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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  October 4, 2024 3:00pm-4:01pm AST

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on the there's no limit to how a dream continue to study in your own event, you know, counter adding the year into israel's genocide in gaza. and the conflict is no impacting millions in the region this hour. we continue our special coverage of the war that has killed more than $41700.00 palestinians, the pennsylvania. it's good to have you with us. this is l 0 life. and also coming of the aftermath of another major is really attack in southern bay roads. israel says it was targeting hospitalized intelligence headquarters. it is really strikes near
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11 known as main border crossing, the syria cuts off a road. the hundreds of thousands of people are using to flee is really error rates . the end is real, carries out the largest scale strikes in the occupied west bank and more than 20 years killing at least 18 palestinians into a car the as a year of genocide and gaza. one year of unrelenting is really bombardment resulting in the deadliest conflict of the 21st century. it has been a war of many 1st breaking records in scale and we tell it to 41788 palestinians have been killed. men, women, the elderly,
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but those paying the heaviest price have been children who make up nearly half the strips population in one year is really attacks of killed a $16795.00 children. and that's the highest death toll for children recorded in a single year of conflict. over the past 2 decades, even surviving has come at a cost more than $19000.00 children have lost one or both of their parents. often other relatives to grandparents aunts, uncles, entire families have been wiped off. the civil registry killed orphans also maimed. the un estimates $1000.00 children and gaza have lost at least one of them making up what is believed to be the biggest cohort of pediatric amputees in history. israel has also targeted an unlikely group and its war health workers, from doctors to nurses to paramedics. they've been arrested and tortured, and more than 800 had been killed. this has also been the worst conflict in recent
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memory for a journalist, a 174 media workers have been killed. and unlike most tours the people of gaza have had nowhere to go. they are unable to lead, relegated to areas be is really military has declared a so called safe zones, but then bombed repeatedly. there is no safe place in gaza, a line that was repeated over and over again by palestinians we spoke to 90 percent of whom have been displaced with some having to move many times. the weapons have not been the only tool in this war. there's starvation as well. the united nation says israel has blocked the entry of 83 percent of food 8 into the strip since the war began. about 96 percent of the population is facing acute food and security. many children have died of starvation. no one and nothing has been spared. more than 75 percent of gases infrastructure has been destroyed. that's hospitals.
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schools, universities must come, churches gone. what remains? are these apocalyptic scenes of broken live and shafted futures? this is l 0. special coverage of the genocide in gaza. one year on we begin with hand who dories report from there about a in this kitchen is barely recognizable, but there's humanity here among the rebel. good, but this war has taken so much from so many. this mother sees her heart is gone after her twins were killed in an is really strike. this father's home was bombed when he was collecting the birth certificates for his newborn twins. on the same day, he received their death certificate. the international court of justice recently
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found it plausible that israel is committing genocide in gaza. israel has also been criticized for its indiscriminate use applied to a pens, including it's u. s. may 900 kilogram bomb that can send legal fragments. nearly 400 meters away with israel's destruction of cause i didn't start in 2023. it has been happening for years in 2008 the human rights group here and reported that as well dropped around 1000000 kilograms has munitions on the strip culinary 1400 palestinians. thoughtful of rocket fired from us. israel has also used white sports at chemicals that burns intensely on contact with air, leading to widespread fires and injuries, who invites crew, called the rain of fire towards the end of 2012. israel begun
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a worry that would last more than a week, and killed $174.00 palestinians. then to use later, is there a wash and unity to month offensive casa, getting more than 2000 palestinians after the kidnapping and killing a 3 is ready to in the occupied westbank to 3 years ago, israel went to work at done this time targeting causes, buildings road homes and leveling at least 4 high rise towers. this included the deliberate targeting of the building housing, the offices of algebra and associated press, among others. israel has not only waged multiple awards on gauze, and the costs are really years under the pretext of fighting chemist in other groups. but it has also flushed and find resistance in 2018, the so called great why to return demonstrations demanded an end to the is really
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located in the right of return for palestinian refugees. just holding the binders at israel's separation fence would prove the phone as israel attacked with tear gas, then life permits and munitions even between wars. the is really military kept up. it's operations. prime minister benjamin nothing. yeah. has referred to these tactics as mulling for one strategy of per yet it's bombings and policy and towns and cities. the latest war has been the most devastating israel has failed in its objective to destroy him. us. why? because uh, lies in ruins. and despite the clear evidence presented by you and agencies forming the basis for war crimes prosecutions and condemnation by international courts, the genocide continues unabated and the august, the utah,
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gaza palestine. israel's war has changed life and gaza beyond recognition that listing and say that they're exhausted. after a year of suffering, we spoke to some of them and here's what they told us. you know, it says the level of, of hunter with the needs you will get funded enough. you're going to die the redness. that means that your child put the data on how to how to, how to read them. i used some of the not that awful, how by that awful mission, the out of the model, the heavy and had a volume osha, a software engineering engineering issue at a rate of the box and wow, in the head of man in the south. and you do
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not then that and the to the have i'm getting a vendor ness mazur. m a. m. as in victor, how much other than ever than ever then. so we ask ourselves what his life been like if you're a palestinian teenager, say a 16 year old and you were born in god. well a birth and is really land air and see blockade has affected every aspect of that child's life from food to health, to education at the age of 2, he or she would have lived through 23 days of devastating air and ground attacks. nearly $1400.00 palestinians were killed during israel's operation cost lead $320.00 of them which held it in 2012. when that child was 5 years old, they would have survived an 8 day assault that killed more than 80 people. most of them women and children at age 7, that child would have enjoyed a 50 day is really onslaught at least 2310 palestinians were killed back in 2014,
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551. were children as that as a pre teen here, she would have witnessed the aftermath of is really a tax that lasted 11 days. 260 palestinians were killed. 67, which over and now another war on gaza. this one far, far worse than any other. at age 16 today, an average palestinian child is living through what's been described as genocide. one year of war in which more than 41000 people have been killed, more than 16000 of them children. we spoke earlier to susan har, but she was a wellbeing counselor at the british international school in gaza, which is now entirely online after is really forces destroyed it's building. susan left gaza back in november with her 5 children. she told us that she felt torn between keeping her family safe and one thing to remain in her home with the infrastructure of gaza itself as a city 8th, every time they build it up, is there
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a yearly ministry, make sure that they have to destroy it for people to go back to the level 0 again. but the thing that i sold over the last a year and a half, it was so amazingly that people are striving to love the resiliency of people where so high that you will not see it in any other household. and the whole universe, people of god's a one to live want to have a freedom, want to stay in gaza, no one when i need because i know even us, even though with all the challenges that i met i do, i didn't want to leave was surprisingly when we had the chance to leave in the war, me and my older 2 girls where we were crying actually in the restaurant, cross border. because i so maybe i should say, why would they leave?
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then i remember the last time i went to the supermarket and november 2 days before we left, there was nothing in the shells. and it was like a horror movie. and believe me, if i'm saying this was the 1st months of the war, so that's was not an or dealer war. there is no equivalent between the power there . there was no shelters there where no place to call safe place. this is where most of the people felt like were not safe. and i felt if i have the chance to leave, to give someone else a chance to live a leave, it's not that because old people to run and go to because no, actually it's the quite the opposite. no one i talked to from my friend or colleagues who lived goes that temporarily. they want to say out to everyone saying, we want to go back, we want to rebuild it. but the challenges that i so before it's quite sad
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as one of the demands that i most made in the early days of the war was the release of palestinians from his really jails as part of an exchange deal about a 100. his release taken captive on october the 7th, or still believes to be held in gaza for hundreds of palestinians serving life sentences. a swamp deal is their only way out of prison. it abraham reports for many palestinian families. the capture of dozens of his readings on october, the 7th revived the hope that had long been subdued. prisoners exchange deals are the only way out of his really presents for hundreds of palestinians. sentence to life decided yes of them have full son saving life sentences, but i'm thinking about my son. he died and is ready to captivity in 2022. i hope to receive his body soon and bury him from the land. he loved a hope put on hold negotiations between israel and him as our best dragging was
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no sign of any breakthrough for now also an egypt broker, the ceasefire in november that led to the release of dozens of palestinian prisoners, women, children, and young men. almost all our joy is not complete. we look at the sacrifice of blood spilled in gaza. he's my eldest son. i am happy to see him here, but it's a painful moment. at least 25 of those release have since been re i rested, including the home. but of some my wife is really forced us give 3 others during greets in the occupied left bank. israel says it's returned 8 captives alive from gaza. dozens remaining time asked if $250.00, many, or be to be dead. this complicates any future exchange deal. how must insist on including high profile prisoners like murder, one bit of o. c abraham hammond, a below the
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o. c. and that side that israel has repeatedly refused to release the palestinians, charged with killing is res, including the longest serving prisoner and is ready to jail her mother. to that, he spent 39 years behind bars and has been excluded from at least 4 swap deals. which lots of different every time the announce, there's an upcoming deal. i get anxious and worried. i won't believe it until i hold him in my arms and hugged him as his family says, they never expected to wait this long. as other families count the days towards when they might embrace their loved ones outside of us, read the jails. they say the passage of time has never felt heavier. me that but he just need mohammed definitely is a human rights attorney who has practiced it is really an palestinian legal system . it's been more than 30 years and spoke to him earlier, at least $3500.00 palestinians are held under administrative detention in his
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really jails meeting held without charge. and he explained how is real use is the system of administrative detection. so i'm order issued by the military commander of those bank and i honestly military oh for sure. and the based on that then monitored order to that. but as team is being, are administered to really the pain, which means that there is no time the standard was detained on a minister position. doesn't know, actually, what is the charge and what the, why he's be detained and he doesn't have any access to the any evidence that they can be presented. and if you want to try and challenge that, the only way to do that is the, is the even worse and the unicorn so long as the judges can see the evidence. why the, the pain and his or her lawyer cannot see any, any part,
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nor of the evidence or the charges that charges been so they can be beating for a long period of time, some of that, but to see me. and if a student is what administrative lead, anything that i'll be in and present for use now there. so it's not usually for 6 months, but then it's be extended for another 6 months. and there is no dish of process that it will, which different opinions can actually try to. it's a good pretext, or for security reasons. and i'm, you know, it's, it's, it, anything can be that can be put on the progress. but eventually, we don't know what, what it is actually the, they say it's, it's something that might happen in the future. that's what they claim. it seems to be saying, it's not the punishment for people, but travel time to prevent them from doing x in the future. that's what fits into is the security or the security of is there any settlers involved to pipe the game?
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we don't know that we don't know that as the dds with the note that as lawyers and we are going to come a complete darkness as far as those that these are are, are, are really the palestine side of speed. the land of a people with a history that spends 4000 years. the history rooted in rich traditions of trade, agriculture, industry, and arts at the crossroads of asia, europe and africa, is vibrant and prosperous. cities. jasa suffered a con haifa, where the hordes of palestine thriving ports, factories cinema in theater. but in 1897. zine is an idea. ology born in europe, sought to create a legally secure homeland for jewish people in palestine threatening a millennia of multi faith and multicultural palestinian existence and identity. and 1917. during the 1st world war, the imperial british government turned that zionist aim into
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a reality by publicly pledging the establishment of a national home for the jewish people in palestine and our land, a strategic importance for the colonial power. the balfour declaration, as it is known, is condemned by palestinians to this day as being immoral and illegal. in 1947, the united nations wait in agreeing to split historic palestine, which was under british mandates into jewish in arab territories. jerusalem was granted special international status, but that did not stop to knock about or the ethnic cleansing of palestinians upon which the state of israel was created. and now stands. between 19471949 jewish power military forces destroyed and captured almost 530 pallets, and villages and cities. more than 750000 palestinians were expelled from their land. neither they nor their defendants had been allowed to return to this day in
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blatant disregard of international law. in 1967, israel sees the rest of historic palestine. it illegally occupies the west bank, including east jerusalem, and the gaza strip through a system of discrimination and segregation in trenching. jewish supremacy over palestinian lives, a system that you and experts have called apartheid. and then came, the little cord is described as palestinian versailles by renowned academic edward site and agreement that gave palestinians limits in self rule in parts of occupied westbank. while israel had total military control over the majority of the area, it imposed israel's total security and economic control over palestinian lives instead of resolving the fundamental question of palestinian statehood and an end to israel's illegal occupation. today that occupation is more entrenched and more violent. today, the ethnic cleansing of palestinians continues in real time. today,
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israel is waging a war on gaza that is unprecedented in its scale its brutality and devastation. today, after 76 years of macbeth, israel's genocide and gaza unfolds before the eyes of the world. 365 days on average lane joins us from oxford in the u. k. so you're a historian, author of 3 worlds, memoirs of an arab june. and we wanted to talk to you today because you're not just any historian, any eighty's you and a handful of others dug into is really government archives and classified documents . and you brought a new understanding of history to the public, specifically when it comes to the knock. but can you explain to our viewers briefly if you could, what the official history was before and what your work revealed. the official history about 1948 presents
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east through is the big thing. my colleagues, the new historians, benny maurice, populated myself, publish books that amounted to a from to the top on design these version of the conflict. in particular, design. these versions said that the 1948, the palestinians left all this time of the cold war on orders from about betty. maurice has demonstrated that the palestinians did not leave the push file that easily have carried off the asp. tennessee or fall this time? in 1948. i'm either on or pay up to up ended designers version the towards the end of the minded retailers a was to a bought to both of the jewish state. he showed the regions really
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a was to bought the bus off the palestinian state and my own book collusion across the georgia and the beginning of dollar design. this movement is a population of palestine, shows that the pollution facing is that was divided, and the king abdullah of jordan, at this tacit agreement with the jewish agency to divide palestine between themselves at the expense of the palestinians. as a result, the palestinians were left out in the cold initially, all of this work was not well received in israel. what about no history was receive shakara um and there was an attempt to dispute it on a fast but gradually some of the findings of the new history found the way
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into the intellectual remaining spring. in particular, the motion that israel was innocent of expanding other standards. the 1948 and the gradually the new history hope to create a climate of opinion in israel, which was conducive to mutual understand. they have to compromise. it helped to pay the way to the also the cold, but after the outbreak of the 2nd, the fall into these railways return from the ministry's positions often enough. and now we reach a stage off extreme deviation extreme. i'm talking to these in between these ro, towards the palestinians and the night during our states. well, why are you just started to get you started to answer this question. second intifada,
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why has the political discourse in israel about palestinians narrowed so much? there used to be different camps. you mentioned that pragmatic prime ministers with knowledge that israel would have to somehow deal with palestinians not just occupied them forever. and that no longer seems to exist. the turning point was the collapse of the time. david saw me in the 2 fonts and the rock was largely responsible for the failure of this family to reserve the concrete. he came back from come day, read and argued that there is no other stand popping up for peace. this was not true. there was always a genuine palestinian box in a 4 piece, but the off of the rock bade to yeah, so i don't know if i did come. david was completely inadequate. you've given me the meaning mo, understanding of national bonds,
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about the consequences of the game with very considerable because all these ladies believed, but rock, they've 3 and not about us being involved in the 4 piece. and therefore, you don't vote for thought the, the police seem negotiations your vote for a strong man who is good. if shooting alex, i'm andrea sharon feet of the bill. i'm sure on run the elections in 2001. and these really ride is being given paul, ever since. and he's ready. society is being moving steadily to the right in the press on the government headed by benjamin netanyahu, is the not right tween the most misty. i make the most expansion is the most address, the most um,
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jewish supremacy is government. israel's entire history. and the result of having this mess, the only government in power is what we're seeing, the tragedy of guns, and then the expansion of the bullying dogs up to the front of a shame. officer historian, thank you very much for joining us and for your contribution to this program today on alpha 0. thank you. is israel is occupation of palestinian territories, set the stage for armed resistance from group such as from us, the moving traces. it's routes back to the late 19 seventy's originally as a charity to build schools, mosques and clinics. houses. there was really challenge reports on the rise of arm groups and their tactics. terrorists will freedom fights is legitimate resistance or murderous extremism. palms palestinian groups and the
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power to rise language he used to describe them have existed for as long as palestine has been occupied. to my mind how dusting all the resistance is integral to the palestinian national stucco and has been integral to the palestinian national struggle going back more than a 100 years to the beginning of the successive waves of scientists to migrations to what was then a palace stone i'm assuming resistance, so just in the late 19 sixty's, particularly off to these radio occupation have gone to the west bank and east jerusalem. the palestine liberation organization under yes, our fat snatch had many armed functions such as the p f lp. which hijacked planes of the 1970s times the black september organization which killed he's right. the athletes at the 1970 to munich lympics. and when the 1st intifada
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started in 1997 and the stones of palestinian youth would match with his ready bullets, a new generation of groups and much the full. the 1st intifada certainly left. we had a scene in the political parties of pumpkins dominated officer that we stopped to see a rise in augustine in islam as it was also i think, to do with increasing per sections that these left wing and, and secular groups will corrupt and no longer had a viable strategy for pet is the national operation. this was when the how may i send it while it's ministry waiting. the outcomes i'm brigades targeted is ready civilians and soldiers with suicide attacks. and rockets. how mass also focused on politics? in 2006, it won elections and concepts, then asked a defensive dominated palestinian authority from the strip and use tunnels to keep
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fighting through israel is cause a was of 2008, 20122014 and 2021. c but how much method civil waste debates about the legality of armed resistance and how it should be conducted? we can say the 1st thing of people that have our right to to persist spricker in school is really in the sense that they struggle against the bill coupons. the occupant in their profession is supported by international law about this specific action on madison 7 october and are unlawful for the way in which they were undertaken. but as ever, the appeal of such groups rises with increased is ready oppression. and when palestinian hopes to suffer into full rotary tenants, how does the or is it site f is a senior fellow at the malcolm age career. carnegie middle east center and author of armed struggle in the search for states returning us from london today. so thank
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you for your time. there are plenty of people around the world who support policy and self determination, but also cannot get behind attacks like october the 7th. how do you even begin to engage with these 2 ideas? a little for me, one of the very 1st thoughts i had been that i tried to communicate to people like my own kids was that it was entirely possible and right to be both of us do it. how much did on the 7th of october in terms of the delivered slaughter of civilians, non competence and southern israel, and the same time demand freedom for palestinians. i think it was a huge mistake that many fell into that they had to somehow turn a blind eye to a time us have done. and i think that was fundamentally unnecessary and of course on ethical. it was entirely possible and didn't necessary to reconcile the 2
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positions they're, they're both correct to be opposed about hosted, but at the same time to be opposed to what has been has done since that. and i know i've done for many years before to ballast against the lebanese and to others. what is the track record of armed resistance in achieving self determination? i mean, does it usually work? so that's, that's a really broad question. since the end of world war 2 and the arrow d calling i zation, it's been clear that many armed struggles around what was that known as the 3rd world, the global self were instrumental in bringing about the end of colonial rule. this could even be said of india, for example, where we, you know, we, we sort of exalt the position of gun d, a non violence, but overlooked. the fact that crucial to the ultimate success of guns is contained was the fact that the british faced our movements in india as well. um, so we know often the armed resistance movements don't achieve military victories,
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but they each way the political will become a dicing force. for instance, the united states and then to china and ultimately bring about withdrawal. in the case of israel and palestine, things are different because that's comparing, for instance, to the french occupation of algeria, which lasted for a very long time from 1830 until 1962. that's a 132 years on the french colonialist ultimately did have another country that could retreat to. whereas when it comes to israel, the idea of the jewish just varies with just go back to where they came from, i think is no longer a either you know, politically correct or ethically correct. and it does mean that other students, i think of goals faced the style of, of being clear that they had the right to resist occupation. i'm just possession and the exile. but at the same time, i think they've never quite worked out how to address the jewish is really
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population with the ideas political visions that both sides could buy into. it wasn't enough to say we're offering you democracy, your 2nd are stage or are you in united state with the quality for all citizens that all sounds wonderful and i think comes from a good place. but if the other side doesn't accept that and become a partner, and then then how are you going to impose as i'm done, you con, basically impose it. so i think these have been fundamental dunham is facing. the posting is from day one and still do us. now israel says that it's going to defeat how much do you think that's even possible? right, i think that the, the core, the real question here is israel seeks to defeat the desire of people who define themselves as palestinian who live under his really control with a direct manager control in the west bank mixed control. and he's jerusalem in direct, but also direct military control. and garza, i'm 2nd class citizenship inside his written itself on the idea of,
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of these people will accept and become willing subjects in perpetuity to different prizes. disenfranchisement, you know, basic political rights, basic civil rights denied to them. so that this idea is ludicrous. and so it's not about whether it's or can just buy from us or not. it might do but, but what does it do about 7000000 palestinians as lives it controls in every possible way every day. what does international say? thank you, pardon? international law. say about the right to resistance and specifically when it comes to the palestinians. i'm not a legal expert, i can quote you on a book in verse on this, but i do have the right to resist as the question to well, the right to resist is absolute. i think for everyone the right to armed resistance is also something that i believe is enshrined in an international law. but there are but none the less resistance should also observe and be bound by international
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humanitarian law on the laws of war. which means you don't killed and prisoners, for instance, you is even soldiers. you don't kill civilians and so on. you don't use torture. you don't use starvation. all sorts of things. a israel has been able to use for the last year, the palestinians. and i think this is crucial and was on the 7th of, of october last year that i was doing it was to had, were bound and had to recognize that they were bound by the same laws that basic to be applied in the case of is really action and i think this is, this goes back, but, you know, there's, there's a lots of, obviously lots of, but let's go many relation here and propaganda on both sides. i think back when i think of 7 of october, i'm reminded of is really defense minister ariel sharon. in 1992 later became prime minister one of the most hawkish right wing politicians. as rhodes ever had. i'm in 1992 when he justified these reading invasion of lebanon to destroy the pillow and
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destroy the roots of palestinian nationalism, all of which failed. of course, his justification was that in the previous 13 years, the piano had killed just over 1200, his raiders, another nationals of who's on 2 thirds were military. so in terms of a normal way, we think about things is clear that even according to share on the pillow, had actually targeted the ministry far more than as it targeted civilians. but here we have a situation where with him as on 2nd of october, it reversed almost exactly to something like 800 civilian dead. nearly 400 military that on these really side. but again, you know, everyone is a weapon. isaac, these, these, these notions of international load, it allows him doesn't, i fear we're now in a moment. we were witnessing the beginning of an era where the entire edifice of international law laws of war is set up over the past. more than
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a century. i think that is from the mentally you wrote it. and i think that the you are of using artificial intelligence and for and what it allows is going to overwhelm the idea that the old laws still apply or can apply. and i think we're entering into a very dangerous new area on the legal front. and not just on the middle, jenny mounted turn in front. yes, it's a author of armed struggle in the search for state. thank you very much. let's bring it now as you're a senior political analyst, molanda shower. he's in london with us live kicking off this week long coverage of the one year mark of the guys award more one in the immediate aftermath of the october 7th attacks. your fears for what might happen were among the most pessimistic that i heard at the time. and of course, when we look at it now, more than $40000.00 people killed gaza broken, maybe beyond repair the region descending into war. you weren't pessimistic, you were just right as well. it wasn't based on any and things to
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sort of muddy them the code in history. it was just seeing the case for genocide being manufactured at each and every day between october 7, october 19th, which seems to be the number and the uh, an october trial within 12 hours. uh how much has shaken is there any, is there any was shipped to the hor, was the human the a to it? so a major loss, not only because a hundreds of it civilians were killed, but also because hundreds of its soldiers were killed and it submitted to the bases were violated. its supplements, its vintages were also run over by a movement that is there a long considered to be inferior to its might be minutes or so after those 12 hours you related this, right. they'd be witnessed 12 days that basically went to shake the following 12
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months. and during the peaceful days i was, i don't, i think back in october time is there in the united states, began to manufacture the case for general. so 1st by doing that is in come out as the ultimate that are sort of navigation of the 21st century. that's even worse than isis. it's even worse on the card that i just actually did. it must be defeated just like i just was. and anyone remembers what happened after 2014, especially 2017. it didn't, you know, they know the, that the, the way it was handled the da da. com to section. and so of course how much there's nothing by guys just, it's a national movement and although it did kathy saturdays, the tax, it remains to be a national movement that sticks as you spoke to your guest resistance and gotten their version of the, of their homeland. but the immunization of not phone the how much the demonization
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of the guys as human animals, if you remember, also took charge and he's right is became to do my nice by of kind of signal population data input operation for basically bombing them coming and getting their children by the hospitals, the schools that are special buildings console and so forth. and then what we sold by october 19th, 12 days later, it was by them. but they're not compressed dental, kept it for at the white house when he died in the question of kind of sign to the question of ukraine saying is read like ukraine by the science lakresha america needs to take charge. along with his read contextualizing the question of gaza with ukraine and taiwan. but he was, i'm not saying that is that it has every right, like to create it has to do. and then suddenly we have the, the, the, the, the case for the genocide being defined by the human eyes vision,
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by pretty little co considerations of what advantage and saw so far as what it has jew clinical calculus. that's open to wait for an end robin in genocide to physically count as you say, state the 10s of thousands of people on probably by the end of it, we're going to stay any that some 10 percent of the population guys are, was either killed or injured somewhere, when you use sense to fear it and you sensed that this was coming and it did. is there anything over the last 12 months that surprised you? well, you know, i'm, i'm a, i'm a student of international relations are. i told international missions for my students, for many years i saw an order 0 for what the bus does in 2000 years, but nothing really got to be. i tilted 40 years, i wrote about it for years. how and then so they international relationships that
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on the ridges of all the interior powers have long starting does not 2 standards, not double standards. and so i was taking it back to out by something i took a long time ago, but it's never really sunken or the silence. the silence. the deafening silence of austin powers, the deafening silence of wisdom governments, the western side of the site are still out of governance, topic toward the silence of what's the media. they are the ones with the eyes and ears. they're the ones who are supposed to be reporting, but the ones why the freedom to be able to report about such a very important transfer. these are what i'm right there were a revenue on how are these and other screws? but the thing was silence for many months while shes been was slapped as why hospitals for a bond. and that just goes a long way to tell you that while we,
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as human society, we do think in terms of values and we do things in terms of, you know, we must be charged, that we must have some sympathy and so on, so forth. but when it came to guys, whether it was a question of racism, question of imperialism or question of an to submit to him whatever it is, right? there was defending site and so much. so when i was stopping on tv, like i am doing now, was sometimes feeding my sex cleaning even i was reminded by our program power and that there's a little cottage that more on why you streaming. it's as if i wanted just to get that message through because there was a major frustration that the world is watching much about this in the a of the palestinians as they dive in the hundreds and thousands every week. and it just gone on for a year, only much later on did some of them start catching up, but the magenta to was some bowers and out of government them inside and then pick
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today was a 0 senior political editor. we'll talk again. thank you very much. is really military has pounded the lebanese capital in overnighted strikes. it is some of the heaviest, foaming of the roots in nearly 20 years. that's the southern suburb of da here is really fighter jets hit this densely populated neighborhood with multiple strikes leveling residential buildings and causing extensive damage and is really striking their hospital in 711 on has put the facility temporarily out of service. the hospital which is in march, are you in, was forced to evacuated, stuff from the premises. no, no casualties have been reported. nearly a 100 medical personnel has been killed across 11 on since the start of his really strikes in the country. and dozens of health clinics have been attacked in the spring analysis. there was a wrong con, your in has via iran,
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that's in southern lebanon. you've told us before the lebanese, in the court of the country where you are, are afraid israel my do to their country what they did in gaza and that attack near hospital, i assume will only heightened these fears. that's absolutely right. what we're hearing is that full paramedics were killed in the mazda you in the hospital, which is just over there as a place. i've spent a lot of time. and before we had to evacuate from the 11 east medical souls who told us that they were killed off the is ready fight to just talk to an ambulance belonging to the sly, make healthful forward seat in the vicinity of the hospital. often that attack it was the decision was made to shot to the hospital now stats, the t 8 medical facilities as of a 137 that have now been shouted across the 120 kilometer buddha,
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most of them were very close to the border areas um the doctors and medical stuff, the felt that those strikes were coming in the too close for them to guarantee to be able to operate safely on their own safety. and now this hospital, which is a major one for this entire area, has now shifted its those as well. and once again, that would keeps coming up when you talk about some level goals. and people are looking at the attacks on hospital infrastructure and goals which spring completely decimated. i'm wondering how much longer will, how much time is going to take for that to happen here in run or people still. i mean civilians still leaving the south where you are or is it the case that those were there now are people who have decided to ride everything out and stay. it was a mixture of both things. people are still trying to get out of the various areas.
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now remember in the last 3 days and the number keeps going up and it's going up in 3 days. it's now a $101.00 townsend village is the on the is really evacuation. old is bought to visit the cute crisis this 2 things going on here. they don't know if they leave this area with the getting be able to get shelter. whether, if they, you know, the poor or for people having to go to government run shelters in schools, they are running out to the space. they can't accept any more people. let's say you go to family, a full, do you know how much money that's going to cost to stay in a hotel in baby, which is also being bombed or ins here, or inside and both places being bummed as well. and then you've got the issue, the roads you so the, the destruction of the road, the little road to damascus. a, the, a on thousands of people now stuck on that on the 11 east side who wanted to cross into syria cuz they thought it might be safer. they should be caught,
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get through. i think again, and i've sent this to you before again, it comes down to that simple fact. do you stay put knowing that these riley's have austin, to evacuate and then might be an extra like me on your house? or do you risk getting on the road and risk getting these really straight? and do you have any safety when you get where you, where you're going and is there any way for you to stay? these are the questions now that people are asking houses using run con, reporting from marsha you and, and 711 on thank you very much. and the israeli army has also bombed the main highway between 11 on and syria. media are reporting that it launched 3 missiles on the international road between damascus and the route they are strikes to place between the syrian states. yeah. booth and the lebanese must not crossings. tens of thousands of displaced. people have been using that highway to get to syria in order to escape the air raids 11 on this is destiny deckers in jordan's capital.
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i'm on because the is really government has banned alpha 0 from reporting inside israel. it's stephanie. so we've been reporting since this morning on that massive strike and blast in dia overnight. do we know yet what israel was targeting in bare room? well they've said the army has said that it was targeting has butler's intelligence center also in the bunker system, which explains that incredible massive explosion. we believe it was 11 consecutive strikes. and why is that? because basically what is role does what it did with pass on the solid sands in one bunker, buster paving the way another one paving the way, further to the way down the under grounds. now a lot of leaks saying that they believe that this is targeting as well as number 2 . the mine believes to potentially be taking over some rumors actually saying that this was a gathering of the sure counsel which would have voted to
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a potential successor or for hassle around the initial no. so the so hash and stuff, ideas, his name, this is not confirmed. this is basically what people believe could have happened. it takes a long time. it was, if it is you're out to confirm the results of their operation. but again, you know, this is a very heavily populated area. adelphia people are describing this explosion, almost a more powerful than the one that killed her son and this well, so certainly these rudy's would have been targeting again, hide by new targets, but no official confirmation yet from the army. whether you know, whoever they were targeting was actually assassinated or not. this is definitely thank you very much for that. do stay with us, please. because i'm going to have more questions for you. i want to ask you about what's happening in the occupied westbank is really 5 digits of carried out into your strike into a car and the killed at least 18 palestinians. they targeted a cafe full of people. that's what it looks like now is really military says it has
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killed the local homeless commander. something that the group has not confirmed. a general strike has been declared across the occupied westbank is really forces have intensified their raids on the occupied west bank since the one guy so began and they've killed at least 720 palestinians. okay, stephanie, what is your, i'm and, and by the way, i'm just going to let us know, i know you're in amman, jordan, but you have done so much reporting out of is real. you were there. you covered the whole early part of the war from within israel, of course, and this is something you know, well, what is real trying to achieve in the occupied was thank as well as real, has increased its campaign against the westbank resistance. again, like even in the west bank, you didn't really have a lot of armed resistance for many, many years. that's something that has changed over the last few years. more use,
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more frustrated use with the reality of, of the occupation which becomes entrenched. you know, the increasing expansion of settlers supplements the more violent behavior by the legal settlers in the occupied west bank. in fact, you have settlers in government these days that c, i geology, that a couple of the ministers hold. so you've also had this increasing armed resistance . and these route really has been clamping down on that in a way that we haven't seen before significant into caught them. they actually used a fighter jet to target this cafe, a busy cafe. uh, killing. you mentioned there. how much combined are also believed to be, um, it's not me to add the commander up there arm doing, but also civilians that israel doesn't seem to care the what they cool collateral damage. you know, they say that the mouse commander was in charge of organizing attacks against israel. but this is a massive strike. it is also a massive digital of civilians. but israel simply doesn't care about that. it seems
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to now have a very long list of targets that it is eliminating as it goes, whether it's, you know, 11 on in gaza in the westbank. and i think it's also a message to those in the west bank while we are busy in lebanon and garza, we can still get you um, i'm gonna get you to taking a lot of what's happening today. and i want to focus you for a 2nd on the events in the east jerusalem in a box a most compound. this is also something that you have witnessed personally multiple times before and will put up the pictures of what happened today. because it's today's friday says prayer day for muslim worshippers, and as worshippers with going to alaska locks they were prevented. there it is from attending the holy sites is really forces have regularly stormed. this must compound, but the frequency of rates has increased since the war on gaza began also something that you are familiar with stephanie as well. what
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you're looking at is these really occupations. this is the reality for palestinians every day. sometimes there are no restrictions other times there are deluxe, the most compound is, is under the auspices of what you're doing. and a walk of this is a religious authority, but it is israel that controls the access points and the danger of the locks. the most compound is the very brief because it's complicated. this government has ministers or calling for a change in the state. described the state is code basically means muslims can pray . non muslims can visit it is for 2 days and it's hardly a site. so you have an increasing poll by this government, which, you know, by ministers in this government, we need to be careful to change to a now used to pray. now this is a red line for the muslim world. it is to g insightful. but this is the concern that this has been changing on the ground. so this is just part of a very, very complex web of what is an occupation?
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i think when we talk about nothing on westbank, you know, goes deluxe, the most compound, the occupation, this is what it boils down to the occupation of israel, of, of the palestinian people of palestinian land. and without actually, i was talking to a friend of mine last night, lebanese who said to me, unless there's a political solution, we're going to see this again and again. and this is the bottom line, you know, unless there is a political solution for the palestinians. you know, you're going to see the cycle of violence. go on stephanie decker. thank you very much. we are fortunate to be able to rely on your fast reporting experience and a reminder to our viewers. you're saying all of this from amman, jordan, because israel has shut down houses here was bureau within israel. thank you very much. stephanie iran supreme leader has delivered a public sermon to crowds in there on praising the countries missile strikes on israel earlier this week. i have told the human a described the attacks as legal and legitimate. iran fired about 200 ballistic
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midsize, and several sites in israel late on tuesday night, from an april for unity across the muslim world against is really aggression. the officials in bosnia herzegovina say at least 14 people have been killed in flooding your blanca municipality, where the deaths were reported was completely cut off as flashed legs destroyed. rows and railway lines. weather warnings have been issued in neighboring croatia, montenegro and serbia. and teams in taiwan had begun clearing debris following land slides and flooding, triggered by heavy rainfall by phone crossing hits on thursday, killing 2 people and entering more than 600 authorities say more than 800000. the homes are still without power. so i want experiences, frequent tropical storms from july to october, but scientists say climate change is increasing their intensity. and we're going to take a very quick break and we'll be right back at the top of the hour to stay with us
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here on the is really forces seek to silence the truth affinity occupied westbank storming and shutting down houses 00 and remote. the truth must be protected and heard, and the stories of real people must be told. this is not just that a task on journalist. it's an attack on the world's right to know journal. this is not a crime or pressing it is finding a data piece of thousands of social media accounts containing photos and videos, place online bias, really soldiers repeated posting and videos of detain a accumulation of mixing that they have participated in torture. obviously it was
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investigated, assembles evidence of war crimes committed in the year long assault and gosh, these video she don't need to be caught popular inside is nobody can say they didn't know. got his own all just so you since its inception, in 1961, the quaint fund has been supporting people's livelihoods, and over 100 countries, by funding projects, and an array of sectors ranging from infrastructure to health and education. these initiatives ultimately helped eradicate poverty. and promote sustainable development the,
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there's no limit to how far the dream contains sta in your own adventure. now counter and wayne the, [000:00:00;00] the come on sort of in a, it's good to have you with us. this is the news our lives from to coming up in the program today a year into israel's genocide and gaza and the conflict is now impacting millions in the region. is our we continue our special coverage of the war that has killed more than $41800.00 palestinians. the aftermath of another major is really attack and southern bay. ruth israel says it was targeting his beloved intelligence
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headquarters. it is really striking near lebanon's main border crossing with syria cuts off a road that hundreds of thousands of people are using. the fleet is really your

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