we've done in the past month has ever changed the way to review our country of international relations and humanity for a man who was recently a guest of the president, but like so many other young social media influencers. now,
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one of his harshest critics, gabriel was on don't. how does he to houston? now let's take a look at some other news news. jean editing technology improves in the us is giving hope to millions of people worldwide who are suffering from sickle cell disease. the treatment for the blood disorder has already been approved in the u. k . and is the 1st of its kind to be given the go ahead. reynolds reports. sickle cell disease isn't inherited condition that affects the estimated 20000000 people worldwide, including in africa, india. and the us. the disease is characterized by abnormally shaped red blood cells. it can cause kidney failure, blindness, stroke, and early death. and it is excruciatingly painful for me. it feels like my body is starving for oxygen is and, and is suffocating. you know, i mean,
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i feel like i feel myself died. now the us food and drug administration has approved to new therapies for sickle cell disease using gene editing technology known as chris for a therapy developed by the vertex company, uses a patients own cells, removed and modified to produce normally shaped blood cells are, patients will come in they will have their stem cells taken out, they released some of them, big it to keep everything else, but there's the stem cells. some of their stem cells are harvested. those go back to the manufacturer. in the case of vertex, this product cash chevy. uh v v are they perform chris for past 9 gene editing, where they're actually editing the gene that ordinarily helps regulate. give it a little bit introduction in our bodies. however, the therapy is expensive. lengthy and grueling. there are very few medical
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facilities authorized to perform. it even in the u. s. and few are still in countries like nigeria, which has the largest number of sickle cell patients. so it is going to be a problem for us to be able to roll this out to where the vast majority of patients with this disease live, scientist believe the sickle cell treatment is only the 1st. so what will likely be a wave of gene editing therapies? for cancer, cystic fibrosis and many other chronic diseases. the lessons that we learned here, the models that we set are hopefully going to be able. ready extend this technology out to numerous other diseases where patients suffering with those illnesses who will themselves be able to get a one time intervention that will change the course of the rest of their lives. chris for technology has only been in existence for a decade. future advances may bring medical benefits that doctors and patients today can only dream of rob reynolds l g 0 will take
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unless you're saying that these laws actually encourage more violence, sharon has to know stories for a global audience. this is my, you house. this is the way what these are. so tight is the phrase us from our culture. open your eyes to an alternative view of the world today on the how does era the us box, the un security councils proposal for an immediate to monetary and cease fire in gaza. the you're watching out the 0 life and the headquarters, and sometimes a number of days also coming of criticism from the palestinian ambassador to the un condemning dots votes on saying its consequences will be disastrous ceasefire
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