tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 20, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST
6:00 pm
the, the, the the hello, i'm elizabeth, prolong them, and this is the news our life from don't. how coming out for the next 60 minutes, we're getting into the and is really drone carries out from s truck on the residential buildings. the officers and in rough us southern gaza, close to where an hour 0 team was with the folks in live. many of the people ended
6:01 pm
in the attack of being transferred to fairly functioning hospitals, including an eligible cost engineer. often days of delays, the un security council is expected to vote on a resolution calling for the suspension of hostilities. and to look at how music and story telling a house in palace demand, children living with the full amount of the it's 15, g m t, that's 5 pm. and gaza is ready, as drives have had residential buildings near a hospital in the southern city of law. for at least 10 the palestinians were killed and 60 injured. the attack happened while we would live on s. welcome to our correspondents, honey mel mode and hit right behind him. let's replay that moment of the remaining population. the area it gets to be this place. then and this is the,
6:02 pm
the tragedy river area striking, causing more of problems and forcing more cala city and the displacement which can of course now the pressure on an healthcare facility as well as evacuation zone as we're, we're getting into the oh my god, did you hear that the hospital that the hospital the are you guys here in the us are years here there's all the debris and no, no, i know i know i wake up its all gone. oh my gosh. no, no, no, no, this is really bad. this is back or you get seen
6:03 pm
this. this is right behind the house, but the right now. oh my god. i'm gonna have you. okay. let me see. let me see, okay. or just see if yeah, it says you see this is a huge, huge dark cloud of smoke. this is what we were expecting for 5 business. a drone did not leave this sky of this area. why get a low level out of the what if you was marking a target, a full residential homes, people are rushing to the side just to see if there are people. i guess this was the, we'll look at that a tragedy right now. it's causing okay us to see people running away from
6:04 pm
from the side of, of explosion. here's where multiple massive air strikes, right at the vicinity of the q way, the hospitality. see people are panicking. we can't even lock the. this is really, really bad. this is, i is the people on the right should now down the road. this is, this is bank the multiple multiple residential homes and rates. we're hearing there were people inside the homes that there were target in their hand. these were the way back to even displace palestinians at this particular location. more than if re, residential homes, completely destroyed. the, this is, this is exactly what we've been talking about. there is no safe place in java. i
6:05 pm
don't know, safe place. they gotta know, plays more safe than the other. even the vicinity of this hospital does a small sized hospital becomes became a target of those relentless areas track. that's exactly what we described in reward. describing these ears strikes be relentless, aggressive, a brutal as well. palestinians keeps saying the same thing. there was no safe place and gaza. and the immediate off off of the strikes on those residential towels. crowds was seen fleeing the area around the hospitals is run, has been expanding. it's offensive across southern gaza. meanwhile, homeless and israel have resumed indirect talks mediation by casa in egypt. i'm off, lita is my and honey as travel to cairo and welcome signal steps to was a 2nd to monetary and sees far. and the un security council is set to meet again and was on a resolution quoting for a suspension and hostilities. the council has yet to pass
6:06 pm
a resolution on the war since it began more than 2 and a half months ago. well, those strikes on residential towers and russell happened near the quade hospital, but also as in southern gaza, where israel told people to go for their safety. hundreds of thousands of displays, palestinians from the north and central parts academy in alpha. and then that strike alger 0 journalist and bull cost engineer in laws most and was injured in taken to hospital. there was a pole that multiple gentlemen were injured from the explosions. let's go now to our correspondence, out of wisdom, and he's joining us live from alpha and products that event seemed extraordinary to was watching because it happened in real time. but that is what people in gaza has been in during every day for 2 and a half months now. of the yes, another day full of the loads, the deadly attacks that destroyed everything and saw you guys are talking about
6:07 pm
the little religious is really talking thing for residential buildings for civil infrastructure and also for agriculture for months, of course, to 2 or 3 just before i know, or again, a series of this one are strikes that to completely eh, island, or took place in the district. this area that just appears to be designated to thousands to be protected from the back to zones of areas in the northern and central areas of the church. we a targeting that had been conducted against the. 2 most that was completely leveled to the ground. agricultural alarmed, the old beast strikes has claimed the lives full time student services. i've heard a number from the city of ocean had been named it and this i talked, in fact, i have taken area that is very densely populated and just close to
6:08 pm
a united nation run shooter which is very crowded and overwhelmed with the back to read these strikes to not only in the middle, the areas in the, in the news of the church we must have been with a team sucks in the value of the town, which is only a few kilometers away from the value of what you do come to the is really withdrew from these areas. people around 30, the fuzzy insights at this time. i want i do want to answer you in the afternoon in any devante, a little bit right that had been made. so the bachelor jabante of refugee camp in northern garza has been struck again by is ready raids. at least 46 palestinians were killed there on wednesday. many more if he had trapped under rubble upon us to be in bed. present says it's rarely false as have surrounded as ambulance center in jamalia, preventing them from operating. so products the newest jamalia is in the north,
6:09 pm
on the constant attack, and they have been claims and counter claims or the who's in control there. yes it is the best of that fact. so it is smooth refuge account which is very densely populated. did not stop. yes, to date. i clearly remember that job value are referred. you come has been on the east valley of relentless bombing guns as strikes for a long hours as we have pier, reaching a lump of residence in the area, informing us that we have been experiencing situations where there is really bumming to every single florida and residents the hearing the sounds of bikes change constantly and in that induct induction locations where palestinian scientists are trying to encounter that is where the soldiers, who are advancing move and the part into a value have to take full control and to eliminate all of the military infrastructure i think is what you had earlier stated the, the,
6:10 pm
the numbers of victims are due to the is really attacks and devalue richard becomes mounting. and also people that have been arrested by the minute treat. some of them have been taken to investigation to others, have been released of getting beaten and being a mistreated by the army. so people in the most of this work you do come in on areas that are experiencing corrupt. it seems as they have describing the scene that the milestones and overlapped marks of the freedom of this refuge account has completely changed on the residents of the go, the chance to return back again to become the one to realize on the scene of the cons as everything has completely changed due to the east really military destruction of the area product. thank you very much for that. that is thought about the nation situation across the gaza strip. live in java. it is radius twice, also struck. i'll show buddha refugee camp and rougher in southern gaza. early on wednesday, l 0 is honey. all showed went there and set this report is really workplace of
6:11 pm
carried out. a new wave of air strikes on refugee camps in a rough walk in the south of the gaza strip, killing thousands of palestinians and destroying homes. this refugee camp is densely populated with houses crammed together. if i let the camera pen to my right, you'll be able to see these checks, bomb device, rarely fighter jets. the scale of the destruction is massive. most of these homes were built with old brakes, and the roofs are sheets of corrugated iron. in many are more than 50 years old. some more than 7 pm. there were sheltering thousands of displays. palestinians, and now they had been raised to the ground submit. i'll give you them, tell you how much the field of a hello this. this is our shop with one of the largest refugee camps in that alpha which has been targeted by air strikes since the beginning of the war. even now is riley, were planes are flying overhead, heavy m, as in massage. and typically,
6:12 pm
a missile hit the house at about 2 am. the strike was so powerful, we didn't know which house was hit 1st. we woke up to the mass of destruction. dozens were killed including children. many others were injured. we were hosting palestinians displaced from the north. now were all homeless. we don't know where to go in this winter cold. none of environment hasn't stopped for more than 2 months to the degree that we can no longer sleep. we don't know if this is reality or a really bad dream. so if somebody in on but these old houses stood for more than 70 years ago when the shelter of him displaced the palestinians and of refugees. and now, after more than 70 days, a ruthless carpet bumped the bite is released. these homes had been levelled, how to set it up, but the, or the head of a mazda as political bureau is mind, honey, a as in cairo, and what could signal a new phase of possible seeds fund negotiations area. honey, i met with around foreign minister jose, and i made
6:13 pm
a law here in doha. amazing and cost was capital that comes off to as well as presidents. so the government is open to another temporary pulls and fighting area . we spoke to guys the home as a member of some office political bureau and he says it's probably or she is still think the will i think the vision is basically we love to still declaration was the war and guzzle. and the, because i think what's going on in the visit is a, because the surveys, the whole pause is much destruction unless clinical people last semester goes. we want to stop. this is, this is our priority. now some people looking for a small pause, a pause here and there for one week, 2 weeks for the weeks, but i think the includes. we want to ask the question because i think who is i with take they, they call the hostages and dr. that'd be able to start a new order out of investigating done once it goes again to sort of people, i think we will not be disagreeing, but i think we want to so it just will disagree and or people and the should with
6:14 pm
the oil on the or the come with big compromise for the did use for the prisoner for the hostages. but the priority. we dealt with their directions with the custody with the front bus. stop the collision in garza the does what does is going to in go this big shame for the international community to keep sort of especially out of the discussion in do you do not assembling to go to, to cancel that most of the countries may have to better serve 20 countries all over the world. the world sits by the the best for him. i correspond to dennis smith. he's joining us live from tel aviv and voted how to is really straight about the possibility of new says find negotiations. well, is rarely some of the pressure from 2 sides really from the us who is expect taking israel to move to a less intense phase of the wall. perhaps in 3 or 4 weeks. i'm from the other side
6:15 pm
. these riley public who wants, who's fully behind the wall, but once the captives to be freed. so the slightly to kind of contradictory aspirations on it. there is a ceasefire. some sold before and we close within the next 2 or 3 or 4 weeks. then you would imagine that there are less than 10 space of the war would begin much sooner. now we know that israel is what is being reported in the washington post. the israel model for as much as a 2 week cease fire didn't not. what gave us enough time to find all the campuses goes to how much doesn't necessarily have control of all of them and is riley is wanting at least 40 count saves, which includes women and those who are sick. and it would also involve israel pulling back the soldiers from the northern parts of gaza. also, as israel is also repeatedly making clear that this is not a permanent ceasefire, it is more of a truce to allow those hostages to be found to be found. of course we know about
6:16 pm
how much once a permanent ceasefire and we don't know yet, but what israel is willing to give in return, in terms of a number of palestinian prisoners as what are the severity of crimes. those prisoners have been convicted or right fed. meanwhile, israel's foreign minister has been in cyprus, there were reports looking at creating a maritime kartel for a to be delivered directly to the us. uh, what more you hearing about this this idea of has been floating around for a long time and the idea that and there is a, some of the, some british aid in cyprus, unabridged vessel. and the idea of how they can somehow deliver this to gauze as port a port, by the way, some very, very small ports and has already been essentially palm to destruction. so the logistics and the capabilities, how you can physically get about aid from cypress about phone to columbus as
6:17 pm
a way and deliver it to a guys that poses a plan. there's no indication more. well, how much things of that? because the easiest way to deliver aid into guys in the boat is through the kind of most of them crossing the land for the crossing between israel and gaza. that is specifically designed for gods. he's got a fuel pipeline that as well. but israel wants to continue this principle, but is not, doesn't want to allow him to contact with gaza. it wants to see la garza and so it's not for pad a problem temporarily to continue using kind of my boost island. it wants to make it essentially much hard to deliver aid by delivering it through rough, uh and whether this idea of somehow delivering it from cyprus. all right, so and, and thank you very much for that. that's been a smith with the what we know so far. i live in tel aviv to the un security council as expected divorce in the coming hours on a resolution quoting for the suspension of hostilities in gaza. the vote has already been delayed twice this week has different mat, somebody negotiation with the united states on the wording of the resolution.
6:18 pm
earlier this month, washington vetoed resolution calling for a cx 5. the latest ross pulls on the parties of the conflict and gaza to comply with the obligations on the international regarding the protection of civilians. it also cools urgent and extended humanitarian pauses and car doors throughout the gaza strip for a sufficient number of days to enable full, rapid, safe and on hand it humanitarian access. addition to it calls for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages. that's bringing our correspondence gabriel and his own though he's joining us live from the un headquarters in new york. so in many today's game, what's being the hold up and what are we expecting tonight as well the hold up is quite frankly, bend the united states. that's very clear because united states is clearly not satisfied with the original draft that came out on friday. there was circulated on
6:19 pm
friday that called for suspension. i'm sorry, called for a succession of hostilities. so they asked for that were going to be changed. it was changed to suspension of hostilities or less permanent to a term there. and it's been the united states that we think has been continuing to ask for changes and modifications behind the scenes being closed doors. but at some point, the other members of the security council, premier of the united arab emirates, which is drafted and essentially sponsoring this resolution, has to either agree to continue delays or not. and so we are believe now that there will be a vote within the next hour or 2 in the security council. and at that point, we will see what happens on this. now this 1st draft came out last friday. so this has been now or on day 5, almost uh, almost end of day 6, if you will, on this draft being reviewed by the united states and other other security council
6:20 pm
members. this is a hugely important security council resolution. it has wide support by security council members. it will pass that is very clear. the only thing that would prevent it from passing is if the united states chooses to veto it. and we are being told between 2 sources diplomatic sources that is events breaking down to 0 have said that they are hearing that the us has not taken off the table. the option to veto, we've not heard from united states will wait until that boat happens. but clearly there has been a lot of last minute negotiations, but according to, to diplomatic sources, zip told out to 0 that they are hearing that the united states has not taken off the table the option for a potential veto. gabe, thank you very much for that. that is gabriel. and he's under live at the un
6:21 pm
headquarters in new york for now as bring him a home, a shed colleague. he's a professor of conflict resolution and diplomacy at george mason university. very good to see you, mr. try to call it. there are reports that another sticking point for the us of this resolution is that it doesn't want a un bought a to more than to the flow of 8 and the guys up because as well doesn't want that. why would as well be against that? while the for all these reasons is what i think that is the only power that has solve it on the, on the ground. therefore, there is no other condition of the civilian devastation alone, but it stands. there is no way to good condition visa, visa, united nations. and whether it's an org and every water in the past 75 years, the u. n. has to find a for the solution of also provide a monetary and medical assistance for the victims. unfortunately, now we have,
6:22 pm
this is the a strong power part time. that's 3 x negatively to all state pulling those notes only. the 1st thing is, and what these perceived as the animal which in this comes to how much, but also do you and by the and do you and a no says, i think this is like an unpopular rejection of a, a bullet that can initiate. they've come from outside, the middle is coming from new york, the security council and build and this would be consistent with what rights organizations have been saying since the start of the war, which is as well as using aid as of what kind of full. unfortunately, if we look at the basics of any conflicts, it should remain. we'd then combat the combatants on both sides. in this case, we have the is what it is on the other hand, mess bottom of the guys. unfortunately, over the past 7576, they use what have seen not to the level of thought of good, you know,
6:23 pm
of how much us, but it's more of a civilian or a guess to really use them. so unfortunately, it seems that the claim of nothing, you know that he is off of how much guys is not accurate and it, because the radius of the station has got to be on much beyond this object. if so, why we have to sacrifice more. nearly 20000 civilians, 70 percent of them are true, but i'm children, women. the long as you can afford doesn't want to apply here at the same time. he and that's and you know, who is also pushing away on the initiatives now out of looking at this to day of arguments for the sake of out of doing the security council. yes, drone was said between the parties and the united states has positioned it's of that the would cease fire or any of these st. all that the, that the resolution is essentially as was down. so possible you teach diplomacy,
6:24 pm
we were just hearing from our cost onto to gabriel and he's on the, at the un headquarters. and he was saying that they, a hearing that the us will not take the possibility of a veto of the table to, for the vote takes place. why would they be saying that the what, what 12 witness, you know, in new york is not a point to can populate some model for both of semantics or over language. how this is video shut off, should be finalized. so the u. s. has a said no to $65.00, even the snow this ation or even this is the station or suspension of hostilities. any water that brings the idea of that as well, close to something that can be open ended can be put them in, doesn't means, well, i'll put you in a hold to this war view. as i've said no on the double is that we have small ingredients when it comes to the checklist of the un mission or do as the mission
6:25 pm
of the us. unfortunately, i think in the u. s. a is way reading this vehicle as a weapon off, imposing more of a demand. therefore, i think that this is probably the 10th, or the 11th revision of the document would narrow down to the very basic, you know, it's like we are pleading is on our end to calm. so the, some of the, yeah, this is beyond what difference was. the problem i say is we have really interesting to see what the final resolution says. and of course, more importantly, if it will pass this time. that is mohammed shed call we of george mason university . thank you very much for your analysis. 25 pounds to needs have interested in the occupied westbank office size is confronted as rarely troops carrying out more res is there any military that goes into the northern city of janine and to best any on
6:26 pm
wednesday to palestinians were reportedly injured engineering more than 300 palestinians, including children, had been killed by his very forces and set list in the occupied westbank since of war on gauze up again. island fisher has moved from dom i lot in the occupied westbank. well, another night, another series of raids, it could almost put a line from the north to the sides of the occupied westbank and see the places that had been effected. they have become well known to viewers around the world. but perhaps the most serious incident was just a few hours ago in a place called it a noon which is north of hebron. a 28 year old man who is a sales rep for a pharmaceutical company was driving in that area. he made a left turn, not knowing that there would have been closed since october. the 7th. the israeli soldiers apparently saw that as a threat and they opened fire. know the ambulance tried to get to the mind, but they were blocked by the is really army and he eventually passed away those on the ground and say it was a simple mistake. he, he was trying to turn through,
6:27 pm
take the road, realized his mistake, and it was at that point that these valleys opened up and started fighting. no, that is really army. how be not his highest they've conducted set tuesday a as well. and there was also an incident to, at a school and in southern nablus, where the children were coming out after i had exam a series of exams and they were met with a bully of some good needs by these really ami quite what the strategic threat these children imagine from school paused to the use of the army. no one is entirely sure, but we have told by the, the local kind, so head that at no one was actually injured. but clearly, it was pretty shocking to those children who thought the day at school was done. to give us defense secretary lloyd austin has visited an american aircraft carrier and the eastern mediterranean sea. the carrier was deployed and those waters in october with the aimless, determine why the original conflict often has been on the middle east tool has
6:28 pm
announced a maritime initiative to counter attacks on commercial vessels in the red sea by humans who the forces. meanwhile, the leader of the route these has said, has fighters will retaliate against the us. if it targets german. i've been malika who they also can use the us of being complicit and as well as war and gaza. with the buick she at them. i mean, all these birds drive this as you get to reported by media from ali, the met attends a come palaces. so these crimes eliminates to be for that, that the americans were complicit from day one moment. the dispatch, the military experts, mandatory consultants in order to manage the old fans to manage these lately military all places on it is they united states experts
6:29 pm
who laid down plans and carry out the minutes of the operations as that is oliver, that they are accessories of leaning to the scribes above old can, i'm in the united states, provided the zionist entity with thousands of bomb. i'm missing to try to get that is it then said that is the even the internationally bad i'm of the weapon to the head on out is there. i would have an update from 11 on southern for what, what is what has been intensifying strikes against has paula the the hi, we've got the usual scattering of showers across see the amazon base on that pop called
6:30 pm
cloud. the hoops of the wet weather coming from the south because while the system here just running out to power, why just nothing a little further raced with high pressure to the south of that. and that's joyce womack right. what normally when seem to pull standby, for example, the fault is getting up to 18 degrees celsius. so some lovely presence on the shiny bits and pieces of shabby right there. so that eastern side all of option to good scattering of showers. and as i mentioned across the amazon facing and more of the side, just a little further west, which as we go on through this thing up towards the north west of the continent, a lot of heavy showers west of whether it's just coming in across the central pos of the kind of are being to easing away from his spine. yet i've seen some very heavy rain recently in to pay go cool. some flooding here, but the west to weather. so nickel, central pos, of the car be in the middle just a little further west was just because 3 fast i to the west that scattering the showers towards quantum mileage towards police. i think too much yet to speak of nothing too much to speak of to across north america, a little more cloud embrace,
6:31 pm
some showers, some of them tiny wintry around the, the southern rockies over the next day or so. and it's still pretty west as on the west coast with rain sliding into southern california, the highly toxic pesticides linked to elevated occurrences of parkinson's disease and the farmers who used it. were you ever warned about the health effects of hardware? no fault lines exposes how for decades a global chemical giant withheld information, while 1000 american problems, he actually said he should never put the words per question. parkinson's disease of the same sentence, the pesticide play book on a jersey, the, the, [000:00:00;00]
6:32 pm
6:33 pm
on top stories saw at least 10 palestinians have been killed. and this really strikes on residential towels and southern gaza. they have them near the quite hospitals in the city of rough up just behind an elderly or a television crew, as they would live on. and i'm also in israel, have the zoomed in direct talks mediated by castro in egypt. the groups leader as much money as travel to cairo and won't cause signal to step $2.00 of the secure in a 2nd to monetary in $65.00. and the un security council is expected to vote on resolution calling for the suspension of hostilities in gaza. the voted has already been today to twice this week. as disagreements remain over the wording of the text . hundreds of thousands of children and gaza are experiencing psychological trauma as a result of his randy attacks to ease the suffering, a group of traditional palestinian stories. how that says organized musical entertainment for young people at a school and calling you in this in southern gaza. this whole set of thought has
6:34 pm
more of the it should've been here with some of the most improved that i faxed in a sense that many of them have lost friends and loved ones. but they are trying hard to hold onto life sort of thing. and through additional stories, taylor's known as the are coming together to use their suffering and give children a chance to be happy, which is extremely rare, but desperately need. if nowadays we provide entertainment and psychological support to displace people in you and affiliated shelters. and we try to convey our message to children in a simple and entertaining way, using stories, particularly traditional ones. we use entertainment to distract them from the hardships because of the
6:35 pm
performance is these these at the ending school time unit which has become home proposals will be based on a student organizer say adults are starting to cool during the war by children, especially when the bell one of the few has gripped the children's soul and you're scared of everything. for example, the microphone fell from my grasp and made a loud noise causing all the children to panic and thinking it was the sound of bonding calling the cause really, i, tx how killed and injured thousands of children do nc is 1.2 medium displays kind of themes or shelter in his facilities that goes to process the schools have been destroyed and education destructive before. they crave activities that
6:36 pm
enjoy taking them away from the spaces of the walls and into walls of entertainment, which is so different from the actual experiences on the inside. the bonding yourself to what the story tellers breast into additional editing a cool thing to say the hope to remind children have talked with the annual experience of stale jeff and happiness. if not this was added that was for children born and gaza. is there any occupation in was have been let's, let's, let's take a look at more on average, a 16 year old as an deal with a book and is really land and c blockade would be affecting every aspect of his or her life from food health and education by the age of to the child would have lived through 23 days of devastating his way the attacks that kills nearly 1400 palestinians, 320 of the victims with children and 2012. when the child was 5 years old, they would have survived an 8 day assault that killed more than
6:37 pm
a t p. for most of them, women and children. 2 years later, at the age of 7, the child would have enjoyed another is ready on slot. this one last thing, 50 days and killing at least 2310 palestinians, 551 of them children. as a young teenager, they would have witnessed the off the mouth of his ready attacks at last at 11 days, and killed $260.00 palestinians, $67.00 of them children. and now there was another war move fits more brutal than any before. in 2 months is around his scales more than 19600 palace demands more than 8000 of them children to well joining us on set as minolta motto. she's a psychologist and the child and adolescent section at the central hospital. here in doha, gosh, what, thank you very much for joining us. can you explain to us what it's like for a child to live through a war like this one? how did they experience it differently to adults?
6:38 pm
and obviously children, they are more affordable and the out of that we claim the, you know, like our society and instead of providing for them a safe space at north change environment, you know, like to be would be exposed to a town magic events that would fix them psychologically, physically and emotionally. i guess the with the, you know, i'm that, you know, with the children and that you know, like the math also the coping skills and then we can then be 10 is a how to coping a daily at a, on a daily basis. yeah. yeah. it's a, it's like a emotional stress is set to change to out of those dresses not assess themselves in children. yes, we can assist in this and in many ways, you know, like as an anxiety, separation, a fee of separation, anxiety, a depression, and the sense of losing the safe can lose. think of the sense of security. they
6:39 pm
don't have any security to anymore. keep in mind also with an adjustment issue, the adjustment this to the 1st as they would lose their homes at village and over $640000.00 children, have lost their homes and go back to 140000. what is that due to a child? did they lose the deal of the home? they lost their schooling. they have no to you anymore. they, you know, like they have nothing to be connected to and they would point to adjustments for the service to come up, adjust to that situation because it's ongoing. thomas is not like something happened and it's been going for now. 270 something date. yeah. and in that 70 something day 74 days i think yes, 25000 children and gaza have lost one of both of the parent. and what does losing a parent due to a child it's it's, it's throw might take you know like losing appearance. meaning that they have no caregiver anymore, they, they don't have a sense of security,
6:40 pm
they have no safe space. they have it. there is no attachment speaker for them. and you know that just too much for them to be able to, to cope with as they don't know, the assistance of you know, unlimited assistance and for one of those children and god that has been injured. they've lost loved ones, they've lost their hollins. what do they need to be able to function? let alone do deals with what life throws at them off to this. obviously, they need, if they think that they need to be it safe. you know, as you know, this is one of their basic rights to be safe and not to be in, into the, was own and being involved into that tax and losing their lives. so, losing, that'd be loved ones that are losing their territory. you know, it's, it's too much, you know, it's, it has to be stopped. and also, you know, the have to, you know, have the 5th responders piece of it meant then, who has 5th responders just to process with them and what's going on. obviously,
6:41 pm
it's not going to be if you have to take a journey because that is we have like, a long way to go. you know, and obviously, you know, like that assess tool like children went through on a victim of trauma who was trauma. not necessarily that can be fixed. yeah, yeah, there is like, you know, a, the damage going to be done for long term. they'd be going to carry for the piano like and as we say like, you know, and that has generation of jobs for that. tama with kathy with them. yeah. and what does that mean? you know, for a territory to have hundreds of thousands of children who have experience such severe trauma. yes. what does it mean for the future or place for the future? honestly, i don't think we have any indicators. this is something general. it didn't happen since like how many years we did have this type of attack on childrens and families and you know, is, yeah,
6:42 pm
we have no indicators except like it's kind of be more devastating. we, i would, you know, like i went to what else like anxiety, depression, and behavior issues academy as well. it could be also, you know, like a suicide. we don't know. like we, we don't know, we can, we, there is no immediate indicates up to the last, this is what's going to happen. a, b, c boss. we know that the theme is going to be very hard to complete, but it's off. there is a whole generation, thousands of children that they the effected mentally physically. and that meant that health is be and it destroyed in a way that is this functionality that's going to be going through within 4 generations of this. that is child and adolescent psychologist minolta model. thank you very much for joining us and helping explain to the what the children and gaza
6:43 pm
yvonne through. thank you. thank you. this one has launched a strong this home, several positions in southern lebanon targeting has bala, the lebanese on the roots of 65 is located in the past 24 hours is one of them has bowl i have been exchanging far along the border since the one garza and more than 2 months ago, saying a folder reports from southern 11 on as of late as well, has increased the intensity. the pace and the scope of its attacks against the lebanese armed group has the law. it is what it is. it says it is targeting as well as infrastructure, and clearly the strikes are becoming more precise. scoring direct hits of the casualty told among hezbollah fighters is really testament to that. in the past. the 24 hours, 6 men, the group last 6 men in the past week, 17 men. now that's quite a high number because since this conflict began along the border 11 weeks ago, the group lost 113 men. now this is being blamed on technology that as
6:44 pm
well is a technologically advanced army. it has drones in the skies over southern lebanon, 247, not just along the border, but in other has well as strong holds across the country. it is also tapping into telecommunications network. this is what we're also understanding at the beginning of the conflict as well are really concentrated. its attacks are focused on destroying surveillance towers belonging to the israeli army cameras along the border. it's wanted to blind the enemy, but there is only so much it can do with drones in the skies. now also at the same time as well is uh, stepping up the pressure. it is a negotiating tactic because it is looking for a diplomatic solution to end the conflict along the border. it's once hezbollah to pull back from the border in order to allow tens of thousands of his raiders to return to their homes in northern israel. now hezbollah says there will be no negotiations about the situation along the border until as well as
6:45 pm
a tax on gaza on gauze us stop, but at the same time as well is a threatening, a full blown war. so the situation is dangerous, and that's really those were the words used by the head of the united nations peacekeeping mission, in southern lebanon that there was rosita. so they're living on the, the, i'm from some other world news now that your opinion has agreed on new what was about hosting migraines and limiting them from entering the blog. the patch on migration and asylum is expected to come into effect next year. it pushes for speedy, a veteran of irregular arrivals and will accelerate deportation of project to the saw them. applicants the agreement, the aims to take pressure of countries experiencing big and flows of migrants today is to leave a historic day. i am surrounded by colleagues who have not slept all days and
6:46 pm
nights in a very i would say also emotional moments. i start from the person and you know, i come from an island in the mediterranean and i know exactly how, what it means when we say that we have finally delivered to on the migration. and as i look back, it's probably the most important in fulton, legislative deals of this mandate over 3 years ago. and the 20th of september, 2020 on this very put them in this thing. same room together with feel of a we presented a proposal for the new buckets for migration and the asylum that was just 12 days off to the fire in motor. yeah. in laws, which was the last chopped off the europe that we want to forget on migration
6:47 pm
policy. and today with this historic agreements, we are opening a new chapter. we'll see europe on migration that we want to be proud of. that's cost to natasha buck. so she's joining us live from power. so natasha, what does this new chapter entail? exactly? what are some of the proposals in the migration i have a whole as well, i mean the big a most to try and crack down on a legal migration to the european union and best of my age migration once people all care and some of the main proposals, all those people arriving illegally in the block would be processed a lot faster than they are now, and they would be filtered through those. a deemed eligible to apply for asylum will be able to stay. those who are know, it will be defaulted. most the full patients will happen a lot more rapidly as well. there's also a plan to set up and create detention centers in different balls the european union
6:48 pm
. many ports we have decided apples and on board is and then there is this thing called a sole authority tools, which is basically a dis, alleviating the responsibility and some of the bugs and own of countries of spain, italy, molten grease. for example. these countries in the midst raining when most people arrive, the idea is now that those countries that have bed so much responsibility for migrants will now have that response. but the shed, amongst all the e u countries may say to be countries in the news for a long time, those countries on the meds, it's raining of said we simply can't ok with the people who are coming. it is bother you. countries to share in that since those are some of the main points in this new tax. and on surprisingly, natasha is a mixed reaction. so far it is within the e u most you countries a well coming age, particularly those countries on the mediterranean. they feel at least that,
6:49 pm
that i think that all the countries are going to help them share the responsibility for my friends. we find those from a hungry, a country that often goes against the grain. when it comes to a policy, they all saying they certainly don't want to welcome any migrant, but they're all clauses in this ad for countries like about a se one, say migrants. and then they all welcome to troy and to help pay for those migrants financially to settle in other e u countries. but there are many charities and rights associations who are saying that this pact is simply going to make it a lot harder for asylum seekers. won't harder for people to apply for a silent, but they all say that that goes against the human rights values in the your opinion . all right, that's how she thought she for that, that is natasha butler. joining us live from paris, still ahead on our 0 months lives lot relief efforts in china, often earthquake hills, more than
6:50 pm
6:51 pm
business latest to sponsored by him to like global your real estate destination in due by the the, at least a 131. people have been killed in houses, reduced to rubble, often earthquake and a mountainous region of northwest in china. more than 700 people injured and gone, suit and shingle i, provinces, emergency workers of searching for the missing and collapsed buildings. but there's the risk of the demand slides. katrina, you has the license from badging. the government says dozens have been killed and hundreds injured in this magnitude 6.2 us like that. struck on monday in the sense it was in gone through problems in jesus on county where the majority of the state
6:52 pm
policies took place. now the authorities say that at emergency release services in that area, has the freaking much repeated. our electricity has been restored and that turning their attention now to neighboring single fi programs, another mountainous remote region that is also very much affected. now about 60 people are still missing that specifically from the village called ginty and village, including one pregnant woman, the suspected to be trapped on the mud slides on these most of my slides, which triggered by the quick on monday, they're about 3 meters deep reportedly in the government is very for kerosene, tacitly working to try to excavate the much slides using heavy machinery working as quickly as they can. but this operation has been hampered like freezing temperatures during the day. it's about minus 4 degrees celsius in sing high that drops to the minus 12 degrees in the evening. and so these teams are working as
6:53 pm
quickly as they can. and also because of the weather, piracy also is getting these thousands of people have been displaced by these us, expose in shanghai and gone through problems into some sort of permanent shelter. the government has thousands of tens for these people. 4700 homes were destroyed by this quake. these tense has electric heating. they've been given blankets, food, however, this is a very much a temporary solution until some sort of permanent refuge is found for the people due to these reasoning winter conditions. katrina, you out 0 agent. people voting in general elections and the democratic republicans, congo. delays of upholstered in the capital can shasta, and several other towns that were purchased in some areas of. of the people failed to find the names in the voters list. the aussies facing many challenges, including an insurgency of refugee prices and immense poverty. catherine, so it has the laces from the capital can shasta we are also calling stations here. in contrast,
6:54 pm
the people have been standing in too many hours. they say they want to toss the bylaws, but that was the complaining about the because the nice they said they said that the boxes and materials did not arrive on time. and when voting obsolete started. and the process itself has been very, very slow. so people are going there to check the news against the booth, at least before going to cost them by laws and you know, these problem difficult problems are not just being faced. yeah. and this whole conversation. i mean, we've been talking to people and i'm calling stay. so instead of saying that it's the same problem in contrast and different other parts of the country. and then we
6:55 pm
have the security challenge in other parts of the country, particularly in that is uh, you know, people proven and who are $2500000.00 internally displaced people in it, tory province in total. there are a 7500000 displaced before many of them will not be able to go through and so you can sell. so the top core from the us state of called colorado has disqualified donald trump from appearing on the presidential primary balance in 2024. colorado supreme court says it's because of the us constitutions close on insurrection. it's related to trump alleged roll, the attack on the us capital. on january 6th, 2021. the trump campaign has vowed to appeal mental. a rock below has moved from washington dc, or the colorado supreme court ruled on tuesday that former us president donald
6:56 pm
trump is in the eligible to run for president. i'll read you a quote from the majority opinion in that ruling that says, a majority of the court holds that trump is disqualified from holding the office of president under section 3 of the 14th amendment of the us constitution, otherwise known as the insurrection clause. the opinion goes on quote, because he is disqualified, it would be a wrongful act, under the election code for the colorado, the secretary of state, to list him as a candidate on the presidential primary balance. now how big of a deal is this ruling that's kind of a tricky question to answer. given that this applies specifically to the state of colorado is republican primary election, which is taking place on march 15th. but this does have the potential impact, former president trump, as a candidate on the ballot in 2024. even before the ruling was issued by the colorado supreme court, there were promises by trump's attorneys that this would be appealed all the way up
6:57 pm
to the us supreme court. and that's the scenario that we're watching out for here. so january, the 6th of 2021, was an insurrection, to undermine the certification of the 2020 national election. was donald trump in active, participate in that insurrection? so still legal questions that need to be answered before we can see this develop. but what the big news is here is this very reasonable expectation that this could play out as a show down at the us. supreme court made up a little alger 0, washington dc. the identities of more than a $150.00 associates of the late 6 offended jeffrey epstein could be made public next month. a federal judge has ordered dozens of classified documents be unsealed as possible lawsuit against the bush social logical, a maxwell. some of the finance sales associates have been accused of being involved in epstein exportation of mine is the islands. major. logical also says the volcanic eruption in the south of the country pauses, no danger to nearby towns,
6:58 pm
but they don't want to use that gas pollution has been detected in the capital re cubic international airport remains open despite the ongoing eruption. and that's it from me, elizabeth front of this new valve and stay with us. we're back in just a few minutes without ongoing coverage, just as long gossip. the a bundled price so far. oh, with this thing is pro, this debt begins to sing and i don't know it's a happy child who love to play for sprains the attack happens during one of the almost daily ease. right in the ministry, right. it's on the city of geneva, which, you know, on. he says it's around it this foam and killed the compound or the old hosting it resistance, according to adam's family. and with this is the lead drive of slow down, short, 15 year old,
6:59 pm
best shopping year old item the back of the head. i wish i was of the 3 and someone would come to wake me, attend me. i'm just really. i would never a god today was this felix to anyone. it's hard but they got the ok button the what am i supposed to? few the house coverage of africa is what i'm most proud of. every time i travel, whether it's east or west africa, people stop me and tell me how much they appreciate coverage. and our focus is not just on that suffering, but also on a more pop listing and inspiring story. people try to tell them what's happening in their communities in a t a and i'm biased and as an applicant, i couldn't be more proud to be part of to submit to the world slow down. we stand
7:00 pm
firm as homes west. it's a global nickel reserves. indonesia is points to leave the global, the battery industries. we definitely manage our abundant resources and play a role in solar energy harness the offerings, 75 percent of global carbon credits essential, committed to environmental protection, enhancing investment climate, digital licensing, your better tomorrow. the . the de problem and this is the news on line from doha, coming up in the next 16 minutes thing in the old and is really drawn,
10 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on