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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  June 21, 2024 10:00am-11:01am AST

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the policy says that decision makers in check, so the devastating human cost of their decision working at the 0 enables me to make that positive voice is relevant to so that there's more that unites us then divide the the hello, this is in use our own ouch. is here, um, so the back people live in doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes, overwhelmed and understaffed. we take you to guys as largest remaining health facility where the doctors are struggling to meet this factory needs of patients. the is really forces hate a building near you and runs full sheltering dozens of displaced palestinians,
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8 and 7, gaza. also this hour thousands of young canyons showed their rage against the proposed line to raise taxes, but the bill passes its 2nd reading in parliament and another set back for the french interest in the saw hail wishes military government revolts to license for a major uranium mine the suffering, fatigue, and fear, that's what $2300000.00 palestinians in gas i have enjoyed for more than 8 months. now, hospitals that are meant to, he'll have become what some doctors describe as how on earth israel has bombed, shall be cj and destroyed. most of guys, us health facilities, just 17, out of $36.00 hospitals, a partially functioning offering only the most basic treatment. with more than
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85000 people injured, that's far less than what's needed is really forces of kills nearly 500 medical staff interested more than 370 percent of doctors and health workers have been forced to flee the attacks in the summer heat diseases, a spreading quickly among the space palestinians, crime did the temporary shout. this. the health ministry has documented more than one point. 4000000 cases with hepatitis searching among children. let's speak dodge is here is honey, my mode was outside guys is launch is remaining functioning hospital endowed by central guys, honey. israel's relentless bombardment is causing the collapse. so of the health care system in gas yes, fall in this is the, the case across the gaza. strip the from the early weeks of this genocide, the word is really military,
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deliberately targeted health facilities. the from the northern part passing through gauze and city, the central area. and right now, in dropbox city where we see a field hospital is pushed out of service, but public hospital is the privately own clinic. inside dropbox, it'd be, have been either severely damaged you completely destroyed and leaving an entire city and almost $65000.00 local residents from robot quoted on or what without any, without any proper access to health care facilities in the city. meanwhile, people who are in evacuation centers on the 10th accounts across the street, the lacks of proper access to health care facilities. these areas are completely lacking the basic infrastructure, the basic necessities and the, uh, the facilities needed for people to survive these difficult conditions created by the intense bombing campaign. and i like the ability to combat any of the implications associated with it. for example, we're seeing here at our hospital, the only remaining semi operational hospital here in and dated,
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but actually the central air. there is another one that's a charitable health care facility, but it's a, it's a smaller size, doesn't have the capacity largely on it prepared on uh, not equipped to receive a huge influx of injury. so old cases are transferred to this house within the lock . so cost for that for the past $4.00 days or so we'd be adhered. seeing the influx of injuries, patients then transferred from other areas in the central part of the goals is driven lucy and the pressure put on the medical, the staff, and the fact that there is it there as an acute shortage of medical supplies. this causes any great deal of problem inside the hospital and its challenges for the medical to stop, to intervene and provide a better health care. a service for the large number of people the night just as a brief walk inside the house. but they will realize that this is not a hospital anymore, as one doctors put it. this is more of a just a standing facility, more of an evacuation center, but also in terms of evacuation. 3rd doesn't have the services,
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the necessities to prove to intervene and provide help and assistance for people. we managed to get an active inside a lot. so hospital at a yesterday and we also it managed to get access to restricted area like the operating rooms. then we would witness some of the most difficult, dire situations in terms of medical service inside the hospital because what we found, ok, we're inside the lock. so the emergency department here is the, it's over crowded and i'm joined by doctor man inside the hospital from pansy. my medical mission volunteering to hold people and medical or we need to know more about what's going on inside the emergency department. thank you, honey. as you can see the extreme, i have
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a crowding in the emergency department. this is actually a time when it's not really as busy as it could get, especially when there are a tax nearby. there's limited resources in the department with only a few doctors servicing hundreds of patients. family members everywhere. there's not enough beds for the patients. you can see them either in wheelchairs or on the floor on that, surrounded by their family members. and there are only 3 doctors generally in the emergency department, sorry. these doctors i've worked in on the staff. so as you can see here, some of the nurse is helping distribute some of the medications to the patient is certainly not enough medications to go around. some of the antibiotics that we want to use that are crucial, not available. and also on allowed to be late and in terms of medical supplies it's, it's a hospital, but it's fairly functioning and it's working on very limited resources which is causing a lot of strain and it any minute. now the health care system is kind of imminently
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collapse and the millions of people getting off the hospital wouldn't be able to get to the hospital. normally that would have a couple of 100 beds and doesn't necessarily get to treat a lot of patients. there are now up to 800 patients and thousands of displaced people living here. as you can see all around us, their patients and their family members in the car doors in hallways, living with that by whose family members. and it makes it very difficult to be able to move around even to be able to actually even find your patients that a lot of times unfortunately because there's no structure and there's no system you actually don't know always way your patients. and the way you might be able to find them in order to provide the treatments as they were in the pdf, pick one of the children which houses infants and small babies all the way up to kids. about 12 years old, extremely crowded. i, one of the striking features added the you think you'll young babies an instance require formula and reading this to be and now the christian,
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especially everybody for children and the adult population. and as you can see, there's no room for these patients to be in bed. they're surrounded by the family members. know why it's very difficult to be able to examine them with privacy. so unfortunately, sometimes we're having to examine patients and speak to them in the open hallways, and that's just become an accepted part of how we can provide care. he told them this war and children is absolutely heartbreaking. and sole shattering. it's very, very difficult to actually provide and any can. so some of these children don't actually have them either or they father or potentially by parents maybe being looked after by extended family members. a lot of them have had shrapnel injuries that are going to leave them with amputations and debilitating problems for the rest of a live. now we're working from the, all the building to the building that used to be the of centrix was that's now been converted to the operating theatre building. and we're going to take a look inside. unlimited resources that are being provided here and the operating
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you know, the healthcare facility. there are only a couple of students that are still. tasha. this will be one of them. we just entered the operating theatre a complex here at the last the hospital dr. bucks or tell us more of what we're seeing. yeah, so just very quickly on my left hand side here, the recovery rooms where patients come off today. i've finished the operations and i'm kind of to fairly show you everything that's inside, but it's very limited. resources is not necessarily the equipment to be able to monitor them. sense of taking their vital signs, like blood pressure and hot, right. there's one main card on that as far as the entry way and the exit for patients coming into the operating room. and most of the time they're full, 56, even after 10 patients just lining the car door. it's very difficult to actually move around. what is this case? yeah, so this is, this is a young kid that's obviously had to be buying from an explosion or bloss injury.
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this is a very common and unfortunate scenario, or a lot of these kids are in the pain because of their rooms. there isn't enough. adequate energies. you have to be able to give them or they have to come daily down to the operating through room to get dressing changes because there isn't enough adequate supply on the wards to be able to dress a winds appropriately and, and they require care. actually this is sometimes is not necessarily not able to be provided here at our hospital. tragedies find you at every corner of a lock saw hospital after walking in do the different departments of this health care facility. the only remaining to my operational health care facility in the central area. we couldn't help but notice thing the inadequacy of the medical care available for people. this is honey more from a lot. so hospital in the central area, guys on palestine elsewhere and guys, and he's really as try cause damage to school sheltering this based on these after
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building next. so it came under attack. it happened in the southern city of con eunice, dozens of palestinians would been seeking refuge in the classroom. say the destruction means they have no way to sleep. these really ami target is refugee camps in central guys. overnights, also kidding. at least 3 people. and one thing does, it's as long as you can see the classroom where we shelters damaged, i don't know where we will sleep. we are 25 people in this classroom. look at how damage it is. look at our sleeping area. where will we sleep? we don't know, we might have to sleep in the yard for the children of guys that is rouse war has to and schools into places of shelter rather than learning. $625000.00 young palestinians have been out of school for more than 8 months. guys, children make up nearly 16000 of the more than 37000 people killed since october. the 7th agencies say after the 3 and
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a half 1000 case of mountain duration on the brink of death and an estimate of 17000 young palestinians have been opened. and g. o said the raves children are struggling to cope, and some of them are suicidal. joining us now and i'll just, sarah, is our damon who is the founder and president of the n g o n r i. she's joining us from dell, blind, central, gaza. all right, very good to have you with us on algae 0. your in guideline to stand on a humanitarian mission with your charity in our international network for a relief and assistance. and this is your 2nd time there understand since the war began in october. talk to us about what you've witness during this trip and how it the situation can past when you went back last or you know, a, it's exponentially more dire, more desperate if that is even possible. and what you have on top of, you know, this ongoing psychological obliteration when it comes to both the adults and also
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the children is the sort of ominous under tone. and that is this increase that, you know, we're seeing. but that is also being reported and looting and criminal activity because what, what needs to understand and this is something that tragically happens. you know, when we're talking about any sort of war dynamic with this level of deprivation of the basic necessities needed for human life. and that is that you see the moral code beginning to road. and so, you know, i was talking to a father yesterday who was telling me that his 5 year old son imagine just 5 years old coming up to him and saying, you know, daddy, maybe it would have been better if we had just died and stayed at home rather than having to live like this, and he was further talking about how, you know, the next more is going to happen once the bomb stop. and you hear this repeatedly over and over again. there is the war within each individual because a lot of people will tell you that right now, despite all of this madness,
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all of this tragedy is also providing a certain level of a distraction from the true measure of the scale, the scope of everything that has been lost and you have children that are beginning to exhibit all sorts of signs of severe and traumatic psychological distress. and when it comes to specifically the humana terry instructor. no one who works within the humanitarian sector has really been confronted. you know, with, with this level of need and loss, right. and, and sheer and total devastation. all right, and then i'll ask you a little bit more about your work in in the humanitarian, terry inspecting because you're working on on setting up medical stations and expanding the number of shelters. aaron garza and you're specifically focusing on children, talk to us more about the children our. how are they co pay those who have survived at this war so far? how are they doing? i mean, you know, at this stage one, we're talking about sort of mental health interventions for children because the
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traumas are still ongoing because it triggers are constantly there. you know, the buzz of the drones is sort of like this is ongoing tons of o you think you've survived, but wait, death can still come when we talk about interactions for children, that very much really focuses in the space of providing a distraction. so it's activities, you know, like play like music like dancing, but then what we're also trying to do is provide children with, you know, basic educational kits. but then you have, you know, other things as well that, that we're trying to get into gaza. but that have actually been been stopped for the last 2 and a half months now pretty much ever since that up on the border costs. and that is things like children's shoes, just driving to this location this morning. you see children who don't have shoes were running around bare foot in areas where there are sewage. you have this growing increase of, you know, disease. and then you have this very sort of basic reality. and that is that when a child is scared or in pain, they turn to their parents to try to find comfort to these very basic killers of
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stability have been fully eradicated for children. so what we try to do is build them up in the best way possible, but when you talk to children, they don't use the rhetoric the language of children anymore. they use the language of adults. and that is extraordinarily jarring to see and to experience and witness . and, and i imagine what's even more hot breaking is, is seeing the parents not being able to, to bring them that conflict that a parent usually bring. so that children are, while you were to an invoice owens for over 2 decades, both as, as a journalist and a humanitarian. and as a journalist, you've coverage many conflicts in syria and also in iraq and in the offensive again size. so that's what's been your experience by going into guys and, and how is a suffering that you've witness? they're different from some of the other conflicts that you've covered. what makes, for example, the trauma of children in guys are different from what you've seen else way
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no, i was trying to put my finger on it and one you know, doesn't like comparing one more zone to another, another person's pain, you know, to another. but there is something that is markedly different about cause that and it is the sheer and total's psychological obliteration. it's really the way that the trauma triggers are relentless. there is no escaping, there is no rest spite. there is no room to breathe and you really sense this constantly. it's not, you know, in some of these other areas where if you survive one bombing, you're able to move to safe space because you're, there is no concept of safe space. and then it's the sheer magnitude, the scale and the time with which it has happened. you know, up the other day i met a little girl in hospital. she's 5 years old, shrapnel shredded her abdomen, who got spelled out. she's in a hospital bed next to her baby brother was covered in burns,
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and she's being comforted by her aunt, who is filled with such tenderness and love towards this little girl that it's a beautiful thing to witness. and then you realize that the aunt is not also going to have to fulfill the role of the mother because these 2 little children's parents are both dead. they just don't know that yet. there's also another issue that is a great and pressing and most urgent concerns, and this is related to the closing of that off border because it wasn't just to meet our dre for humanitarian assistance. it was also the only exit point. and right now, according to the world health organization, there are 14000 people in gaza. need to be met a click as actuators right? have emergency medical situations, they need to be able to get out. and i met one of the little boys in the last 48 hours as well. if this child who also has shrapnel entry to the abdomen does not manage to get out of hudson,
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he is going to either find himself best case scenario with a permanent disability. worst case scenario, he is going to die. right. children, adults lives are at stake, not just from the bombs but from the lack of medical access into that stuff. but also the fact that the only evacuation point has been blocked off as well. and which brings me to my next question, are the challenges, what challenges do you face operating a humanitarian organization inside gaza today? and why is it so difficult to move age around? you know, it's impossible on so many levels and you're constantly sort of trying to play mental gymnastics, figuring out how to navigate the plus or of challenges that are in front of you and the challenges start with 1st and foremost, actually getting the trucks. and so how does that, is this extraordinarily lengthy process right now? you know, the only access point, especially to the south is kind of upside in and they're in the trucks go through.
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extensive screenings is excruciatingly slow at so all of it you also have the challenge that she met, a chair in organizations don't have a say and what actually gets to come in. and so what we end up seeing actually is it's real given priority to commercial trucks. if you look at the numbers right now, more than 2 thirds of trucks that have been able to enter the southern part of gaza, mind you index greenly low numbers, but 2 thirds of those trucks are commercial trucks, which means that goods ends up on the market where the vast majority of people can't afford them. once goods actually manage to get through the search process, you're going to have the challenge of getting them from the check point to the warehouse. there is a growing sense of lawlessness that was criminal activity. there are leaders, there are games, you know, for trying to target humanitarian, 80, and the trucks cost to navigate this whole, you know, gauntlet challenges does to get to the warehouse. and then there's movements within
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the floods that south north to south. south north does not happen, full stops, but then just getting the permissions to move within the hubs. it's extraordinarily painful. it's painstaking when you are finally able, you know, to get something to someone. yeah. to be frank. you feel as if it's so small because the need is so great. but i was talking to one of our united colleagues about this yesterday. and she's like, listen, you know what we're working for our people. these are our children, this is our future. and even if it's something small, even if all we're able to offer is a smile, it is still our duty to do that. all right, before we let you go, just one last question i right now we are out of points politically, way. nothing is happening. negotiations and the war has sold to this now few of an all out war between has for law and israel. what is there any hope left among the people of god said that this could come to an end? so of the, you know, hope is
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a cool beast in the sense that one can't live without hope, but then the minute hope prizes and then is crushed as it is every single time there is talk about potential ceasefire. it really thinks a person psyche and suggests that were entirely unimaginable, you know, being here. you know, obviously people see that i'm a foreigner and, and you get this constant question of, oh, you know, ask her, she's from the outside. maybe she knows when this is going on and it is going to not be able to answer that because people cannot take fits anymore. but at the same time, there is this sense of having to keep going and a lot of husbands, when you talk to them, you know, they don't want to be called resilience. they have been forced into this position. they don't want to be called super heroes. they have been forced to be super heroes . they are, it's a hosted. and so is there hope that this is going to end one day? yes, of course to a certain degree. but then every once in a while you,
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you talk to people and they say no, like it's gone, it's been eradicated for moving forward because, you know, we have children because we don't have a choice because we have to live. and you see these, these moments where people try to create choice, they try to create love, they try to create, you know, a little bit of the life that was for each other. but it's just factions of moments . i mean that the level of sheet that every single person here carries on their shoulders within their psyche is so palpable. it really hits you, it hits you in the god and it prompts you by the throat. our thank you so much for talking to us. thank you for the important work you are doing in guys are right now . our daemon, founder and president of the n g o n r i joining is there from dow, by law, in central guys. i thank you very much for your time. it's the
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best now turn 2 out of world views and one person has been killed in kenya after police confronted demonstrators during nationwide protests against planned tax reforms. thousands of people took to this race in cities across the country on thursday, in the capital, nairobi, police, fire gas, and use water cannon to disperse the crowds. welcome, lab reports it's donated with social media uses. blaming can use president william root tech for the rising cost of living and tax hikes. now, his full housings to the streets protest as gather may, can use parliament as m. p. 's, debated the legislation to increase the taxes. we are paying the houses l o w on the up into what taxes. we all know that you're not gonna get the most. we don't get enough missing those results. please try to can street. government says
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it's already listen to the people when it removes some of the most controversial taxes from the bill. every time we got the processes to the side street, they rounded panes, very clean the right place in the front of the way to the say, we got to reflect the southern to the police in the taken out. remember that the need to do these offices as people talented the peaceful protest as well. mostly peaceful, dental people had several streets in the city center. so the police use fulton cannon and take us to seal off the streets, closest to parliament inside about 2 thirds of the m. p. 's voted to approve the amended bill. that is 2nd reading. the president veto has the majority outside.
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people said his government doesn't represent them and that type of corruption and full service delivery to the initial on the input on we so, so far as soon as he came into the fall off, once i'd be done with the, the thousands protested in around 20 different towns and cities, including router's hometown is able to read the crowds a younger than those seen it opposition? lead protests and reason. yes. it doesn't follow a political leader and that students drop see, cuz i'm young professionals on the streets in my baby rights group say more than 30 people were arrested and thousands injured, including 6 hate by police cars. when running away, the police have set their respect. constitutional rights must protect government buildings from occupation elements expected debates on the finance village final
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reading. next week. as sunsets approach, please try to clear the streets and the following is of tear gas before nightfall. it didn't work until playing co security broke up the remaining crowd. malcolm web address. there may be kenya as the conflict in so don has created the wells where is too many terry in crisis, that's according to the head of doctors without borders, which has millions of suffering. and the latest development sources have told dodges here at the time military rapids support forces have taken control of. i fly at the capital of west core to find states southwest of cartoon. fighting between the sudanese army and the pine military who blasted several hours before soldiers reportedly withdrew. the recess then took control of government and military buildings. thousands have been killed and 9000000 people display since war broke
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out april last year. i'll just see what i see, but morgan has this update from car to with the foreign ministry rapids support forces has been targeting positions officer, denise army, not just infatuated in the door for region in north star, for, but also in other parts of the country. now in westport, at the time the recept was able to take over and food, which is one of the last 2 remaining armies, trunk holes in the seats, and with the takeover of the recept over the military garrison and food at that the only baba knew. so as the last remaining minutes, very strong, cold in the state of westwood, the fine. now this means that the hours have, has expanded its control over the territory into them. and especially in the core defend region, and especially in the west star floor. and now has access to control of the border between sedan and south to them, but the takeover of the iris f over and pool that has led to the displacement of stability. and i thought it was already a place that has been home or hosting hundreds of thousands of people who have been
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displaced from other parts of local defend region into areas that are controlled by the army and territories controlled by the army. because they deemed it safer. and now with the iris of control and food of tens of thousands have closet to peter with bob and who's not in westport defense states, which is the last remaining army strong, cold. but it's also the place that the recess has been targeting for the past few weeks and have been trying to take control of the all concerns about the humanitarian situation that will result as a result of the iris if taking liver. and as a result of the displacement of civilians from and for that to buy a new plan elsewhere, including across the border into south to them already. but united nation says 10000000 people have been displaced as a result of the conflict. within 15000 people have been killed and there is a catastrophic, so many parents situation according to the united nation. and they often sense that with more and more people lean, especially towards buy a new cell, which is already an active, complex own. and where 8 organizations cannot easily really reach those needs. they
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off on the sense that the for me to parent assistance or the humanitarian needs will grow. and that more and more civilians will be in dire need of assistance and may lose their lives. as a result of shortages of those relief supplies, even more than onto 0, how to or miss as military definitely test results. the uranium mining license of french nuclear group, ronald the company operates the mine with one of the largest wells deposit. one of the was largest deposits of uranium, it's highlighted tensions between the june to and from a put on your power funds. and is the latest step in cutting ties with friends. so some of these wrist explains remind me, like i said to us or to vote about the military joke that relates to the more wording mining side, which seats on 200000 tons of uranium, a metal used in the production of new care energy as well as nuclear weapons, it's the only site operated by the prince mining company, or i know it also operates another binding site in our lead in the north of the country. and the region of it is the government of the give you the chinese,
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the ministry need and you had given or on the up to the 19th of june to mobilize, decide, or lose it slices. the company safety does already mobilize stuff. and my tv is to the side and lead infrastructure. so as a full of doing relationship between files, i need for my call, i need you to try to rearrange it says the coup last year that piper gave you a general try me. and then we'd start to see how the relationship towards started are taking an old style. when the french, the military and government boarded the french invested there to leave out. that was followed by the eviction of several hundreds of french soldiers based imager and disrupting down on our french basis image here. now it seems that they move forward the action of the media future to is also targeting print businesses. image russian companies have indicated interest in the uranium mining sup, uh, site anymore, right. and we've seen also applauding of a to just between russian businesses and the russian government as well as rushing, messing the res, uh, image,
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which clip point to the direction. why these new license or the nicest for you, but we're in may be headed to how many degrees obviously that i would you a sale i had on this, i'll just here and use our a bit of a stretch. india is me that makes his 1st visit to the cash me a beach and since the general elections in which he lost his sweeping power, george an extreme heat in the united states, my friends at the border with mexico or among those suffering, the colors, some of hate parole and some of stones for many across europe to somebody when you see lots of cloud fund that has rolling across from pushing to the west side of jeremy. that's what we're going to use its way for the east was the he continues.
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meanwhile, down towards the se, in particular, the intense heat white carry on here. we'll see something of a heat wave pushing up towards the north west. as we go to the console. next wait times is already starting to rise. a little bit of weather just coming in across all and west and pa, salt the u. k. to have to get pushed out of the way to squeeze down to the way by a barrier of high pressure. but there's a stormy weather that is kind of settling, cause a good positive jeremy, may notice a few of those for the football taking place the some what to whether to into central they some positive frost easing across into more than pulse of easily as i said it will make its way for the east with a rash, the shaft rolling across poland into the baltic states some parts of scandinavia as well as southern areas if you will be a good deal dry and bryce at price of weather dry weather that just coming into west spain and portugal at long last drive prologic us northern parts of africa. we have got the usual scattering dish as opposed to west africa,
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but not as widespread as they should be. the he says he went toward towards syria to provide a lifetime entail was very interesting, but not in the eyes of his government. this has been home for so many years in the final parts of the series. we followed the story of a british age worker as he flees from it live with his family after being arrested by a powerful village shop. one of the toughest times when they tortured me. state list in syria on l. g 0. ok, foundation is deliberate, over $300000000.00. will suffice. emboldened 75 countries around the world, 100 percent of sec, thoughts and emergency donation spence on projects and we ensure beneficiaries come 1st of a 300 on luis covenants. it goes through the roof, the crossing in recent months. our most of these bless and be blessed and we all
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turning your donations into direct delivery in the shortest possible time donates with confidence. the . are you watching the news hour on elgin 0 with me? so you back to go, i reminder about some stories and he's really yes, right, cause damage. i school sheltering, just based families in the southern city of han units and got 5 thousands of palestinians who had been seeking refuge in the past. i would say they now have no way just in kenya, and one person has been killed after police confronted demonstrate destroying nationwide protest against non tax reforms. please use water cannon and t gas
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dispersed files to me upon them into my little beach wednesdays voted to move ahead with the b one out on the war on gaza. infuse fighting and explosions have been reported in the rock for region of southern gas, or where these really ami is intensifying. it's a sold tanks and troops backed by war. pains that pushing deeper into several areas of the city, is there any forces bombed residential buildings in neighborhoods, in the west, and palestinian on groups targeted a helicopter in the east? the us secretary of state on to me blinking as one is really government officials to avoid further escalation with has belie 11 on the us is trying to ease regional tensions area this week. the on groups lead a warranty is fight is we're ready for why the war and these really on the city. it had a proof glance for a war in 11 on 11 on offensive. the 2 sides have been exchanging fire across the border since october. but the attacks have intensified in the past week and in
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a recent development as well as released a video, it says shows a new kind of attack drone. the explosive drone was using a strike on an is really military base in mid july on the border with 11 on let's speak to alger 0 is in a harder about this. she's joining us live from marsh i you. that's in 711 on is a not the attack with this you draw and that testable claims have carried out. happened in the area behind you. what's been named best as well. that's it for top. the exchange of fire continues at a much lower intensity than what we witness last week, but the 11 on israel border remains very much an active frontline as well are releasing a video showing for the 1st time the use of a f p v arm drone. if i show you what's behind me in the distance that to where you see the antenna, the weather is, it's not very clear,
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but that is the is really town of a to look. it's largely empty for residents, but that is where the attack happens in that video that has the release to see that drone targeting a military position. and the target was a system that detects drones. so what has it been that has been trying to do in recent weeks is slowly gradually unveiling its new arsenal and showing its capabilities its parts really of a strategy of the terence. it is also a part of a strategy to avoid an escalation of this war, as well as says, it doesn't swap the wider conflict that it's open this front to help support garza now just a few days ago on wednesday. in fact, as well as secretary general boasting that they have a surplus of fighters, the surplus of weapons and they too are manufacturing their own drones. now us media is quoting us, officials are saying that they are concerned that the i render on the air defense missile system of the is really is,
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will be overwhelmed in the events of an escalation of this conflict that heavier miss 1000 rockets. so will be able to breach the i random system in the north of israel. and in fact, hezbollah has been targeting iron don't batteries in recent weeks. so the situation remains tense. it is a serious situation along the border as well saying it is preparing for a wider conflict as well as saying it is prepared to. so there is a lot of concern that this conflict which is still largely contained for the time being good to expand and widen into a much larger war. xena, thank you very much for your reporting that xena. honda lived there in march, i you in 711 on. well, let's discuss these latest developments now. it has some variety who is a professor of international phase of contact university and is joining us from amman. jordan, good to have you with us on alta 0 hassan as they had mentioned their attentions high on the northern border of israel and 7 border of 11 on with hezbollah
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unveiling. it's new arsenal. it seems it is an old out war between has well ninety's really inevitable in new york. it was no way. it's not the end of the old, but it could do now. and then the situation could actually it'd be generate and to allow to, i mean, this is a very easy to slice and go that route. i think with bosses until this moment is sticking to the rules of engagement with a little bit of a difference is here. and there, but that's, and actually it's has little, has no interest in that and then allow for me because of the consequences. and for this reason as well as being, trying to send them can be messages. so those rates were there by joint, i'm taking photographs. so like as sensitive places, military base is over heifer for a sense in order to fill days, right? that you know that would be a price tag or any pull it out or is not going to be like a piece of cake. so this is one thing. another thing is that there are a lot of pressure on nothing. y'all,
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himself is to open another font. it when this is, i don't know if he coming from the opposition leaders. yeah. let pete who was saying that there should be administered pan to deal with the situation and then all, i think let me, i would not really get into the pressure of coming from the, from the opposition. so he would probably he to be advice of the americans because the american administration has no interest in a way to work. but what about the pressure coming from is right wing allies? yes, this is a very important things, but also that video has learned how to maneuver them. uh, they cannot read the dictates what nothing you know must or must not do and the war 11. and then if any, all, this is tim with the army and the preferred for plans for the why, the complex. but the question here and, and this is very important within a thing i'm gonna, you know, give them to go ahead. and this is subject to a lot of political calculations, whether it's in it, but also in the relationship with united states. and just recently, the american administration sent that invoice in order to be pension and, and,
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and then make sure and just kind of file something, no one wants. right. but at the same time, as well as saying that is saying that military operational plans have been approved or potential offensive in 11 on. we also see now is really forces pushed deeper into rafa in, in southern gaza, with this offensive that is intensifying in vasa. do you think you'll be on the political considerations and the pressure from the americans? can israel a for, to open up another front militarily, right. now this was, this is really amino something remains to be seen at least. so we know that is what has a very strong on me, but t or say force coming from united states and even warning to these right? is that the iron don't? would it be over one by the missiles and drawings? i'll find my husband why in case of a model allow tor breakout. and so the question here,
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as long as the is not like as little as well as is more trained um, organized with more even lethal weapons compared to, to look a sam and how much and for this reason, i think these raiders will pay huge price for something that they can avoid and, and also do one thing. the one thing very important for the latest that we have like 90000 is what it is evacuated, the northern font division, and they can go back without having the solution. so minutes your solution is not really what this lady shouldn't be looking for. how some very, always good to get your thoughts. thank you very much for joining us. how some variety professor of international relations that contact the city of the now induced prime minister and the vendor mode is visiting indian administered kashmir. his 1st strip since winning a 3rd term in office 2 weeks ago. more the lead
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a yoga session in srinagar. marking world yoga day is government scraps and mostly majority regions, special semi autonomy status in 2019 and its right to elected leaders. but india supreme court has not ordered the government to hold local elections by the end of september. a decades long uprising against in general has killed thousands of people in kashmir. speak to the foundry about this. he's a journalist and political unless the editor of the dispatcher is joining us from jermel in indiana administered kashmir. thank you so much for your time. what is the significance of parameters to modi's visit to to kashmir right now at this time? what does it, why does it matter? and what message do you think is wanting to send a, this was the, it's very important to find this to his date, this me within 2 weeks of his taking molar into the pipe down at the national government. so that signals that you know fish meet demands of what i ought to do for him. and recently the general election definitely concluded that this maybe
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people worked at all what i meant above me, lee. and that was the what the house was probably the highest in the last 40 years . so there is an eagerness in the region to catch up with the democracy and to get back to the kind of political don't let us see and don't want it because that has not been elected governments in the region. valasics. yes. and i region which is being run by a belk receives. so people want to get back to the go live so far, industry can here. but it was last to lead a yoga festival that has been happening at age, an activity on 221. i be here, but then he made use of this opportunity to the show of people that elections with a little bit less, that you have to write a song. and he also said that the, the, that because the don't want to christmas day a downgrade to essentially i just started getting into the 3 the show that the stage would be highly rated back to the state board. so based on the okay,
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so the it for, for international audience who may not be familiar with what's been happening on this point just already towed the whole point of removing the statehood for the region was, was to basically most just state with the rest of india right, to show that there is no difference between brush me or, and the rest of india. but we've seen recently enough taking a tax in, in the region. and most of the attacks have targeted people from other states. so how concerning is that for the government and has revoking the autonomy actually worked so i don't think they don't want to just be less than anybody that defend from other states that can say there was a small, you know, the, me, that bus most symbolic. so that was withdrawn from the background back to the state, but it also comes with the 2 young and dentistry. and you knew that that means that you know, the local people don't have any access to the decision making process. so good. so . so now you knew that if you were open to do people from best of the country to be able to come here a big job to do business, is that the structure?
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so the concerns end up being to reassure back to the right to learn jobs and go to the chevy group projector. but the number of statements that have been coming up, kind of like from the start statements, bonds date or, and election those right? so, but i'm looking forward to some practical steps in that direction to happen. so until what practical steps precisely do you think the government might be able to start the key when it just divides in the region between induce and mostly a practical style aspect to go step in that direction has to be that there have been more than 2 dozen political statements about or the election that happened as many statements about restoration of state to its original building. but, and that's 50 action in that direction has not happened. so election commission has to get to the man brought steps to work for the next so. so people say that these itemized, somebody wanted to go statements but practical steps in thumbs up,
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you know, be some progress on that kind of to happen. so apologize. they shouldn't, which you mentioned the whitening this went been in the sense that it was a huge issue doing that i sent collections by the way. and as i said from that sounds of it all for that reason that this is not something people in india, particularly people who don't want to just may have like so it is what we're seeing, that in next part of what kind of less than some of the government takes part of the amended that bought from across the country is a psychology. thank you so much for your analysis. thank you for your. your thoughts on this story is a 5 challenges. agend miss send policy. i'm just joining a staff from jermel in the in getting administered kashmir as a south korea has some of the russian ambassador in protest against a new security deal between north korea and moscow. on a state visit took young young this week. the russian president vladimir fulton signed an agreement with kim john own pledging mutual defense support us secretary
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of state on to me blinking as also condemn the new treaty as a threat to regional peace and stability, flashes and bass. that is the software that has responded. same threats against multiple 3 nations with young young are unacceptable. stay ahead on alger 0. o eyes on pop. why. how an awareness campaign about one guys, that is inspiring environment a lot to this thing in the nation. we go through and i'm not above killing children, but i'm not wasteful or take life for specific reasons. i look back at the life and career of canadian, not to donald sutherland, who has died out to 3 is finding nearly 6 decades. the
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news the
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the welcome back indonesians, that taking a page from the all lies on rasa. viral campaign, to raise awareness about this right to far as in papa and the voice popular region . indeed, indigenous tribes and palm or of companies that locked in a legal battle in the supreme court. the all lies on pop up posts in hash tai and have been shared nearly 6000000 times on social media. barnaby no, re, for some jet, caught the members of indonesia as are you. in more communities from west popple province travelled 3000 kilometers to appeal to the supreme court to save their forest. but we will be left with nothing from oil companies are allowed to operate
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. we are worried about tom oil waste, polluting our sources of life. a video of this demonstration in late may has be shared online along with it, a poster with a hash tag. all lies on popcorn. the campaigns creator says he was inspired by the a i generated all lies and brought the image, which went viral after that is really army bump, a 10 camp in southern gaza, killing at least $45.00 palestinians by the beginning. many people think that if we support people abroad, we also need to support at brothers and sisters at home. indonesia is the world's largest producer of palm oil and ingredients in products ranging from chocolate, tooth paste. millions of hector supreme force had been cleared for it's called evasion and production. the government stop issuing permits in 2011 companies wanting to produce palm oil in what are considered virgin for us. said one of the balance economic and environmental concerns. after the say,
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the case is before the supreme court or a test of the government's political will populous force are largely intact. but the area being contested in court is nearly twice the size of jakarta. perhaps how we need to initiate this in the palm. oil industry is good for the economy. we think it's big enough for us. it is if they want to expand their business, they should make use of technology instead of clearing more land. industry leaders say the support, the moratorium, but concessions granted before 2011, such as the ones facing legal challenges may be exempted if the cost for me before the good software men can if i lose shit department. so uh, depends on the golf tournament. be brought to you uh, to function you are the oh you employed people are hoping public support online will persuade the supreme court to rule in their favor. find below algae 0 to card
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steve. alerts have been issued for around 70000000 people in the united states like stream temperatures. this course in regions from the northwest to new york rescue teams have been deployed on both sides of the us mexico border. a migraine was found dead in the desert and the issue that water is apparently from heat stroke. us to go to official say at least one migrant a day died from the heat last week in the region of a paso forecasters of one temperatures of up to 43 degrees celsius are expected. in the coming days. we would highly encourage people to use the port of entries. don't try to cross the legally, especially through the desert, because this brutal heat is unforgiving. and that's so what's happening is these people cross over and they're losing their lives. so our strong recommendation is don't try to cross the legally and don't go through the desert storm. alberto has caused the santa caterina river to various expands in northern mexico after leaving
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a trail of rain water. as it moves north, alberto has weakened into a tropical storm and is moving in land over northeast and mexico. 4 people have been killed. 3 of them with children. the thousands of people have gathered at stonehenge in southern england to see the sun rise on the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere. they have come together to celebrate the summit sole space, the unesco world heritage sites attracts thousands of pagans, son, worship, as an tories for the event every year on wednesday, a small part of the story excited with spray painted by environmental activities to highlight the comic crisis it would winning hollywood actor donald sutherland has died at the age of $88.00. the canadian saw featured in nearly 200 films and television shows and a korea that lasted 6 decades sutherland was known for his role as
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a mash and kelly's heroes. and more recently, in the hunger game series christian, so it only takes it a bracket. his life donald sutherland appeared in more than 200 films and shows throughout his career. he got his start playing quirky off bead characters. what's a not so smart, conduct named vernon, pinkly. the 1967 hit, the dirty dozen and the drug addicts known as oddball in kelly's heroes. just a few years later. and more recently in the hunger game series, he was a fascist dictator. or take life for specific reasons. his death was announced by his son actor kiefer sutherland on social media there he posted a photo of himself as a child with his father in it. he wrote with a heavy heart, i tell you that my father donald sutherland, has passed away. i personally think one of the most important actors and the history of film, never daunted by a rule, good, bad,
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or ugly. he loved what he did and did what he loved, and one can never asked for more than that. a life well lived sutherland played a father figure, and robert redford's academy award winning directorial debut ordinary people. redford was just one of many film legends he worked with over the course of what he had. knowledge was a blessed career and a blessed life. i just had a terrific life and it's been because of everybody else. you know, the people who come and ask for an autograph of the people who've given me. ready life, i've had a wonderful partnership for the last 30 years with my wife who was a, it's a good, there's not an award in the world. we're going anywhere close to the sutherland was never nominated for an oscar, but in 2017. was honored by the academy for his life's work. he was 88 when he died . and that rush suspicion is our own algebra pension was always on our website
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that out you 0, don't com. i'll be back in just a few minutes with more of the day. thank you for watching the unique perspective. one picture is not going to tell the entire 8 months of the genocide. however, it is bringing attention to advise that this has nothing rough. it looks like we're off, it looks like so on heard voices, we've been seeing the exacerbation of the militarization and the police over the past 100 years. connect with our community and tap into conversations you will find elsewhere. folks in the region government and other companies are stealing indigenous land. the stream on out to 0 of the
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. ringback the latest news as it breaks for immigration advocates challenge president trump asylum order back in 2018 with detailed coverage. while the sensor writes remains from the in the saddle, the fall right is expected to shake off politics and bustles from around the world . the growth rate of the russian economy is ahead of the world. average. and russia has already overtaken japan in germany, in terms of the size of its economy. a working class community driven football club with some remarkable funds left leaning socialist politics. what you see on this the, those of the police of the funds to pay for phones and discrimination. wide focus,
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bringing people together. it's quite unlike anywhere else on the lot. white sports football osha's on out, does it run the overwhelmed and understaffed? we take you to the guys as largest remaining health facility, where the doctors are striving to meet these factory needs of patients. the play you're watching. allergies here on line from to have with me for these back. people also ahead is ready for us is hate a building me a you and run school sheltering dozens of disgrace palestinians in the 7th.

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