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

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it is coming out of every sector of the as rarely, official machinery. they're all palestinians are the enemy finishing the post, the codes, the media, or the just the, [000:00:00;00] the hello and serial venue. it's good to have you with us. this is the news. our light from the coming up in the program today. another massacre in the so called se still is really bombs hit displace palestinians living in tents and 7 guys, dozens of people are killed in the strikes. and we'll, we'll be looking at the impact of the war's having on education for hundreds of thousands of palestinian children.
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the ukraine launch is a large scale 12 and attendance on the most skill regions killing at least one person in couple of harris and donald trump. are set to face each other for the very 1st time as they meeting tuesday's us presidential debate. news the is really army. his attacked a 10 city in southern gaza in what was supposed to be a safe area. at least 40 palestinians were killed in the strikes on the wasi and dozens more were injured. the victims were displaced, palestinians seeking refuge from israel's continued from boardman. the attack happened in the vicinity of a field hospital run by the british charity. you came med. israel's military says it targeted the homeless command center. a mazda is called the claim, a blatant lie of the sale. we heard very strong explosions in the
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area and we headed to the location. we found that a deep christ with the size of the attack was 15 maces deep. we found the body pots everywhere in the area. we started digging immediately using our hands to recover the data. and we still looking for others who are missing was a 0 is honey mountain motors, and they're all about on the central part of gaza. honey is day 340 of this war. and if there's been one constant throat this year, it's been this that the so called safe zones designated by israel are not safe. absolutely, and there are mountains of evidence to show that these saved zones are not, in fact safe at all. people killed within weeks, days or hours of their arrival to these designated stones. so let's just remind our viewer, these really are me orders sharp, like people in northern gods and goddesses, any other parts of the gaza strip. i know told them to in order to avoid being
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bonding kills, you have to be in these areas only to find themselves the target of these relentless areas. try extend them off evacuation that the common for you is. sides of these beer attacks carried out by this really monitor. we're talking about a, in largely sand, the area and what's the part of hydrogen is there, but the mazda extends it from the central area all the way through the city. but right now, it has been re size and the most, the vast majority of displace policy. these are concentrated in that area around the vicinity of field hospital because we're talking about a remote area. it doesn't have any of the basic supplies. and the fact that is an infrastructure, so these hospitals set up to help these displaced people to survive the difficult conditions, yet they're not safe to be in valenze lafayette park in the past. the last time it was a talk close to a 100 people were killed when there's really military sit, a targeted, a sat brigade commander with this time is really army is saying targeted
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a headquarter. how about how much inside the area without providing any evidence whatsoever. so far, and we've seen this pattern happening over and over the top of his back portion centers. these are on or was schools manage them run by the united nations for palestinian refugees. we see in the hospitals we not talk and we hear the same exact narrative that these areas are used by militants. are our headquarters by how much, but not providing a single evidence whatsoever for the people have been killed so far. but the fear right now, the vin number is increasing because there are 10 others peebles, many other souls looking for the missing family members. the children, the women more varied under huge. a massive pile of fans and dirt in the area is largely found. area being targeted by what is known in military the bunker buster bond. these are not the because huge dep decision and judging from what we look at so far, the level of the savings so massive in the area. and we're really deepening this.
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the shadow sense of, of, of safety and among the display population, some of these people are in, i'm off the back. it was on the back which is going have been forced into displacement for the 5th time. the 7th time in the displacement already in a very, very bad conditions in terms of physical well being in terms of mental being and now why they were sleeping. they were killed inside there tends to 40 people were looking at women and children, the same exact patterns of attack, entire families. we just got a report within the past 15 minutes there at least 3 entire families were killed inside the last evacuations on as a result of this deadly attack. honey, thank you very much for all that reporting there. that sounds as 0 is honey. my mood reporting from inside the gaza strip bar as a hayley is a vascular surgeon who is recently returned from gaza. he describes the impact of a tax like that one,
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especially the impact on children. anytime i have something like this, i have about 4050 people of did my, my heart or my mind goes to the people who have survived this attack. and by no means i'm not saying that's fully people, it is not a significant number of stairs. even one civilian dine is one to many. but honestly, what i saw in those kinds of attacks when i was deb, it's not only the severity of the people who actually died, it's the injuries that happened around it. for example, one of the stories death to be to be stuck to my mind. and one of those attacks there was something that they called a precision, a therapy with ducky one specific tent and not have hospital where i was. and eunice and so basically that, that one tent but above 20 tents, away from that and we have multiple entries. and one specific story that came to me that really broke my heart at the time was i was in the hospital and they saw
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a young lady. she's in her late twenties. she was literally pacing from one side of the off to the other. she would stay in one side of the awful about 2 or 3 minutes, and then she would the 20 piece quit to the other side. and there was surface native. i was like, what is she doing what she doing this? so i dropped everything i'm doing and i, i run out of here at the depths of the slid, the she, some of us to have to do it. that was $1.00 to $6.00 and $1.00 is 9 or 10. i believe one daughter has significant. she loved never came to her face destroying half of your face. and you also have said, you know what, she's beyond any solicitation effort. we would like to just pass away. yet. she was still breathing too often dressing for a so they put it on one side of the, of where they lived or been that the kids died peacefully. colton code peacefully on the other end of the plus another. have other daughter who has both legs amputated and she was actively bleeding from both legs. so this young mother, she was to physically and mentally,
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she was racing from one side just the up to say goodbye to have daughter going to the other side of the of to put some pressure on the other daughter who was actively beating from both and be good to fix. so this is the kind of kind of steps we get after each one of those attacks and begin to focus usually in the media is about the one who died and no disrespect to them. that's really tragedy. but my thought as a session or as a physician, goes to the end of it. most people get with injuries that have been around those civility or want this casualties. this is really forces don't stay you and convoy, which was traveling to northern gaza as part of the ongoing polio vaccination campaign. and that no cast doubt on whether vaccination will go ahead as planned on tuesday, the head of a human agency for palestinian refugees that employees were stopped at gunpoint despite prior coordination with the as really military. israel claims that there
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were listing and suspects in the convoy. the un says it's cars were heavily damaged by is really bulldozers. all staff have been released often more than 8 hours. almost all of the schools and gaza have either been destroyed or. busy or being used to house displaced people. monday was supposed to be the start of the school year for guys as children, but because of the war. more than $650000.00 palestinian students face another year without education. among them or 40000 high schoolers who couldn't sit exams this year, the palestinian ministry of education says more than 11500 students have been killed in tens of thousands have been injured by is really attacks. more than $750.00 teachers and professors have also been killed and 92 percent of guns of schools are out of service. after being damaged or destroyed is really a tax. and the united nation says there are no less than is taking place in any of us, $200.00 schools in gauze because they're being used to shelters by displace palestinians
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. today, as you may have heard, would have marked the start of a new year in this new school year in gaza. however, after 11 months of hostilities, more than 600000 young people are being described of access to formal education for another year. the un relief and works agency says no official schooling is available in any of its 200 schools, with many of them being used to shelters for displace palestinians. the agency says it's teams are still providing recreational activities and psycho social support in some of its schools. if this i'm getting food and spoke to some young palestinians for now here in guitar and have a chance to continue their studies. star students back in gauze a 17 year old lee on the bus, she can finally shine again. going back to school. generally feels like reaching the name for me,
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especially after the war. and this might sound exaggerated, but i genuinely knew this. israel's wor, costs the teenager for senior year of high school instead of taking classes for months she's had to take cover from is really bones and you and shelter in hon. eunice funding was february. i couldn't reach out to my teachers, even though i tried with a group of my friends to continue our sub or studies at home. but we couldn't do so as evacuated to doha, 4 months ago, lands back on track, thanks to a scholarship. here in cats are, some palestinians have a chance to resume their studies. education has always been central and gaza even before as well as of war. and when living under occupation, the strip had one of the highest illiteracy rates in the world. its schools played a crucial role and empowering people, as well as preserving policy, new culture and history. traditionally,
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guys has produced some of the top achievers in high school exams in the region, but relentless, these really attacks have forced education facilities to close for 2nd year. the un says 85 percent of school buildings are damaged or completely destroyed, and all 12 universities has been bombed. among them, the one where abraham had been studying to become a nurse. and then we did these really occupation forces destroyed my university. see all us how to university and with it, the dreams of my classmates and my own. this scholarship from education above all is giving me a new start. opening a new chapter in his life, he's starting a degree at lou sales university, just north of doha. this time he chose psychology, he wants to help those in his community who have experienced similar trauma to heal . but in guitar, ibrahim is learning more than just skills. now,
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today he's trying on his brand new prosthetic leg. he lost both legs and an arm, and then he's really attack. improving both body and mind. abraham is taking his 1st steps towards a brighter future. one in which palestinians, education and resilience go hand in hand. if this i'm getting food, i'll to 0. the schools in the occupied westbank are also under threat from is really rates and attacks it. abraham went to a school near novelist and she met some of the students there. it's a difficult thing here in the schools, especially amongst the students of the 9th grade. the teacher is ok in their feelings. she's telling them it's normal to cry. as students are trying to process the loss of their classmates. banner beckett's, a 13 year old was supposed to be here today starting her school year. but she was shocked that by these really forces what she was in her home on friday, under occupation,
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you experienced the arrest and killings of your loved ones. you see is really settlers taking your lines, you didn't live a normal childhood. what do you think can help us survive all of this? yes, you're right face. we should have face and patients call success with leaving the fear. when we go from one place to another, we have to take many issues into account. do you mind just walking around and you hear is as it is really for us, have storms of religion was the fullest of this innocent child. and that whereas a human rise in the children's rights are open, higher. how you doing at the center that, that even last school year the grades were low and i can't even pushing my students . i know that i am not okay myself. i mentioned the children, they are very frustrated and was affecting him so much that they can't stay focused . not just the band is really forces to at least 17 noise palestinians in the occupied the west bank in the last 11 months. it's 100000 palestinians are going to
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school today and you'll, you'll find the west bank while remembering their follow palestinians in the besieged cause district. people here say they're trying to secure a better future. they're trying to learn and to study. but that future looks very uncertain to that, but he just needed the occupied with bank palestine. the largest is really military rate on the occupied west bank and decades, continues the army storm the the haitian refugee camp south of bethlehem. at least 3 palestinians were detained after their homes were rated. is the only land crossing between jordan and the occupied westbank has now reopened. after a 2 day closure, it was shut down. following the killing of 3 is really guards. on sunday, hundreds of palestinians were stranded near the crossing at this is only occupied westbank side. it's no reopen, but for civilian traffic only not for commercial goods. let's go down to 0 is honda?
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so who i'm that you're joining us on the jordanian side of that king hussein border crossing. so many palestinians in the occupied west bank really depend on this crossing. what's the situation there? no. and also what are you hearing if anything on when commercial traffic might restart? well, as you can see behind me, the passengers are now coming and going from the king, whose same border crossing and on the other side, these really controlled alan b crossing. it was shuddered for 2 days after directives from is really security officials and reopened only when their security measures were implemented and put in place that according to these really airport and ports authority who controls all of the land crossings that it's shared with jordan, there's still no word exactly on when commercial traffic will be allowed in when those trucks will be allowed into the other side of the border. and that's perhaps because these really are still working on directives for securities and working on
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putting new measures into place. and remember, this closure had happened after a shooting took place that killed the 3 is really guards. on the other side, the jordanian interior ministry conducting an investigation into the matter identifying the shooter as a jordanian national, who acted alone. but for thousands of palestinians on this side of the border, they were rendered stranded because there was no other crossing for them to go to the one in, in the north and in the south have also been reopened. and who reporting from the jordanians side of that border crossing would be occupied. westbank, thank you very much for that. i'm to is now the 1st and possibly final us presidential debate before election day is set to be held on tuesday night. democratic presidential candidate and vice president cala harris and her republican arrival. former president donald trump have been preparing for weeks for the night, which could improve pivots over to the race is happening in philadelphia and the
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state of pennsylvania was 19 electoral votes. could also end up deciding the winter coming election night. it's bringing a bill out already and he's an associate professor of history at georgetown university in guitar. village is good to have you with us. so your, your specially specialty is american policy in the middle east. so i want to start there, how much do you expect the guys award to feature in this debate a little a lot. not at all, but certain to come up because i think, you know, we, we've seen it come up in a number of other prior either debates or even political rallies. it's certainly something that's on the minds of the us electorate. we've seen it in terms of the polling numbers that have come out, particularly among the democratic party space. the majority of whom has, has steadfastly, supported the idea, not just of a cease fire, but increasingly even the notion of withholding arms sales to, to israel. and so clearly that, you know, the democratic party is at odds with its own voter base. and of course, among the 2 candidates i'm buying for the presidency. it's really
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a competition about who can support israel more strongly. what does come with harris is does she have anything to prove on the does the issue? i mean, i know this is a narrow way to look at the debate. there are other issues, maybe we'll have time to get to them. but on this narrow issue, it doesn't matter, especially for voters in swing states like michigan. is there anything she's got the message or signal to them during the debate or she can just set it aside? well, i mean, i think, you know, what, when we consider the fact that the entire us political elite has been staunchly in favor of the current policy, which is essentially an a blank check or a full endorsement of israel's actions and policies to the tune of even uh, you know, a arming it to them consistently throughout this past year in terms of exercising. the un security council veto, to shield israel from any kind of accountability that there does seem to be consensus more or less among the us political class. at the same time, given the opposition that we've seen, among segments of the voters, there is pressure on the democratic party to distance itself from all of these
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policies and practices in a way that so far has not happened that that harris has more or less hold onto the same bided administration policy, of course, that administration that she has been a part of for for years. and so when voters look at this, the, the question really becomes, you know, despite the fact that we know that the republicans in, from our are just as, as a committed to this policy regarding israel's genocide. but it's the democrats who've over seen it for the past year. and do you want to reward this administration with another term, despite the fact that they're the ones that hope have overseeing the genocide how much? so let's, let's be real here. how much do you think this issue is going to matter on election night? right? because it's, it's quite sure to say foreign policy doesn't usually decide an election, but this one has been important in the, in the run up to the election. so, i mean, do you think it's gonna matter a lot? yeah, i mean, you know, i, i would actually hesitate to even consider, uh, the, the question of israel and palestine is a foreign policy question truly in the united states. it certainly is also something that plays out domestically, which is why you see it, you know,
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very much prominent on the minds of even the state officials, local officials at every level of, of the state and society to the point that it kind of blends into. so many other kinds of factors, whether it's going to actually impact the outcome. i think it's still is still an open question because we have seen movements within the democratic party base. people like the uncommitted movement of initially that, that, you know, expressed it's all position and, and displeasure during the primary process. but even the band invite in campaign which has since become the abandon harris campaign. these are our otherwise democratic party voters who have decided to withhold their support given this parties, us support for the policy. now, whether that's actually going to impact the final outcome, i think it's, it's far too close. yes, it's an inside of a race. at this point it's, it's really hard to tell. and so if we brought it out beyond just this, this um, the issue of israel's war on god. what are you looking out for tonight's debate? how are you going to be watching? it is the 1st time that not only the 1st time that harrison trump debate,
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but it's actually the 1st time they're meeting. right? so, i mean, i think, you know, on, on another level, this is, this is clearly a chance to, for the democratic party to distance itself perhaps. and again, there's been some worrying science. i think even just the fact that, for instance, dick cheney gave his endorsement to harris in the last couple of days and rather than then this one route that republicans lies. right? exactly. i mean, given everything that we know in terms of his record, in terms of the war and the rock in terms of the benefits of civil liberties in the us. you know, in the early part of this century that the democratic party actually embraced chinese endorsement and in fact celebrated this, this achievement. and so i think in that sense, there's going to be perhaps more of a competition over who can kind of lay claim to this particular type of politics as opposed to just, you know, thinking that the democratic party is going to, to hold on to any specific kinds of values or things that might matter more to it space. and so i think as a result, we can't really expect anything beyond perhaps some of the more superficial things we see from these debates in terms of the back and forth. uh, you know, regarding,
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you know, their own, you know, personal commitments as opposed to the issues, right. the, the actual policies that i think most people are, are most concerned about, frankly don't factor in very heavily. it becomes about perceptions. it becomes about christmas. it comes about the performance even more than the substance quite often. and i think as a result, you know, we're not likely to cease much discussion of, of the kind of the meaningful issues that most people care about. okay. it's interesting to watch it through your eyes. thank you very much. that is become so common place to say these debates. normally you can't get it wrong by saying these debates don't really move and the lie, the way that we saw in july. we saw during the summer that of course it, it turn the entire race on his head and bite and had to drop out a bill at laurie and associate professor of history at georgetown university. thank you so much for joining us. as jordanians are heading to the polls to choose members of parliament from $25.00 political parties and several coalitions. voting is underway against the backdrop of the war and gaza that has impacted jordan's
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economy. it is the 1st election since the 2022 electro reforms increase the number of seats in the lower house. the new laws aimed at getting political parties a bigger role in jordan semi constitutional monarchy. about 5100000 people are eligible to vote for the 138 c. lower house of representatives. 41 of those. these go to political parties. the rest are elected through a proportional representation system across 23 constituencies. under a quote, a system 15 seats are reserved for women, 12 for minorities, a king of bill of the 2nd to points to the 65 members of the upper house or senate . as well as the prime minister informs the government with royal approval. houses here as michael apple is in the capital m on michael. i want to continue that conversation because we know ultimately the country is governed by the king. so how much does the parliament actually decide in the countries both of the well,
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it's that $5100000.00 jo danny invite is who will directly elect the lower house of parliament, the house of representatives, and how it works is off to the elections. the king, a points of prime minister, the prime minister with royal approval forms, a cabinet, a government. and this is where the lower house then fits in, the lower house of parliament. it's part of a by capital system. you have the below a house of representatives in the senate forms the upper house. it's the lower house of representatives who will be directly elected today, who must consent to approve of that make up of the government, the various ministers that are going to be in the portfolios for a couple of years. so that's way the lower house of representatives fits in, and that's something that, that citizens can directly play a role in. and as you mentioned, the political parties are going to be playing a much bigger role than they have traditionally, in the past, at least 30 percent of the seats are going to be allocated towards political
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parties. and that's going to be wrapped up every election cycle to within the next 10 to 12 years. the entire system will have done away with independent candidates, and it will just purely be a political party based system. michael, how's the vote going so far? i'm asking you because there's already been reports of some irregularities. i think it's safe to say it's been a slow start to the day. we've been to a couple of police stations. it is quiet as this was expected. there was a fair amount of votes. apathy in the country. if you look at votes of 10 out of the last 3 decades, the highest it's ever been in the last 3 decades was 61 percent step is a 1989 and it is consistency. come down with each election cycle. the last election in 2020 it barely scratched 30 percent 29.9 percent. i was looking at local media reports. they expect it to be about 56 percent this time. we've got brief by the i
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you see this morning. they said in the 1st hour of voting, between $50.60 jordanians, attend up at the polls. that includes 8000, i se stauffer used the opportunity, but there's been reports of up north and it bid. there's been several people arrested for what was called irregularities. or negligence, it's unclear what his negligence refers to. we'll get those details later. and then down south and my on 8 people have been arrested for being in possession of stamped ballots. we'll get more of those details later. polls close here at 7 pm. okay, we'll be talking to you throughout the day, michael and for reporting from jordan's capital. i'm on thank you very much. still ahead on alpha 0, the responsible use of artificial intelligence on the battlefield. experts from 19 nations gathered south korea to establish a blueprint and a search for survivors after bridge collapses in vietnam, stifling, yagi reeks have
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a the hello, we are looking at a sun bree breakdown to the weather in europe at the moment. lot of cloud coming right out of scandinavia, 3 central pos, jeremy, the opponent pushing right down into italy in the balkans right down into central parts of the mediterranean to the east of that there's still a little bit of walking around suddenly wednesday still picking those type of just out the behind that boy is a call. we're looking at some cool refresher weather coming back in. and we have to make that to big timber, to contrast the, the, to some live they all storms rumbling away. right across central, possibly the politics to the balkans. you can see a little try their into southwestern corner of here, but up towards the north west. point enough, the circulation will run across the panel discussion pushing across into what
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norway then moxie. it's a pretty wet weather as well as we go through tuesday live the storms rumbling away just around the balkans, pushing into graceful, pushing, further east, which as we go through wednesday and the weather, the bless you weather becomes increased. the widespread was coming in from something of a normally direction. you really all going notice? that's a dramatic changing conditions. wet weather right down the across a good part of fronting to the north of spain. meanwhile, with heavy showers, continue 3 much of west africa. the unique perspectives, the american stablish when it's going to go into the dr. using kamala harris's identity of the black women on heard voices, people who are close political affiliations, can get a way that can connect with our community and tap into conversations you find elsewhere. are we going to live in
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a world where it absolutely normal journalists are targeted and blamed for their own? little place on earth is changing the world order the stream on out you 0 as the world economies. those strikes are those with a strong result. indonesia is where such resolve about the right place for your business to get off the ground of grace. otherwise with this strategic downstream industry on your better tomorrow the the,
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you're watching else a 0, a reminder of our headlines this hour. at least 40 people have been killed and 6 the injured in and is really attack in an area. housing displaced, people in southern gaza, or plains bombed attending camp mentioned on milwaukee west of sun eunice. 3 entire families were among the dead. the only land crossing between jordan and the occupied west bank is reopened for civilian traffic. that's after it was shut down . following the killing of 3 is really guards. on sunday, hundreds of palestinians were stranded near the crossing from the altar. 5 west tech side is really forces stop the un convoy, which was traveling to northern gaza as part of the ongoing polio vaccination campaign for the while head phillip plaza really said employees were stumped, gun points, despite fire coordination. israel claims that there were listing and suspects, and all spouse have now been the israel's military says, 2 of its soldiers were injured in a drone attack by the lebanese group hezbollah. on monday,
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this happened in the western gallery region. that's in northern israel. the 2 sides have regularly fight at each other ever since israel's warren gossip began in october, saying a holder has more from the root. this has been the reality along the 11 on israel border for the past 11 months. in recent days, there's been an increase in violence between has the law and israel. the arms group has intensified its number of rocket and drone attacks, a times reaching deeper insight as well. and in areas that civilian have still not evacuated. drones carry small quantities of explosives, but the attack is seen as a message at a time when israel has intensified it strikes. and so there is nothing on it as well, says it and tends to maintain its attacks on has below us military assets until it
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can return tens of thousands of residents to northern israel. no, no, no. we are looking at the entire waterfront. and this means while you are finding in kansas, we are preparing for anything that can happen in the north. in moving the center of gravity can be quick. israel has also been operating in syria strikes on sunday nights were described as the most violent and extensive in years one at washy. this is brutal aggression. this is bob barracks regression at this moment, the 18 tests and 37 injuries of the wounded of different injuries between malta, medium and some of critical injury. so i'm sure they are believed to have had a syrian research center used by iran to produce precision. ms. files and other weapons is right is have one objective. there is to prevent the iranians from consolidating their position and in syria. so the positioning over here in, in, in a force is actually a threat to, as well, from the own perspective. so they've been targeting them anywhere and the killing
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goal of the leaders love it on to prime minister, someone a masters of western nations for an emergency meeting. a civilians are increasingly being caught in the crossfire. the government is not directly involved in the conflict, but has been trying to reduce tensions. hezbollah has committed itself to keep firing until, as well as the war on garza ends. and that's looking increasingly unlikely to happen soon. and while hezbollah and israel appeared to be trying to avoid an all out war, each round of escalation sets a new red line. these really army has been instructed by prime minister benjamin nothing yahoo to prepare to change the situation along the border. its leaders have presented operational plans for lebanon to visiting us military officials who supports would be important in any major operation. washington has been trying to prevent a widening of the war weeks before the us presidential election. within the absence of a ceasefire in gaza. there's little guarantee,
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the escalation will remain control center for their eligibility to be as an international summit in south korea has called for the introduction of safeguards on the rapidly expanding use of artificial intelligence on the battlefield. the world's armies are increasingly turning to ai to produce ever more sophisticated weapons racing ethical issues over their use. brought mcbride explains from autonomous drones able to decide whom to attack, to enabling of a foster decisions in combined logistics. the development of a i in the military spear is being driven, especially by conflicts in the middle east and deep prey. and at a speed of development that has this summit wondering what happens if humans can no longer control with waste, with profound uncertainties, both taking the logical and jo paduka. phones is older,
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more imperative that we set the homes and governors for responsible. a i this 2nd global summit springs together political and military leaders along with other stakeholders like diplomats, technicians, and lawyers. all grappling with the ethical dilemma of how much battlefield control to give as much at machines. this is an opportunity from people working in different sectors and disciplines to me. and to understand each other. the use of military ai has a particular relevance for south korea, as it faces the declining population with the world's lowest vitality rate. the country has to look for alternatives to actual soldiers, to deal with its future security threats. with hostile threats from north korea, keeping up tensions along the heavily $45.00 boulder south korea or is relying of a more on it sophisticated tech sector as one of the world's leaders in cutting
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edge a development. hey, i is racing forward and there's a huge disconnect from the pace of that can always use that quickly. it's advancing and the pace of policy making, like most of the walks of life, the military sector is facing the ethical challenges of a i's. rapid advance. but knowing that its particular case, the cost of losing control has potentially more leesville consequences. run mcbride down to 0. so it's bringing graham on web and singapore, he's in a junk fellow at 90 young technical, technological university graham. it's really great to have you with us. what's the main application for artificial intelligence in warfare today? the main applications. well, i think fundamentally, the applications that are currently unfolding what the potential applications, that beast number one is to have artificial intelligence put in the,
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in the best position for one of the design for which is to really make or to help you know, human decision makers currently, to make even better decisions, i think going forward, we can probably look to a time when artificial intelligence will probably take on a lot more cognitive capability. and we'll be expected to make a lot more decisions on our behalf, especially as the battle field or the battle space becomes more complex and more difficult to navigate the filters that can, if you don't have to think capable of to, to do it. because you're telling me what it is likely going to be used for. but my question is, what is it being used for today? a while, i think today what was to seen the nation stages of artificial intelligence applications . we're currently looking at the level of machine learning, a way of professional intelligence is doing
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a lot of the punching most large data sets stuff to you to come up with is a lot more insight to a decision makers. so it's play more of a wing, a wing man, a we person sort of role helping operators to make better decisions. but i think this is a matter of scale. as all what generated a model is become more advanced than you rapidly evolving. i think we're going to see increasing outsourcing of that decision making capability to block the visual intelligence. and i think that's where the concerns, like what can i, can i give you a real world example, a recent one, these really magazine plus 972 reported just a few months ago that israel has been using ai to draw up till this. so it pushes data sets, as you said, to make up lists of people who are connected, sometimes loosely connected to a mouse is armed, weighing and as long as you, as i'm doing and it, it makes up a list of people who can be targeted for assassination is that kind of thing? the future of warfare?
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i mean, this is very my call, but i think sad, sad to see it be very well be the control welfare is left on check, which is the reason why initiative such as re a mess we're seeing unfold of the last few days and some of the initiatives like that are critical because the last on check there will be palos of various sizes out there as well. in the salt health system. find all kinds of ways to, to tap into the power about the visual intelligence we thought ethical and moral norms to governance of phones that we're going to end up in some really dark places such as where off the e i is going to drop to it's an a problem with such killed this is that because of the, the way in which the eyes you know, works that the, the company complex appeal itself. it's relatively, we'll pick and talk to understand the kind of decisions that between drawing up
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such kill its mistakes can happen. and miss identified persons can be in such lists and we'll end up with those problems. we're trying to avoid the problems we're thinking about right now. so 90 countries are attending the summit in, in south korea. let's just assume an ideal scenario for a 2nd. i'm not sure it's realistic, but let's just for the sake of argument, say that everybody wants to be a virtuous actor. and everybody commits to getting the benefits from a i but none of the downside, right? certainly no machine generated killing of civilians for example. what would that virtual us use of a i look like a that's a very good question. um, for me, having worked in the defense technology sector for these half a decade and during the ins and outs where somebody, me, i research and development trajectories are going are think of fluctuations. um, a virtual scenario like that would be one way that way i think we, we give 4 fifths to this concept of meeting
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a meaningful human control or what in the technical parlance we call mh t insurance. to simply means that human beings have to be boxes off of a. i believe that the colleges, human beings have to be in the driver's seat where uh human beings get to see to make the last mile decision on a goal or no goal. when it comes to the application of artificial intelligence and its connection with the so i thought it would be for weaponry, right? talking about people of the old red button that you push to fire onto a target on the saw of some sort of munition thing. a book to us context is one way she with the buck stops with a human being. and i think that's where a lot of that thinking is being invested into, how do we come, how do we achieve meaningful she when control and that the human being never gets picked in order to do is there a strong international law framework to regulate a i today, like again, making this assumption if, say,
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is think or is within an army said, well, we actually would like to respect international law. let's see what the rules say. what are the guidelines to well, currently you and i, well, no the on can you. i think we're still in the early days and sad to see. i think the discussion selecting far behind during, during the clip while you're on. ready i agree with the one of the, one of the references about how i think the, the science of technology is going far ahead of the policy thinking and the, the moral frameworks and the norms that we should up long before photo bought and taken seriously. and i think for me, my skeptical view is that i think the end state is that what we're trying to achieve is closing up this gap between the technology and the the don't with the framework that shouldn't be in place to bound the, the, to go and no go areas as to how artificial intelligence is going to be using tobacco fuel because i think we're going to end up with some pretty bulky bases
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down the road because of this guy. yeah. drawing up go and no go areas. that's a really interesting place to leave it in to think about this graham on web. a junk fellow at 9 young technological university. thank you very much. thank you. tens of thousands of people in east timor has taken to the streets to catch a glimpse of the head of the roman catholic church as he visits their country. folk frances has begun his 1st full day in east timor, where some 97 percent of the population is catholic. it's the 1st visit 5 hope to the nation since again. and then since 2002, the pictures there you're seeing on your screen a live. and the pontiff is on the 3rd leg of a for nation for it's still a head on alpha 0. who's going to take the voice of darth vader renewed us. actor james earl jones has died at the age of 19.
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the bushes says one person is dead after you. crane launched a drone attack on moscow in several other regions. the officials say more than 70 drones have been shut down. the governor of brianne sc regions that error rate alerts were activated in many areas, the fatality occurred when the remains of a down drone hit, a residential building southeast of moscow houses. there is usually a shop of oliver joins us from moscow. so what for you?
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finding out slow serial. the 1st is as has been reported in the most current region and g to that massive drug that's hotkey. so the russian defense ministry actually said that $144.00 crop typed rose bushes done over the russians have a trip over the nights. on september, the 10th, many of that were intercepted over the golden regions of re ons. course. a battle girl, a clue? god. ben varone is lip at schofield. uh 20 more have been intercepted over the most could region in the morning. one will be for as crushed into a multi story residential building in the town of robins coil and robins got some such 5, killing me to se from mosca. where 5 star to uh, between the 11th and 12th oh, flows late. uh, the 2nd run crashed and exploded it and not the multi story building and the same
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town. and as a result of that time coming from is for a 46 year old woman died died. and actually this is the 1st time in the war. in addition, 12 people were injured that so right now, traffic in mosca and somebody is extremely slow and it was literally struggling to get here right now. several, most apples were suspended. many planes on re to most were redirected to alternative fuels and other cities. and now passengers will have to be somehow delivered to most from the meanwhile, the restrictions of new cars and material. and as you quotes, get apples have been lifted so they will, it's about 2 and a half hours ago. it's around 8 am local time. so once again, it's quite a significant attack. yeah, it's a sizable attack and as you reported is near the capital near enough that it shut down airports and slow traffic,
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etc. so how significant is this and what official reaction are you here of the well, the official reaction, the is been complete called them nation of, uh that kind of, uh, attacks of these actions by the irrational source. he's a most to say that russian ad defend systems. what good, what russian needs moved them. i know what the about ends, english, especially going to show ration in ukraine and also the russian investigators, to me, to your house cloth supplies. they smashed about the time to sign you bring in, you are these as a terrorist. i tend open, opens at criminal cases, harris just following back as it's hot. oh, the trends are most, i've known just most good by tulsa, most could region and other regions. this morning, but still again, no. what about any kind of reasons why this is happening to, to us right now to, to, to russia right now. okay. i'm from 00. your shop of oliver reporting from the russian
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capital. thank you very much. jail. the former hollywood producer harvey weinstein has been taken to hospital for emergency heart surgery. wines these lawyers say he's been suffering from multiple health conditions. he was convicted of rape and sexual assault in 2020 in new york, in jail for 23 years. weinstein was also sentenced to 16 years in prison and a separate rape trial that one in california, which he is appealing. a series of wildfires in the us state of california has forced thousands of people to leave their homes. hot and dry conditions are causing fires to erupt across the us. west coast. among the fires is one spreading in the san bernadino national forest east of los angeles. it has already burned more than 80 square kilometers of land as firefighters have descended on. bolivia is indian country where wildfires have consumed. 3.8000000 hector's, the deployment of 60 crew members, and experts from brazil follows the declaration of
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a national emergency. some of the fires were spots by the agricultural technique of slash and burn, which is commonly used to clear land for forming wildfire. smoke has blanketed, believe us capital. a pause significantly worsening air quality. a bridge collapse over a flooded river in northern vietnam has sparked an ongoing search for survivors. the collapse happened in photo province after the arrival of play for the deputy prime minister says 10 vehicles, including a truck and 2 scooters fell into the red river. 3 people who've been rescued, but at least 13 are still missing. michael to tar skis. a journalist in vietnam, he says type when yagi is continuing to recap, eric, even though it's been downgraded to a tropical depression. too much of the concern now is up in the northern mountainous provinces, north and west of and or others still receiving heavy rain. there been numerous lamps, side route to the through throughout the day. and a bridge over the red river collapse
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a couple hours north of and away with traffic on it. of course their cars and motor bikes. and i went to the river, which is swollen from all the rain. hundreds of soldiers and police officers are out searching for victims. it's not clear right now how many people may have fallen into the river. a few people have been rescued. of course this now evening, so that's quite a serious situation. and unfortunately rain is projected for the next couple of days and regents of more land slides are expected. lots of roads and highways are cut off and even annoyed. so i renewed, flooding this evening due to more rain. this almost forecasts several days in advance. we knew it was going to be very strong. it landfall. i mean, unfortunately there's only so much you can do for us to arm or does magnitude um, so the, you know, a lot of wind damage, a lot of flooding and more to come in on the flooding. and it looks like, but they did what they could to get people out of harm's way, make sure people are off the roads during the worst of the storm, evacuating people from weaker buildings,
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getting people off off the waters and off those. so of course it's, you know, tragic. the deductible is in the fifty's right now, and will probably continue to rise. but the certainly did what they could um, right up a storm. the head of el salvador is police forces among 9 people who've been killed in a helicopter crash and a rule part of the country. mauricio ariellas that was escorting a fusion of bankers to the capital san salvador. when the aircraft came down in the northeast, by the well cooked though, has been linked to a multi $1000000.00 fraud scheme, el salvador president has called for a thorough investigation. as the case princess of wales, catherine says she's completed chemotherapy for an undisclosed cancer and will resume some public duties. kensington palace released a new video to coincide with her announcement. the princess has been largely absent from public life since she was diagnosed earlier this year. charlie angela has won this from london, is
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a heavy edited video set to contemplative music with kate's voiceover in which she says that she's doing whatever she can to stay counts of free. and she is taking each day as it comes, the video features. huh. and william and the children for the king, the notebook and the sunshine is going to the light boil funds around the world. what it doesn't tell us is one stage of tapes. treatment is at, as the policy has got to be very quiet as to what kind of cancer cells can found when she was treated and what treatment she received and not really as in stark contrast to how transparent king charles has been about his own cancer diagnosis in the video take, so she's looking forward to getting back to what is the end of the summer holidays here in england. many people are getting back to work and she's probably trying to preemptively on. so the question of when she will be back to public duties, although she did appear at the tree, think of the color in june in the men's wimbledon finals. what does come across
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though is honesty about just how tough these last few months of being an embassy to other people who are going through the capital journey. and how does the charities have reported a positive impact of how openness saying that more people are seeking screenings and no doubt going forward? she's going to want to continue to raise awareness. but right now it's kate says the focus is on her recovery until families still try the answer out of there and in the act are best known to being the voice of darth vader has died. james, earl jones was 93. is rich, deep voice became familiar to generations for dear car looks back at his illustrious career. described as one of america's great is doctor james, earl jones, and 60 your career in film as either established him as one of the most recognizable voices in hollywood. mm hm. so it's easiest to, to sell millions of sewing growers new invest at the voice of star wars, film,
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and dark fader. the book, the trail blazing african american actor, took time to find his signature, deep baritone voice born in 1931 in the then segregated state of mississippi jones suffered from a severe stutter. owing to his difficult childhood, joan said a sympathetic teacher and the practice of reciting poetry helped him conquer his speech impediment. one day, the sun was set on my time here and he made his phone to view and stanley kubrick's 1964 doctor, strange stuff. but his 1st major center rose was in great white hope. turning him an academy award nomination in 1970. i'm black and i'm hoping his dramatic range was undeniable in more than 100 performances over the following decades. field of dreams was the hunt for red october and as the eagle snake caught leader, tulsa, do. right. and conan,
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the barbarian is paula. and the dramatic active was an eas, pivoting to comedy along side eddie murphy's and coming to america to us wait, right? that our team, as well as veterans, so young on stage jones was politic thing, the type of role. and shakespeare is king lear and the fellow lenny and mice of man and truly max and in fences landing him, one of his 2 tony awards are request what law is better say. i've got the, like you in 2022 historical court theater in the heart of broadway was renamed to james earl jones theater, james earl jones, to match his powerful voice and resume long after he is gone. once that speech is a very important aspect of being human whisper, doesn't congress. the net reps of this news hour?
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we're going to take a very short break for resets, and we're right back at the top, the hour with a full slate of world news on the laws and take a supervisor of the united states, vittoria's guantanamo, and background detention center. civic. so cold war on terror now, human rights activist campaign for the release of the last i've gone in one time and will be retraces as steps, revisiting because that's it. that goes of background. with this documentary on the jersey to cultivating food is the foundation of human civilization. but food today is a global commodity. 50 industry did not make money. how many people will be on and how it's cultivated. the contentious debates,
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public interest and the public safety is definitely not taking precedence and in depth examination into our great business. and the conflicting interests play industry doesn't want any regulation. they just want to put the products on the market. the price of progress on o g 0. the latest news, as it breaks, hands are under locked down and is ready occupation soldiers on the street with detailed coverage. the vaccination campaign faces many challenges is since israel destroying most of the medical facilities, an old roads in java, from the house of the story. these writing, the ministry, has medic, virtually impossible for guys, fishermen. so and so their water is considered so for they just need
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the . ringback the another massacre in a so called say so is really bombs killed. dozens of displaced palestinians living in tents in the southern. gov. the i'm sort of in a, it's good to have you with us. this is else. is there a line from the also coming up to date jordanians head to the polls, the parliamentary elections against the backdrop of the war and gaza and economic

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