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tv   Up Front  Al Jazeera  June 21, 2024 11:30pm-12:01am AST

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wells hunting for the bedside and is prime minister in the run, the moody has been visiting indian admitted some cash man. his 1st trip since winning a side to 2 weeks ago. moody led a yoga session, inserting the gall, mocking. well, the yoga day, his government scrap the most of the majority regions, special, semi autonomous states, us back in 2019, but induced supreme court has now ordered the government to hold local elections by the end of september, decade sloan uprising against indian who has killed thousands of people several broken countries have experienced a major power blackout, some in scorching the high some of the temperatures. montenegro bows. now most of corporations age racing. adriatic coast is what is pulse of albania, what will impacted the policy is cost significant issues, including shutting down traffic lights malfunction. as a power transmission line,
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montenegro is reportedly responsible for the outage. ida hygiene research has moved from, sorry, ever. the smallest of what we know about the power outage is coming from grace and officials. they say that the incident did not happen to increase. so and according to some preliminary information, the problem happened somewhere between greece and albania. a great and officials had also says it's march 6 up to 6 months before we have official investigation results. and they said, that's what happened might be to some extent, related to extreme heat waves. today we have to have one of the pots of space in the balkans, with temperatures reaching up to 40 degrees people in bosnia and herzegovina, albania, for a shot. and montenegro, greece as well, were affected by this power outage. we're talking about hundreds of thousands, if not millions. uh also sir, is aware of tax to the because we're in the middle of the sort of the season. i'm.
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the situation is gradually coming back to normal. the electricity is gradually coming back, but there were some disruptions. we're hearing that inside of the bulky and capital traffic lights were off and there were severe traffic disruptions. also, we're hearing about people who were stuck in the elevators and the fire fire fighters had to rescue them. luckily, institutions such as schools, hospitals, and other similar institutions. they do have their own uninterrupted power supplies with their own generators. okay, that's it. for me, my inside lots more information now website out, is there a dot com to stay with us? the, what is the effect of the conflict on the environment? the impact is, is so much more than just emissions from tanks ships and will fight more than will say it has a devastating effect on people. and the department of defense is emissions is
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as large as many countries. every time ministry spent and increasing military emissions increased. and this war and this climate crisis, all hail the planet on it does ita as israel continues its own slot in gaza. progressive jewish groups across the world have protested in solidarity with palestinians. so is there a generational shift within jewish communities when it comes to israel and palestinian liberation? and if so, how sustainable is that conversation is coming up with 1st ceasefire talks between from mass and israel have stalled smoking fears at the world as it has no image in inside. meanwhile, in the west bank palestinians have continued to rally in solidarity with god in the midst ongoing raids, interest. we'll discuss the situation in the west bank and the future of parents, the leadership with this week's headliner. from ramallah, journalist and ryder area, i'm about to go to the
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man. bye good. thanks so much for joining us on upfront. thank you for having me ma'am. right now, more than $31000.00 people have been killed so far in israel siege on guys of the humanitarian situation on the ground is becoming even more dire. i mean guys are struggling for survival. a quarter of the population is facing starvation. i know you have friends, family in guys. oh, what's the situation like? what are you hearing on the ground it's, it's such an important question to ask and yet one of the most difficult ones to capture because no words and no videos can really showcase the struggle of just being alive of just having another breast hour by hour. that is 31000 killed by direct air strike. we still don't know the actual numbers and including those that were denied medical care and including those that are dying from lack of medicines
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and access to medical care. those that are injured. and so coming to wounds that the numbers really don't show you the reality of every single day, people having to go and scout and scavenger for whatever food that they can find. and this is a man made problem, this is, this is a condition that is created and enforced tactic. land strategically by israel. and it's not just kill through air strikes. that is for the destruction of any infrastructure less than a day. but it is to the capacity of the palestinian population there and it is to quite literally kill them in order to pay the way for building new is rarely settlements, which as we have seen already is rarely politicians and representatives are pushing forward the building of new settlements in with us while the international focus, of course has been on it as a, there's an important attention that needs to be paid as well to the west bank. and i see protest, i see rallies of support going on there. but i also see an increase in rates,
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arrests, killings, etc. what's been your experience since october 7th, with how the conditions are in the west bank. the conditions in the west bank are dire and of course for polish things in the west bank. there is that recognition and expectation that as soon as israel finishes with, let's say it's going to begin intensifying attacks and the us bank and seller attacks against palestinians are increasing and is really ministers are arming, is really settlers who are legal in the west bank with new assault life rifles as they have been since october 7th, and then adding to that, i think in light of the travesty and how profoundly violence the, the attack of israel. and the idea is that we're not able to fully process and understand the level and extent of attack that is happening in the west bank.
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israel's using aerial bombing through drones on palestinian civilian homes. it is locking up refugees in their own refugee camps, including elderly and children for days at a time. now imagine being locked in your kitchen for 3 days. you're 80, you're, you have 0 access to your meds. you have 0 access to a phone, and that's become the norm here. you talk about the increasing settler attacks. there was a response to that president biden cited after the night of nations documented more than $570.00 attacks by settlers since the october 7 war began. and he has said he would impose financial sanctions and travel bands on individuals guilty of attacking palestinians and quote, undermining peace. security and stability in the west bank, of course, has a lot of debate about the effectiveness of these sanctions. and even if they're being enforced, um, what do you make of the president by his choice to do that? i think president biden is very much on brand in terms of american administration
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and their foreign policy the president by then a loud and sponsored and funded israel during this ongoing ethnic cleansing and genocide, old practice has been committed in the us. so to say that, hey, we're going to hold few individuals accountable, but we're going to actually keep empowering. the redeem is merely a symbolic gesture for history books that really conflate what happened in reality and what was said and, and public meetings and press conferences. i think president biden's trying to say face, but even in that mood, there was no recognition of israel's in apartheid regina, there is no recognition for palestinian right on, on this land to live freely and with dignity. it was more of let's try to curve subtler attacks the little bit because it's kind of getting noisy in talking about this relationship between the us and, and is really and of course what's happening in, in, in guys and westbank. it made me think of something that happened last sunday. a
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real estate show was held at a synagogue in teaneck, new jersey, where a number of companies were pitching, land, and properties in israel, and the west bank to potential american buyers. now while illegally encroaching on the west bank certainly is a new, a vince like the seem to be coming more and more to the for in the us, canada, etc. oh, what do you think about that? well, why do you think it's happening now? so the, the is really practices of continuing the encroachment on palestinian lands, of course, hasn't stopped even during this ongoing aggression after october 7th, we've seen israel continue building the apartheid wall in areas such as jeanine, north of the west bank and other areas as well. and in terms of the united states and canada and selling areas of land here are marketing lands here to buyers and abroad. and allowing that to continue, especially during the genocide is very telling of how israel is
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a colonial state. this is how it began by trying to sell palestinian lands on to others and inviting them to come here. but you need, there's also another layer to it is happening in that regards. the united states and canada have actually been pushing for palestinians to apply for visas. and asylum in the united states and canada, especially canada, has really been promoting palestinian departure from here and trying to build new lives there. and it shows you how the form of the population ethnic cleansing has a bureaucratic layer and the, and that's where foreign policy also allows for the facilitation of our, the population as well. do you have any fear about that as a kind of big picture in game? i mean i'm thinking about a few days ago. i spoke to a doctor that looks different hospital in 31 of his family members had been killed . he's staying to conduct surgeries in the hospital,
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but he's actively taking his family to egypt and i said to him, hey like, are you not worried that you're not going to be allowed back in? just like in 1948 because i can't worry about that right now. people to die. so between the pressures of being pushed out from, from the threat of the bombings to the kind of diplomatic, political and economic incentive to go around that around the world. are you worried that this product, the portal itself, deportation is going to be effective? i think we're only flesh and bone. and i think as palestinians, you have, you know, your family that you love any friends and how can you ask anyone to just keep taking it? just keep leaving the bombs, just keep failing your body, eat itself and trying to push yourself a little further to go get some water. so it's understandable because i myself, i'm, i'm having to interest people. i love and colleagues as well and help facilitate their evacuation from, with, as a to egypt. and that, that's,
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these are like impossible missions to an extent. you have to pay almost $5000.00 to $7000.00 per adult and $2500.00 for a child to form an extortion in order to be able to leave a place that is being slaughtered. that is a slaughter house. i do think that the end goal is to guess evacuate, palestinians that indeed populate them. this is part of the strategy forced them to fleet. the creation of a humanitarian crisis is a tactic. the denial of water entry is a tactic the forcing global powers to feel like they can do anything except now we're seeing the dropping of humanitarian aid, which is actually resulting in the killing of palestinians and the destruction of hospital infrastructure rather than actually feed starving population yeah, i see us being the populates, but at the same time again, we're only flesh and bone which is why we appeal to the international community,
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which is why we asked for in demand for the opening over at alpha. both ways. not one way because yeah, we do see these tactics and we've seen what they've done before. but what's different now is the recognition of what happened in 1948 and all the demands of what's to come now that this palestinian and it needs to be seen as palestinian. the west bank as palestinian jerusalem as palestinian. yeah, suffered palestinian. these were taken in 1948 jerusalem 1967. israel's trying to take what remains in 2024. but if we bring back that knowledge, then these tactics would just fail. it's, it's, it's on us to decide whether these tactics fail or not, rather than to place someone that has been starved and try to demand of them to endure this monstrosity. what role does leadership play in that? one of the things that comes out of palestinian civil society, one of things we've seen emerging is a kind of sense of distrust and disillusionment with
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a lot of the leadership including the palestinian authority, which is the governing, of course body, which administers parts of the west bank uh, do you see the p a playing a role in the future either of westbank or guys and and if so, is that a good thing? you know, i constantly find myself stuck between laughter and tears when it comes to that because the palestinian authority has aided and abetted as well as genocide and any talk about a future rule. how, what a plan because i little bit about how a lot of people that i've seen counter intuitive. right. so the palestinian authority basically came into power $199495.00, was supposed to be an interim government. but instead began receiving funding that by the united states and germany to create a police force. essentially, that is trained in riot control rather than defense because the west bank was the
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militarized, under the also agreements. and the palestinian authority took on a role as a proxy army for israel in the west bank. as you see, israel's always saying, why don't you insure our security. so the palestinian authority at arrest palestinians on behalf of israel. it has supported israel. and this is why no one really sees any hope in them. but it is this heartening that for example, a lot of the questions threw out just even before the store was, well, do you condemn him ass instead of really trying to 1000 to what had this is. it is a political party that has grown in contract affect the and then you have the cosign brigade, which is the armed wing for him as currently fighting on the ground. and rather than asking palestinians, well what is your imagination of a political party? and that's where this becomes difficult because we've been focus so much on trying to answer the very much irrelevant questions. little room was left for palestinians to have radical imagination in terms of designing and imagining
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a new future for them. the who said the leadership choices is reduced to these 2. that's the american system. for us, it's very different. and we've seen leaders come out in times of meet when palestinians with an uprising in the streets, and they found no one, they found each other and they created leadership from the ground. so the ground birts leadership and i think everyone's concern about palestinians, and the deluxe. guess of leadership is because they don't know who to speak with. but for palestinians we are, you know, very much creating in community. and if it's not the soul who is the palestinian leader, why to negotiate? how much more of our lives can be taken or resources taken rather than asking will . okay. these really leadership is corrupt, being led by a prime minister that is corrupt, whose leaders have a history of committing crimes against humanity and enforcing apartheid. i don't
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understand why we don't focus on, for example, how we can dismantle that leadership in order to empower and, and help palestinians build their representatives freely. not with a toll cold on them, nothing but to go through. thank you so much for joining us today on a front. thank you so much for having the mark. the since october jewish communities around the world have mobilized and solidarity with palestinians calling for an end to israel's brutal campaign and gaza. here in the united states, record numbers of americans use have joined anti occupation groups like jewish boys for peace. and if not now in some of the largest demonstrations for palestine that we have ever seen. many of noted that even before october 7th, a growing number of jewish people across a diaspora had been questioning, not just the actions of israel's government, but the very idea of a jewish state,
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especially one that comes at the expense of public many lives, have a city of freedom in palestinian self determination. so always seeing a significant shift within jewish communities when it comes to israel and palestine liberation. and is there an opportunity for lasting change? joining us to discuss is rabbi alyssa wise, founder of rabbis for cease fire and former co executive director of jewish boys for peace, and were also joined by eva bard, what national sports person for, if not now what thank you both for joining mean upfront a rabbi i'm going to start with you. uh you have said since october, 7th, jewish anti zionist organizing against genocide has erupted on an unprecedented scale. peter, by none of us currents predicts, quote, questioning the idea of jewish statehood, will be a current in american jewish life. that it has not been since the american jewish scientist consensus was established in the 1940s. you've been a leader within the jewish left for decades. is this like a a turning point when it comes to the question of israel?
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i think so for sure. uh, one of the things that we've seen in this time is that the organizing that actually been happening for decades is coming to fruition. right. so i think that what's happening right now in the jewish community is there is a calling of the question, right? who are we on a moral and communal level? and how far are we willing to go to defend israel and the jewish state? you know, i think for a lot of people who have not yet been called off the sidelines on this question, they're being called off now because there's no way to be neutral on this question . you either are standing against the mass slaughter of palestinians and gaza or your for there's really not anywhere in between. even research shows that a younger american jews are becoming increasingly critical of israel even before october 7th. and there was a growing generational split between the american jewish community when it comes to israel and the occupation. why do you think we're seeing this generation on divide now? and i think there are a couple of reasons. i mean,
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the things that many young jews are taught growing up on the sort of mythology that the, the vs is successive is really, governments have required to be able to claim jewish support around the world, which they need. it depended on for their foreign policy. that mythology is dependent on how soon he is not being fully human. and then young jews go to college with pals to me and peers, or they follow young palestinians on social media. in this moment they see how us to me is broadcasting on instagram, the genocide that they are going through at the hands of the is really government. and there's a shattering that happens of all of the different mythologies of like a land without a people for a people without a land. um, the idea being the most moral army in the world as id of soldiers right now are posting videos of the war. crime is they're committing on social media. on and youngers are saying, wait a 2nd, the values that we were raised with of justice and equality are totally in congress
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with this. and we refuse to check them out the door when it comes to the posts, paying people. and i was raised with, you know, an overwhelming amount of holocaust education. i feel very, very clear on what has happened to so many jewish people um during the 20th century . and so it should not be a shock to anyone that i'm out in the streets resisting what i see as an attempt to wipe people out. what was i taught in my jewish education, if not the ability to recognize and attempt to wipe people out when i see it. and that's why thousands of young jews are in the streets right now, or otherwise. in october, you founded rabbis for cx 5 and you have said that jewish teachings actually demand and in to israel's honest lot in guys it, can you explain what you mean by that? uh well, i mean the truth is, one couldn't approach the sacred text of the torah with any less than 3 it. so we
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have rabbits for us. these bird choose to read it to pull out its ethical and moral core. and when we do that, what we see is that the most sacred obligation that there is for people of faith, jews, and not just use christians, muslims. everyone is the idea that all people are made in the image of the divine. and what that means is that we must treat each person as sacred and each life as sacred itself. you follow down that road, right? if that's your central spiritual obligation, then how does this massive slaughter in gaza? how does the denial of food and water, and medicine destroying hospitals, where you know, the humanitarian crisis, like if you can even begin to like, wrap our heads around that, right? it's such a desecration of the divine. and for us that rabbis receipts are we pull on these threads of georgia tech a little bit, somebody who's and that's abstract though. right there actual people died. $1139.00
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jews out on october 7th. and there's the abstract question for the news of the literal and immediate urgency of protecting jewish lives right now in israel. what do you say to those? i think that it's a mistake to think about how a mazda attack as an anti semitic attack. i think the mazda attack was an attack that was targeting is relays, and these really state for decades of dispossession and occupation and apartheid. and so it's part of israel's project, has been to completely conflict zionism and judaism. so we are meant to understand that anything that israel does, they do kind of as a jew in the world, but it was not a jew, israel's, of state. and they need to be dealt with and treated as any other state. what with the same accountability is, and i think that when it comes to we understand what is our object, our moral and spiritual obligations. and this time is, you know, as the persian port room, you put it best of i come into the world at these,
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see this, the sword dropping from their hands, even at the ark of their rage because we understand there's just one fleshed wound, and that's the idea, there's just one flash, you can't kill palestinians and torture palestinians in the way that is roles doing and not think that that doesn't also cause injury whether physical or moral and spiritual to the jewish people. and as rabbis we feel an obligation our we took on responsibility when we became rabbi, is to serve the ethical core of jewish people and it, it, we wouldn't be doing our jobs. if we still decide lightly, israel commits these heinous work crimes. so we're going to moment a moment of great public awareness outrage, pain, and considerable organize. and specifically in the american jewish community you see is building on this on this and try it, trying to a full fledge movement to work. i think this is definitely a turning point in the days after october 7th. the thing that was happening in the
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streets were that americans use many of whom had lost, is really friends or relatives on october 7th, and people who were murdered in that attack. as well as palestinians who had had relatives murdered in the decades before. and in the weeks and months since, we were together in the streets saying, we will not be divided from each other and our safety and our futures are tied together. this is not about size, this is about humanity. and whether or not we can have a shared future as humanity and, and against a us foreign policy. that was, he was sending funding bonds to these really government ostensibly on behalf of jews with jews, industries, alongside policy and saying absolutely not on this is the total and complete breakdown of the idea that you can have fewer safety at the expense of palestinians . and the alternative is emerging in the streets where people are saying,
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actually what we need is equality and justice and freedom for everyone. we need safety for everyone. and that's how we'll secure a thriving future for all. when i was with you say, you know, one of the things that i'm watching carefully now in the past couple weeks is how more and more people are calling for cease fire. right? those web sit on the sidelines for a long time, right? it's been very troubling to see that it's not just the right waiting, but the middle, the center of the jewish community has gone along with this more so you know, they, a lot of liberal organizations attended the war rally that happened in november where john, hey, he of christians, united for israel spoke and at a certain point that the crowd was counting no, no cease fire, right. but somehow that is more palatable than being on the side of peace. right. and they have stood against it. so i think that the, the reckoning that is have in the jewish community is going to take years to
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resolve. but i think those that are calling for ceasefire now are doing so very carefully to not align themselves with the broader peace movement. and i think they do that at their own peril, because in this time, up until this point, there has been a least within, for example, the christian community, a kind of what mark ellis dobbs, an ecumenical deal, where in exchange for forgiven christians for the guilt of their role in the holocaust christians go along with support for israel, but this is a time breaking of that because there's is a moral limit, right? those kinds of commitments can only go so far, but one is real, crosses the line, which as they were gone way beyond crossing a line at this point um people are no longer going to be willing to stay silent on their critique of israel, which the jewish community demands for peace and interface relationships. so i think we're going to see a total reworking of the ways that alliances are working across space across race
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or cross movement. and in the wake of this, i think the whole jewish community map is going to be redrawn either by what right, by this last week. thank you. everyone's that is our show up front will be back in the us. we can stories from african perspective, the museum, it is the menus to same se mailbox from some people to short documentaries, by african filmmakers from the media. and gonna, knowing that i'm actively contributing to the change. it's really a rewinding feeling, sleeping on water. and the girl from the new series of africa direct on, i'll just sierra a business like this. this world to you believe i guess is
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a line flowing on one of your lives makes model inflates. the business like just is free to you believe i guess is that a light supply on one of your makes modern plates
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the the why money inside this is denise life from the coming up in the next 60 minutes a deadly day in gaza. at least 55 promised indians are killed by his rarely attacks across the district. a day in the life of the adults and one of golf was few functioning hospitals. we follow a neurologist forced to make decisions about who gets to live the people of the world cannot afford 11 and to become another gods. a warning from the u. n. chief of space grows at cross border attacks between israel and has.

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