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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  June 5, 2024 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

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[000:00:00;00] the the hello, this is and use our line from the home, little rock coming up in the next 60 minutes, the, from the depths of despair, palestinians more in their loved ones, is really forces or intensifying their attacks across central gaza,
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killing at least 70 people at the table understand the 9th and the other children have gone to where the trauma of israel's unrelenting war, a groups, one of a spiraling mental health crisis and also a nationalist as really is hold a controversial rally and occupied east jerusalem after making an incursion into all ok, so mosque compound plus the fears, battles and dogs, north star for region between its army and paramilitary rapids support forces in the city of elf shirt and sport form a wimbledon champion. elaina rebec tina has been knocked out of the french open. it leaves jasmine powell, lini produced the biggest win of her career to reach the semi finals. the
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it is 15, gmc, our 6 pm in gaza, where israel has stepped up. it's attacks and the central areas of the strip. and it's all happening here. 3 refugee camps full of displaced people, just a few kilometers, a part of bridge mcgasey and new say that's as the and at least 70 palestinians have been killed since tuesday. most of them are women and children, doctors without borders has described it as an in scene escalation of violence. grieving families have gathered outside the lock, so hospital and they're in bella. it's central garza's, last remaining health facility. and some of the homeless, lots of redone. you expelled us from our homes, claiming you wanted to eliminate from us and its leader. but you haven't done either of those things. and that's,
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and you all who do you want to take revenge on children? on sleeping children and women? what's if you're a chief, what are your goals? well, more than 300 people were injured in those strikes, doctors are forced to treat patients on the floor while others have died waiting for life saving operations. and the hospital has worn if 3 times over capacity and cancer care for any more patients. welto strikes of force, hundreds of people to flee their mid shift shelters, and the bridge refugee camp to the bella. but it isn't any safer. most palestinians have been displaced several times and say they are exhausted in the north. at least 4 people were killed in strikes in the room, all neighborhood of garza city. it had been hit hard early on in the war, but the army has renewed his attacks. seeing her most fighters have regroup there. all right,
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let's head now to central gaza and speak to out to 0. so many men moved rejoices from outside the alexa hospital in there. and you tell us, please about the latest striking there to better and the area where you find yourself. well, it's almost this hour is that reminder of what is started yesterday at the early hours of the evening yesterday, where the intense common campaign as part of the winter. so this hour, just within the past couple hours intends bombing campaign to place the southern eastern part of their city on already pause lillian further, typically on casualty of the destruction of remaining facilities, public facilities in press rector on residential homes for people who are rid of the time it's all going this way. yes. the just remind our viewer that these very of the refuge account are the, are comedy thing. the people who are the children and the grandchildren to
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palestinians who were made refugee in 1948 already to wave the new york this ways one more time just within the past. it's due 3 weeks. these people went back to their homes after this reading military withdrew from these areas just to check on their residential buildings. that they, their infrastructure, the damage that is causing the destruction that is caused by, is really military only to be forced into and turn the further internal displacement as of last side, as we see in the hands of the family, is leaving the eastern part of the central area all the way to the committee so far we're looking at a combined the relentless air attacks on artillery, showing down deep, quiet, kept her shooting at table and choosing them as the lead their home, 87 bodies that been transferred to the hospital here already pronounced that some of them just lost their life half way on their way to the hospital. here there's a triple. the number of these, of the people are with
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a critical injuries inside the hospital, which is find it very difficult right now to accommodate this huge influx of injuries. but what does the, what do these attacks are doing through the central area in the past few days, and since the expenses of the military operations run my city, the central area became the last refuge for this 1000. literally, the 1000 of displays, families are coming from roof behind the western part of the city, dick and shoulders here, but only to enjoy this intense bombing campaign data. we're really targeting their evacuations on their uh, residential buildings that everything that the high speed show 3 and just deepen in good sense of, of shattered safety and security. people walk here with on search city as there is nothing going on. as of right now, what we're seeing is an ambulance that has been dispatched within the past half an hour coming back and it looks it clearly that it's carrying bodies of from
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a sites that was bombed. at the early our hours we were told by the civil defense for one paramedics that it was difficult for the parents to get to those sites. and it looks like they were able to right now to pick up these bodies and injuries and come back to the hospital as we see they are being sent inside the hospital or the emergency department. but early are of this, our, the 3 bodies are right. as a result of these are a tax on the southern eastern part of the city we were told do residential buildings were targeted and destroyed as people were sheltering inside and were more people are still inside these buildings and honey hair. when your images are coming out of there to better, what's the situation like inside the hospital? of the glad you see in here, these have to the least over well not only a by the or really large number of injuries any backwards inside the hospital,
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but also just the past 24 hours have been quite difficult. we're talking about double and triple the number over really injuries inside the hospital poured into inside the home. just adding more pressure on the medical. it stops along the. the fact that there are no medical supplies available at the hospital just because it's very difficult for the hospital to provide data and not to 30 medical intervention to save life. and just to be brutally honest about what's going on. 6 the vast majority of people die at the floor of the hospital because of the insufficient and medical interventions, the lack of medical supplies that uh, mazda sensor that have been available. but they're not because of done going to closure on the atlanta crossing. that for the past, almost a month, no medical supplies have been allowed into the hospital makes this health facility unable to provide any not this certainly medical intervention or any opportunity to
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save life. and that includes the children include women. the elderly include people with a kind of health complication and chronic diseases are dying because of the lack of, of medical supplies. this health facility is a gradually raising the rates of other hospitals across the gulf strip that the to the civil hospital, the agent hospital loss of the hospital that were pushed completely out of service . and sadly, we're seeing this happening right now. there's too much of pressure on the medical to stop and the health facilities that it's the same exact exact scenario. we're seeing a crippled 100 percentage for both health care system across the gaza strip. very dire situation that you described there. her name moved to a talking to us from outside the alexa hospital in terms alex, thank you. as long as of the war has taken an unbearable toll on garza as children . last month's images of a headless baby alpha after and is really air strikes shocked. the world ahmed was just 18 months old,
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and he was killed when is really forces targeted to displacement champ, filled with families. 45 people were killed. i'll just say we're spoke to um, as grieving, father and brothers camila know the work or has their story. the family united in grief who don't dreamed of being a doctor all kind of dreamed of being a pilot, just 18 months old. and hadn't yet had a chance to dream of becoming anything. down to john's wife and 3 children were killed and it is really a strike on or displacement. come in, rafa show how to continue to use or say order. can i saw the bodies of my wife, my daughter, her to my son are con and my baby osmond. i was told he was headless. i just picked inside the body bag and saw his body without a head. i couldn't stand to see any more. i lifted up again and walked away from
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the all. 7 the cafeteria in the last estimate was among the 45 people killed in the attack. many others at the comp done to leave in the tents. they had been staying in his ready, designated safe area. they were killed just 2 days off to the international court of justice, ordered israel to stop. it's in person into rough uh, despite estimates find a day, this is how his family tries to remember him. they kept his toys and clothes, source of comfort and pain. most of all that, all up the angel and every time i look at my brother's belongings, i'm overwhelmed with grief. i hope to be killed, so i can join him in heaven. i missed my sister and for others, i miss them all. set them on the table, understand who i missed. my mother, my sister who died and my 2 brothers are common estimate. i wish they'd never been
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killed. i missed them too much from its head was never found, and his family were forced to bury him without it. his grave is next to his mother and siblings in the ruins of casa, can no magic out of his era as credibly difficult to watch. so in my waste is spokesperson, as to unicef, some middle east and north africa office. any jones does not live from a mon, i mean these lives caught shorts in the most tragic of ways, the image of a baby ahmed, a devastating image of the horror that is this war. how does the family and especially surviving children, the siblings, for instance, of, of ahmed interface with this on imaginable trauma deal with this? well, this is, this is a big question. i think this is just uh,
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unfortunately one of the many stories and goals are right now of children forced to deal with or with a reality of loss of trauma of the total destruction and, and uh, yeah, the whole story is, is even darker than what we see, because it's the ones, the push as, as they go up. unfortunately, this, this uh, war has a profound impact on the psychological, uh, wellness and much are, you know, as before the war started before, the latest escalation started before the 7th of october and there were around 500000 children and the guy, the step who needed some kind of mental health support. now we know that all of the children in guns i need that support. i need a specialized support in many, many, many cases. so this is really hard to deal with. the problem now is the services
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that are on the ground are almost non existent. we're talking about the only psychological a psychiatric hospital inc as a, has been the out of service early on in this escalation. um, that means that the basic needs of, of mental health can it's the can't be uh, mit um also for children as long as they are continuing to, uh, to witness where they are with this thing as long as they continue to experience what they're experiencing. it's really hard to deal with with the trauma, the 1st, the 1st age principal of, of trauma is 3. move the person from the environment of the trauma. that's, that's impossible. and guns are, there's no safe place and guns are and there is no uh, yeah, there's no place that feels safe, right? there is no escaping the chronic, sensitive and security displacement death and destruction. and i think what was really difficult to hear in, in that report,
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that package that we just played is ahmed's the 18 year old baby. so brother basically saying, you know, i'd rather die so that i can, i can meet them again. or it's really difficult. i mean, how entrenched is this trauma and how do you see this generation growing up? i will, i don't want to lose hope, but what you're seeing is really drastic. and this is something that we have rarely ever seen the amount, the frequency, the frequency, uh, the, the extreme levels of this promo is unprecedented. uh, almost and uh, the best quote of the brother i brother died is just so many of how deep that goes. and we have uh uh, that's running in garza for whoever wants to talk about their mental health which receives
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a lot of calls each week. and the parents come and one of the quotes that that's i'd have heard is, uh, the parents are really struggling because they say we can't even hold the children to tell them they are stationed out because both we and then know that we are not safe. so when you can't even hold your child until then it's going to be, all right, well what, what kind of supports can you guess really, parents are facing a whole rebuild, potable and what if it reality and then being put in this very difficult position where they themselves can't be i showed that children me, that'd be only our families experience of loss. um, as you outlines as well as being repeated across garza, i have received an uptake or a trend towards children. so you know, just not wanting to live anymore. just simply,
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they can't deal with the situation. yes, i think we've heard a lot of those stories, but also we've heard the loss of, of children who can deal with their yada to they don't even they can't even express what they want or what they don't want. um, we've heard from colleagues from people on the ground from our admissions on the ground that children with withdrew children start expressing themselves or even some of them can't speak any more of their uh, we think they're bits at night there. uh, there's a lot of sales timing happening. um, there's a lot of not willing to eat or think so there's a lot of symptoms that they are seeing a lot of if, if you, if you may uh, lost interest in, in life, which is really what uh,
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what kind of not one thing to live is even if they don't explicit and the longer this trauma continues the longer and the harder treatment and, and dealing with these traumas will be that's why it's really imperative now to, to have a ceasefire through the birth of to have 8 and services, etc. and going to these children to help and, and in hopes to emigrate a little bit of that trauma and hopefully make room for, for uh, recovery in the future. this is not her childhood, should be um, slim or waste a spokesperson at unit assess middle east and north africa office. thank you so much. now instead of going to school children and are spending hours to get water for their families, they and their families, travel long distances in the sheets often to find water treatment plans shots
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because they don't have enough fuel to operate in the whole 3. isn't there invalid with more? it's a basic necessity of life. but for policy and using garza clean water is cars. the size of this place, people travel every day by foot to one of the causes last operating nation plans that even the it's an everyday old deal. we come to for a walk to 2 to 3 times a day that some of this was between thing and some will use the washing. it's a crisis, a daily mental and physical struggle with drained and exhausted. most of cause i just want to treatment and sanitation infrastructure has been badly damaged or destroyed by israel since october, 7th, palestinians here now rely on what 8 gets through is where you have restrictions and remaining treatment ends. but there's not enough fuel getting into the strip to keep them learning. well, no other way the station stopped operates and due to lack
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a few. that's what we were told. we finished see will to, to workshop alone and nothing like that, but it's not suitable. it's just too salty. the crowd is conditions and loc assignment. taishan here means there is a concentration of disease and without clean water, even basic hygiene becomes a struggle. that i have been my yeah, i have 2 boys with special needs. they need care and they need water. it takes me about an hour to go get water. sometimes when i get back, i find them crying in the tent. they need someone to stay with them. they need mineral water and it's not available. they need a proper tent and hygiene. 7 edge of water is adding more misery to the lives of tens of thousands of college been used currently saying it makes it time after being displaced several times in the past few months. and then somebody adds the data that has been left out of time. and there's still plenty more ahead here on the news hour, including extreme flooding in south africa,
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flattens neighborhoods killing more than 20 leaving hundreds homeless plus rushes for administer office to bolster. what kind of process military during a visit to west africa will explain what senates from us, kyle, the call to our nationalist is really is have been marching through occupied east jerusalem as parts of their so called flying day celebrations. while the events marks israel's illegal occupation of the area after the ninety's 67 work or disappearance were her chanting desk to eric, marching through a palestinian area of the city. well, benjamin netanyahu, whose cabinets has bound l. g 0 from reporting and israel. so let's go to and run todd, who's in the dirt, 80 and a capital m on from where he's monitoring events,
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a very contentious events and we're on and that's absolutely right. this year is much more vocal when it comes to racism that we've seen in previous years against palestinians. in fact, a lot of the participants in the march. i've been putting out flyers. they've been saying the masses attack on october 7th against israel was called the alex a flood. we a cooling this flood it with is really flags. and this is exactly what they've tried to do. the day began with the far right politicians actually visiting the like. so most compound where they raised their flags, where they prayed. this is in direct contravention of the agreement between these radio authorities and the jordanian walk through actually manage deluxe the most compelled. and it was designed to provoke an insight and it was almost as soon as those of ultra national these right wing is a right full flag in occupied east jerusalem. they started beating up old
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palestinian women, old palestinian men, they were running into shops and run, sacking them. the police simply couldn't do anything about this. in fact, what they did say to the palestinians is simply shot to your shouts. we call control this. i've been there on the previous much is always live on a last year when i was being insulted. always being spots out. my colleague in the us from out of the arabic was actually punched in the face. this, we've seen much more of the issue with the same gen list, both pablo standing and his right to journalist being who covering this event, being harass, being punched, being always like, pushed around and start from being broadcasting. there's a lot of anger from these, but the, from a lot of the young boys who were craig a lot of these bodies. but it's much more than just and it's actually saying to the palestinians a little bit. we don't want you that any more challenging deaf 2 hours and they keep challenging. now, over and over again. now we've been speaking to
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a lot of analissa over the years when these black box has been taking place. and a lot of what people have been saying is the, actually this is less than use face of israel. israel is becoming a much more open erases right wing society and any kind of liberal, left leaning is right. these voices being drowned out simply because of these people and the numbers seem to bad that last day. there are 60000 people on this march and occupied the east jerusalem. let's see what the police say about the figures the ship. but when you mentioned the police, they aren't stopping the attacks on palestinians taking place. what they're trying to do is just keep the protest as a weight from the public things that's not the defense of the public things that's simply proud control. often times the police lose control of the crowd and they simply give up. they just let them go wherever they want and do whatever they want . we're seeing that much more this year. we say a lot more violence,
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bishop that we've seen in past years to him. on connor reporting, thank you so much. and ron, as well fighting between the sudanese army and parent military rapids support forces has escalated in the west of the country. the violence has been focused in el foster. that's the capital of some dogs north. dar for states on both sides are using heavy weapons and artillery and violence broke out in l. foster in mid may prompting warnings from the international community. while the city is a humanitarian aid hub and a nation that's facing a food shortages for shortage and displacement crisis, the conflict has killed at least $14000.00 people in just more than a year. and in north are 4 states. so foster is the last stronghold of the
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internationally recognized government. the r s. f has taken control of nearly all other main cities. their local armed groups have broken months of neutrality, declaring allegiance with the sudanese army, fearing the states will fall completely in their hands. a foster was also a major supply routes for aid, and the conflict there means relief is no longer being distributed. we're seeing an already di, or humanitarian situation. all right, johnny now was there clara nicole a is she is the head of doctors without borders. emergency response insur down. she joins us now from paris. france a good day of growing alarm over the situation in a foster. how would you describe the violence in golf in the area and can you describe what people on the ground are experiencing at the moment? so unfortunately it's been seen as the dental name. now that's the situation, the stobel,
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the fucking ongoing every day. and really in the city and he's completely uh and discriminated. so the viking for over the place on the unfortunate steve and hospitals that touched everyone. he said it is new really you facing and security and some houses of those. there is a many uh, no distinction, the options against the womans and within the phone, but them. so it's full of early d. c t that we are seeing these fighting happens. so complete lawlessness that you are describing who is perpetrating the violence and the parties of the ones inside the c d slate's. it's like the bottom seeing these really inside the fashion basically. so unfortunately, that's why it's touching a woman that's involved assuming in the moment and also has structures and, and we think that should be and all the thoughts of funding. and can you explain
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to our international viewers? why is the city so important to to see that there's nothing in my house is on the it says it's a strong to citi capital or for the for so it says it's quite an important. so c, t and the in the, this is the, the big finding, but we can see the on these are the c t a in buffalo. so it says finding important for the western parts of the country. and i'm told that emma suff actually runs a clinic and our foster what is your team telling you? are they able to operate and function we're kind of cases do they see in the quote with the situation because the one did the fairly new room. so we seemed to be more than $1000.00 swims, went and formed it,
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and the only able to doing such a bit of the moment. and while the bus to with their laptop for people who used to be a very do the unfortunately there is just just one surgeon company in the front seat . so yes to the continue, the case is received in the hospital and the itself is not safe level because that would be not ready. and by the showing full times in the, in the 10 days. so for me it's the will continue activities, but it's very low and difficult to work in since search situations and even has really full funding. the wanted the patients to invite to the specialties and, and what could happen if this current violence continues to be left on checked. so look at my expense to with these go into the wish and it would be a very high will to leave to inside the population. and because of the funding,
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but another only because of the funding. so there is a supply issue. so at the moment there is almost no trucks, even commercial trucks arriving. and so it means that so even if there's some list available, what day is there some available? so in fact, even before we start during the day, you know, folks deferred to 4 different conditions. so even and we used to be delivering, these will be more and more complicated already. mother cushion watched them very much inside the city and on this area. so what, what kind of email do you know if there's sufficient, continue like this independent, there will be a way of every kind of multitude that is full full, unfortunately. and what we're seeing and now is, is we need to be journals basically inside the cd. clara, on the credit i had of emphasis emergency response as through john talking to us
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about the situation and officer. thank you so much for joining us. so as so have here on algebra 0 there you, when the issue is a new warning about the states of our climates, we're take a closer look at the potential impact on livelihoods around the world. and in sports, we'll hear from manchester cities chairman as a club prepares to legal action for legal action rather against the english premier league. the hello. hi, i'm place to say it's looking dry now across the southeast of brazil. we are looking at to find and sunny weather coming in here. most area of high pressure. hey, this is a blocking feature. this waving weather system, producing a little bit of rain that will push this way up towards red,
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but not too much way in the way of where to weather coming in here. because that high is just suppressing those showers far to drive on a service at around 15 degrees celsius. a lot of the dry weather, with a high pressure pushing up in across the amazon northern parts of south america across to look very unsettled, more heavy showers. coming in here. over the next couple of days, i stretched side way up across the panama and a garage, costa rica, quite a line, a very wet weather there, into cuba, into jamaica, into a good pomp of his spine. jala. so we're going to see some very white by the coming here that to cool some localized flooding. the used to not, as i am pleased to say, do like fine and dry. so looking good for the cricket here. over the next couple of days, we're not gonna say bullshit. i was just creeping in across the crate to rent and it's been the less around, totally lost the set back. so that 5 across the west side of north america, right? but the next dial site, but across the plains, pushing across the what was the operations, some very heavy showers, with the possibility of
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the hours before is killing a canadian c key. there said the agents of the indian governments were pumped into assessing makes the fault lives, explores how the coal for an independent state a spilled beyond india's borders and investigates. the nation's alleged campaign of eliminated critics on foreign soil. the indians assess the nation on the jersey to the latest news as it breaks in years of was false just going economy. yet experts say it's high, g, d, p. mosques, have some challenges with detailed coverage. even the rush of the defense budget is unprecedented. 7 percent of g d p, the crowd funding platforms are still raising money from around the world. springs declaration is habits of a growing cents a month to month, even western nations. the u. s. policy is failing to bring
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a 2 state solution any closer. the, [000:00:00;00] the you're watching out is there are more are about top stories. this hour is rarely forces have killed at least $87.00 palestinians and gaza since tuesday. most of them were women and children, doctors without borders, has described it as an insane escalation of violence. alternation with israel east have been marching through occupied east jerusalem as part of their so called flag day celebrations. events,
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march israel's illegal occupation of the area after the 1967 war, the fighting between the certain these army and paramilitary rapids support forces as escalated in alpha. sure. that's the capital of su dogs. north star for states, both sides are using heavy weapons and artillery rushes for administer surgery, laf is in board team alfonso on the latest stop on is 3 country tour of west africa as part of moscow's ongoing attempt to strengthen its ties across the african continent. lab, ralph has confirmed additional military supplies, and instructors will be provided to help build up working alfonso as defense capabilities. when should of these bills and this is just used today, we had the deputy of the defense ministry here with another visit. pay along with his colleagues from the king of fossil regularly considered
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a practical tasks. russian military instructors working here as well as the quantity will grows and higher level. we are holding trainings for representatives of police and military of mccain, and faucet and russia. so this means that of cooperation is pretty advisors. nicholas hawk has more now on the lab ross visit from the car in nearby center gall . um, what is the goal of rob ross of visit and how is he being received of the boy you certainly were reading, being very well received. he just received the highest honor from the brian char, a b, military gentle leader and routine of costs. so for the, for ups, because he chose countries that were already close to russia or that already had relationship with the russian states. or he started his visit in guinea, a country rich and minerals that russia is trying to build the economic ties with.
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and then he went on to congo where he spoke next to present the needs assessing, get so about their efforts to try to broker a deal in libya. but he also mentioned the war in ukraine during that visit, where he said that if there were french forces on the train you in front of them, they were legitimate target any event. so in a former french colony, and that resonates a lot in many parts of west africa where we're seeing russian soldiers septic game, where french soldiers used to occupied that space. so now he's off to chad, in fact, where there is a 1000 french soldiers on the ground in and dumb enough. but that's where i get a lever off is looking to build further military ties with a charge new president my my interest debbie that was just selected a few days ago. layla right. nicholas hawker report in a lab drops a visit. thank you so much to turn or focus now to south korea,
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which is hosting an agricultural conference for african nations, which in hopes will relieve hunger. rice is an important staple for many african countries, and south korea has become a world leader in the grange cultivation. rot, mcbride reports from sol the for the host of south korea. this conference demonstrates its rapid development from the recipient of overseas aid to a don't, a nation which can now help others, especially in the production of food almost desert challenge law. we will work to strengthen advocacy food security capabilities. we will actively promote agricultural transfer and contribute to increasing food self sufficiency. chandler, south korea and farmers have made pioneer and good bonds in agriculture. no more so than any rice production. and it's so cold k rice belts project across parts of
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africa is aimed at supporting farm is that accurate cultural centers help promote more resilience rise seats while spreading education and the use of new technology . what distinguishes korean strains are the yields, compared to many african varieties. korean crops can produce mold in twice the rice, a top to 6 tons by hacked with young rapidly growing populations to feed the worst and in climate crisis. more african countries are looking to increase production lemonade i hear from me. i would like to commend the k rice built initiative for lunch, but korea, which is a testament to the principal partnership. the career has forge with the african countries pneumonia. the goal is to distribute enough high resilience seeds to african families in the next 3 years to grow rice fest. ringback to 1000000 people rub mcbride, i'll just say era. so hi, the
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very un secretary general. i'm telling you that this has warned of a dire impact climate change could have on what he called humanities chances of a livable future. with this warrant that the average global temperature will very likely exceed 1.5 degrees above pre industrial levels. at least once in the next 5 years. well that would blow past a t. pears climate target as at the world on a disturbing path. and there is a $5050.00 chance the evidence temperature for the entire next 5 year periods will be $1.00 degrees higher than the industrial tides. we are playing russian roulette with our planets and we need the next it's read off the highway to climates hill. so just how does global climate action measure up against what's
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actually required to reach ned 0 by 2050. our environmental editor and the clark explains. and the fact that you might remember this power is 2015, a rad. moving to label consensus as a power as agreement was force. it was a historic deal with widespread support. a primary objective to phase out fossil fuel emissions, to keep temperatures from rising. ideally no more than one and a half degrees celsius above pre industrial levels. well, in a 9 years on the world has failed to deliver as temperature of soul in his call to arms, the un secretary general said that failure is super charging, whether extremes costing billions and displacing millions. yet even as climate apparel strikes a parts of the globe, not one of the g 20 countries is causing emissions quickly enough. the energy transition is happening is just to slay. meanwhile,
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the fossil fuel industry is still being subsidized on a massive scale last year. a record 7 trillion dollars is that is more than governments globally spend annually on education. and fossil fuel companies invested just 2 and a half percent of capital spent on clean energy in 2023. the rest on keeping the coal business of oil, coal and gas running many will point to how some government said not only points in climate policies, but also actively reversing them. it's pretty evident that has to change and fast. as the secretary general said, it's time for leaders to decide who's side bear on tomorrow is too late. let's go to al jazeera as uh, gabriel. alexander, who enjoys is no longer from the american museum of natural history in new york or a city gabe. oh, what were some of the other takeaways from the secretary general's message?
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as well, it's fitting that he gave this message and i'll get to here at this museum, the museum of natural history in new york city, one of most iconic is not only in new york, but the united states. and me even maybe globally, when it comes to celebrating the natural world. i think gutierrez chose to make his speech here because essentially what his message was, is that our natural world, as we know it is very much under threat. this high profile speech that he gave here was uh, had a lot of detail and it was over 30 minutes to speech. and he was really uh, using his belief, hopefully you will as the world's top diplomat and advocates to, to, to put the claimant issue back on the world agenda. and he feels that it's not there right now. it's been distracted by other urgent issues such as war and peace and other issues around the world migration as well. so really his message here was we
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have to, we collectively nations. the g 20 g 73 body uh needs to take more urgent action because in his words, we really are at a tipping point. and the hard truth is that the world is going down a path right now that will lead to potential more climate change. so we look arguments for that here at this speech at the museum after tipping point, what were some of the specifics that he laid out to, to address the climate crisis as well. there are a lot of mom, he's given over a 100 speech is about climate, but this by far was, is most specific. they're actually more than 30 different asks if you will or policy recommendations. i won't go through all of them. but some of the key highlights were that he's calling on every single nation in the world to come up
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with a national climate action plan. but not only that, but to incorporate business civil society, all sort of sectors of the individual nations. he called for a complete ban on any sort of advertising, with fossil fuel companies, for either advertising companies or p. r agencies or even media organizations around the world. any calls on fossil fuel companies as well. to invest more into a sustainable production. he said it's only 2.5 percent that fossil fuels, humphreys, invest in sustainable activities. and he said that is way, way too low. sweet, laid out all sorts of plans and initiatives if you will. some probably more attainable than others, but he also left the group of audience here with some hopeful sign, saying that we still have time to turn this around,
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but not much time is less condo reporting from the american natural history museum in new york city. thank you as well. one of the impacts of climate crisis is severe weather and flooding, which is now it's south africa's east coast. at least 21 people have died of hundreds are homeless for me to miller reports because this is over to god is a tomatoes, a driver kept as a tomato building up in south africa's kazoo to tell providence by the time many could seek shelter. it is too late. areas like this have been devastated. the high winds and to ritual rains, flattened homes and flooded roads. at least a 120 people have lost their homes. 11 others have been killed. thirties have declared a state of a lot. i see now blue level, but we don't have any food because it's all with all our belongings, with our ideas, all onto the rubble and we're still searching. we literally have nothing we played
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with those who can help to come forward and risk us. the language, the rooms have been destroyed. that means my tenants don't have a place to stay and now i have to try and get them a place to stay and have my house repaired. and i do not have that much money to do that. i survive because of my tenants, and there are only 2 of them in some areas work is being done to restore war to electricity. supply of the power lines were damaged 2 years ago, doubling and it's a rounding areas with the size of the was flooding. and so last week is history killing more than 400 people. at least 10 people have died now in the neighboring east, some k province. with these been extensive flooding. and more than 2000 people have been forced to leave nelson mandela bay. with a service to save the heavy rains and cold are likely to bring hail snow and more strong wins issued a warning into other provinces. because move bad weather is expected to meet the
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miller, which is 0 or so ahead here on algae 0, the commercial space race itself as boeing launches to astronaut into space. following years of delays and in sports, new manager signs in at one of at least stop clubs. farrah will be here with that story. the
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business like this to be sponsored by intellect tuck, he's real estate consultant. the basement installation has to be sponsored by interlock tuck. he's real estate consultant, the and and setting up for your sports. here's layla. thank you so much for wimbledon champion. elaina rib akina has been knocked out of the french open. it leaves jasmine how lini produced the biggest when of her career to reach the summit finals
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. this was already pow leanings and best ever performance at a grand slam tournament. the 28 year old just enjoying a break out and season not seeing her move inside the world's top 15 for the 1st time she beat well, number 4 was akina in 3. set some of those things, either arena sub lingo on there and re back in the sense was it really so much? i think it has a little bit to emotion. i mean, the 2nd said about them i, i said to myself, okay, is good. she's a great champion so it can happen, you know? yeah, just fine. trying to, to keep it there, you know, to try to, to tell me, but yeah, it for 2 times a day after pulling out of the french open. novak jock image wonder, go nice surgery on wednesday and is a major debt for wimbledon. the serbian was defending champion in paris, but well now loose as well. number one, ranking to younique's center, jock, which has not won
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a tournament the season have been 13 of the last 4 grand slams last year. you faces a race to get fit for wimbledon, which starts in less than long on the paras olympics full center will become the 1st it's highly unmanned to reach the top on the piece for when the new rankings come out. on monday, the 22 year old remains on forced to make it back to back grand slam titles after defeating regard dimitry off to reach the semi finals where whole face of carlos outcries, screen center has to be manchester city or taking legal action against the premier league over the organizations commercial rules. a club are challenging the legality of the leak sponsorship deal regulations and are understood to be seeking financial damages for losses. for some sponsorship deals were halted. the league have their own case against the club after they were charged on a $115.00 counts of breaking financial. fairplay was of course it's frustrating. i think the reference is always frustrating. uh,
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having it being talked about the way it's being talked about. i can feel, of course, for our fan base for everyone associated with the club to have, you know, these, these charges constantly referenced. i think we as a club have to respect that. there's a process that, that we have to go through and we're going through it. it's taking longer than what anyone hope for. i think i really got to where it is today by being the most competitive lease. so i hope there's a bit more sensibility in, in regulating be attending in england or the rest of the your, i think you won't see the same level as we've seen in the past few years because of the level of you with the regulations. one of jeremy's key players is calling on his country to have the same killer instinct to as his club team around the dread. antonio, rigorous as a change in attitude is needed after me is to end it's 4 run at major tournaments. 0 host have gone out and the group staged at the last 2 world cops and last and
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around the 16 at the previous european championship. and so that was, and it's like 2 different pairs of shoes. hey, with germany, we have a very good system that fits all game. but what we can take from madrid is that killer instinct, a less match against ukraine was a nail male jewel. and we paid really well. but the thing that was missing was the goals with and that's what we can learn from intuitive connect. instinct to julian and bobby's friends team are playing in the, in a friendly against lex and berg, later on, that's the 1st match. since around the jury confirmed, he will be joining the club on a frontier deal from some groups with poland, austria, and the netherlands at the heroes and the positions do i think a happy man is more likely to play well than an unhappy man? now there's no excuse for all the performances i've had or will have. it's just a feeling. of course, i'm very happy today, but just because i'm smiling, it doesn't mean i'm going to win any matches. there's work to be done and the whole team has to get ready, and i'm the 1st to do that. but of course i'm approaching these matches calmly with
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good humor and enthusiasm. antonio county has been named as a new head coach of napoli. italy has become the clubs, 5th manager in here, the channels that you choose to leave the club last season after leading them to their 1st title for 33 years. they drop down to the 10th of the season as counties 1st job and management since leaving, taught them last year. o m b, a finals between boston celtics and the dallas mavericks. a start on thursday and south takes player chris steps for the thing is, is in a race to be fit and time after 5 weeks out with a tap, strain is separate against a mind me he, he's not a 100 percent. sure he'll making one but hopes to play some part of the celtics aim for a record 18th and the championship itself is really, really the 2nd um, but we're here now and, and, and, and i'm feeling much better. i put in a lot of hours to, to get to this point and look forward to getting some,
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some action on the floor and the team that organization with going into this series before confidence in and knowing that no steps are skipped. yeah. and the goal is to to finish the job. okay, and that is your support for now. layla back to you. thanks so much for i'd greatly appreciate it. and the us air space company, boeing has launched 2 new astronaut on a mission to the international space station, working a 1st for the company. it's only the 2nd private firm to do so after space x and column baker has more now on what this means for the commercial race to space. a new spacecraft, a new rocket and the seasoned crew, are headed to the international space station. boeing has waited a long time to send humans into orbit and it joins a very small club in 2010. then us president brock obama promised a bold and risky new idea to transform the nation's 50 year old publicly funded
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space program into one that relies on private companies for space travel. in order to reach the space station. we will work with a growing array of private companies competing to make getting to space easier and more affordable. 14 years later, the companies in the us space race includes some new startups. and many old titans . boeing is a space veteran. the company was involved in the apollo program half a century ago and was just one of 2 to be awarded the task of transportation under obama's new land. if our so it built the star liner that the craft has only flown to the space station once and it's never carry people starlight star line or flies on a united launch alliance rocket. that's a partnership between defense giant lockheed martin and boeing along the way. other players have made big promises to bigelow space was supposed to build habitats for
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space stations. it collapsed in 2020 so virgin orbit hope to deliver satellites by plane. it folded in 2023. the amazon founder jeff bezos. his company blue origin, started selling short trips to space for the wealthy in 2021. and its hoping to see its own mega rocket lift off later this year. but the one that promised the most as over delivered space x led by eli mosque was the start up in 2010. today it delivers most of the people in cargo into space controls the most satellites and is testing the largest ever spaceship. gotta start, all of these depend on substantial government support the space economy is more a speculative economy than it is a real economy. everything that comes from the space economy as we understand it is mostly well versed based. um, so most of the time space companies aren't actually making profit off of space based activities. we're going into space. it's mostly military, contracted to do just with star line or boeing, tally some much needed success. a mid business troubles back on earth and nasa can
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claim a new partner as it aims for the moon. calling baker out. you got a good and are you up to date with the world headlines on? we are oxford, this is our that will be all will be back in just a moment. the worth of days means the pod came in to be is israel, it needs to go to pieces. i think that to move in the f one, his government with these says 5 digit, you say getting russell, a thought provoking. odd, since the e you made weapons being used in gaza. no guns should be used in an offensive way. that's our facing realities you're running. mean what does he bring to the table? hard from being presidential? could we go to some we cannot take the fact that he was suddenly present as not that important effective. he had the story on talk to how does era, this is the 1st one they saw that we see in the real time it's the victims themselves long before the,
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the saw. there's this disconnect between what we are witnessing on social media versus what we're seeing on mainstream media. it is always an attempt to frame at the 2 sides of them, but there is no 2 sides to this. the western media does have a western bias. understand what they are looking to see out and raise. the listening post covers how the news is covered before the war, $8000.00 patients cross that alpha and beta noun crossings every month to receive treatment abroad. that number has dwindled to elizabeth. $5000.00 evacuated and 7 months of conflict. pushing through the pain 11 year old doreen though they can finally walk again. dream couldn't move her legs after an air straight killed 60 members of her family in gaza. chest good, good. i thought i'd have to stay for more than a year in the wheelchair. i was asking my aunt if i'd be paralyzed forever. this facility was filled with a 22 world cup. now it's been turned into
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a place worth 500 patients receive treatment, education and psychological support. what the even why had to sit teen? i'm in between the moment i got injured and now i've had around 61 surgeries. it could be weeks before anyone can be safely evacuated again and get the rare opportunity to receive treatment outside of the voice on the palestinians. more in their loved ones. this is really forces intensify attacks across causal killing at least 87 people. the, the rod vistas alger 0 lar, from joe,
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also coming up of the table and then the, not the whole, the a small one of

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