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tv   NEWS 30min  Al Jazeera  October 27, 2024 8:00pm-8:31pm AST

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i'll do less than half the studio will be on the script part one on, on to see if we are the ones traveling the extra mile there are the media. don't go, we go there and we give them a chance to tell their story. the yet another is really strikes targets. a school housing displaced, palestinians in northern gaza at least 8 people or did the pennsylvania. it's good to have you with us. this is elza 0 live from the also coming up tens of millions go hungry. incidentally, the executive director of the world food program says the warring sides are blocking much needed. a cross border fire is really strikes and let him know until
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at least 8 people in the coastal city of site in one of his beloved targets, northern israel and bolivia. is government says it will investigate itself, the former president, even morales as the car was shot out the . so we begin in gaza where nearly 50 people have been killed and is really air strikes across the strip since dawn on sunday, at least a palestinians were killed including 3 during this when israel bomb to school housing displaced people in the oh, shante refugee camp that is west of gaza city media on the ground or reporting that israel also killed 20 people, including women and children in a series of air strikes on these a volume, a refugee camp, the strips largest. all of this, as israel continues to block, the entry of 8 supplies into the north. you and agencies saying only for of a 70 coordination request to get food a to enter the area this month,
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have been approved. as a 0 is handled diary as the latest from darrow, by in central golf, in the past 24 hours on the another in parts of the gaza strip. and the cause of safety were horrifying. where the is where the forces last night, just start getting at least 5 houses and make that. yeah. where of these dozens of policy use still remaining under the rubble till this point. they also targeted and you and shelter school, where at least 8 palestinians were killed among them 3 journalist and an 9 year old saying, and now all of these come as people are still under the revolution. the civil defense teams are trying to rescue those under the verbal all of this comes a mid a 23 day located in siege on the another in gauze us through for no food drink. water is entering the another in parts and not only thought also there
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know a big number of people who are still trapped under the bubbles. and no one could reached another area because of this is where the seeds on big now is a bad. yeah. and beta genuine, it's still escalating and people are trying to reach out crying feelings out. there are abundant asking for food, water in medicine, but the story is still escalating and we're still following the news are in the north and also across. so this is in the joining us now is dr. victoria rose, a reconstructive, plastic surgeon who has worked in gaza until very recently in august. you were in what hospital? no. no. so hospital central part of the gaza strip communist 100 is the southern part of the golden strip and you were there and you were in gaza in march at the european hospital also in the southern. yeah. got history on the other side of yeah . um, so you have stayed in touch with the people who are still in gaza. you are getting
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messages. you just told me every day. what is the information that you're getting a um, a lot of what i'm getting at the moment is the lack of support. like i thing. so i left on the 4th of september and the hospital that i was that was 2 weeks without plastics. agent before the next one arrived and he was another vs. plastic surgeon . that's your specialty by them. yeah. and it's, it's something that's really needed at the moment. lots of people think that plastic surgery is, is cause methods, but it's, it's fall from that we do will major trauma reconstruction in the u. k. and everything from open fractions of, of lens to faces. i mean, tumor is a mess of possible i was late, it was so and it's a one imagines and a war zone. oh and was a great need shoes for plastic surgeons. what kind of patients were you getting? well, what the 2 types read 8 mainly funds. so we deal with open injuries in plastic surgery and then the other sort of injuries with a penetrating injuries from blah,
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blah. so when the bomb goes off, the mason rail bits of muscle gets swept top weaponized. they then hit a civilian at quite high, high speed. so it causes a penetrating interior of the skin itself, tissues that will or may break the bone underneath, penetrate the file penetrate along. so we're into to provide the wound, which means surgically clean them and then try to close them. so every patient in, in this conflict would have benefitted from a plastic surgeon and your former colleagues because i interrupted you the people you were working with until very recently. yeah. you're getting news from what are they telling you know, they're asking me when the next test succession is coming. the other day that there is no plastic said and there's no local plastic surgeon left in gauze and now. so how do people when people who need this urgent help on a daily basis because gaza continues to be pounded by these really military with
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killed and injured on a daily basis. people who need this help? who do they turn to a lot of the general searches of doing what they can when i arrived at na site in august, though with people that had been waiting 2 months to see a plastic surgeon. so i operated on a young boy who had been hit in the face by a piece of a mess. who masonry it had last raised his lips to the extent that he couldn't eat and taking the tip of his nose. now nobody should do anything about that and he sat for 2 months waiting for somebody to arrive to fix that. and when i left his a friend of his father told me that his father had basically given up his son would ever have a normal life. again, because they'd waited, so what happens to patients who can not get the, the, the benefit of a doctor like yourself when they need it? i think the, the main issue is that the, at risk of an open wound that's not close, that then gets infected and becomes more severe. and if we could have gotten them
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at the time in the u. k, we try and treat or trauma patients within a certain frame time. so the nice guidelines for sort of open injuries of the state that we should try and close them within sort of 48 to 72 hours because we know that if that doesn't happen, you'll get an infection and that infection can then progress the injury. and it may mean that you need an occuptation. so i, there are lots of patients in gaza. his injuries have been made even more severe by the fact that they haven't been able to get the treatment that they needed. and that's mainly down to the fact the doctors don't guessing in this old enough don't something new and has said that israel is deliberately targeting crippling, destroying the health sector across the gaza strip. and you were due to what you were doing, where you were doing it. and when you were doing it, you were in the eye of that storm. what do you want or of yours to take away from your experience having been in a, in a, in a barely surviving,
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barely functioning health apparatus that is being deliberately targeted by a sovereign state, which is one of the, you know, strongest military powers in the world. i think we have to concentrate on the human rights issue, the fact that we are not able to get the adults as in the needed. obviously the local stuff has been depleted by the tack on them. but we are also being restricted entry. we cannot get enough talk to into garza. only 25 people are allowed in twice a week and in that 25 encompass all the united nation stuff on my boss load. i was one of 2 sessions, and i'm not saying that the other people with me shouldn't have been in there was a bomb disposal ex, but they were people tracking the pony or virus so they will needed to get in. but if i need to surgeons go to in on that week, you can imagine how this will help us get some to the people. on top of that,
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we cannot extract those patients that com be given the health care they need in gaza. we can actually safely get them out. we can't even get them out into the westbank into another pos of palestine. and that's what we need to concentrate on that is not legal. we have to stop that. we have to get health aide in and we have to get the patient out. dr. victoria rose. thank you very much for sharing all of that. your impressions in your experience from, from, from i was gonna say reporting from practicing medicine and plastic surgery for trauma patients inside the gaza strip. thank you very much. thank you. a people have been killed and it is really strike in 711 on the attack. hit the coastal city of sight and dorothy say at least 25 people are injured. and it's really forces launch multiple airstrikes and bear roots, southern suburb of da here. once again, the attacks coming off there is real threatening people in several neighborhoods to
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leave their homes or face being bombed houses or as dorsey jabari has more from the lebanese capital. as a attack on a residential area in a village near the city of side. and now side, and just to give you the idea of where it's located is about 40 kilometers south of where are you having the lebanese capital this attack target? it's a residential building without any warning. we saw the aftermath pictures of a number of floors within the building that were completely destroyed at people in and around the area are still going through the rubble as rescue workers continue, efforts to try and dig out any possible survivors. this is an area just south, east of side and known as hundreds of side of it is know to be a has will look strong hold. i didn't. it's not the 1st time that it's come under attack since october, 8th of last year. but this is one of the deadliest attacks that how it has with
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this. and of course, uh, according to lebanese health ministry. uh, at least 8 people have been killed so far, which is one of the highest decimals that they have with this in and around. this area is really our me says has the law has fired at least 75 rockets from lebanon to northern israel for people were injured 3. seriously. in the town of camera, 2 vehicles were hit, buildings have been damaged, is really military says it intercepted some of the rockets now is really defensive industry. you'll have the launch says that there needs to be what he calls painful concessions. if israel wants to release captives held in gaza, speaking at that same ceremony, the benjamin netanyahu, the is really prime minister, was attending in west jerusalem. he told crowds gathered there that israel's military power alone will not guarantee success. he said this as guns cease fire talks have restarted any guitar, e capital though ha. and egypt has proposed
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a 2 day ceasefire, during which 4 captives would be freed. let's go to houses here is nor dave who joins us now from the georgia union capital oman, because the is really, and it has been down to 0 from reporting any occupied westbank and from inside as well. so nor interesting comments, but you'll have to go on, i don't remember as really officials since the beginning of this war ever mentioning anything even close to concessions before. what do you think the defense minister might have meant by that? you're right. several, they haven't been talking about in sessions, they've been talking about absolute victory. and it's interesting to hear that these comments from the lawn to have some more of an adversarial relationship with these really prime minister. they, you know, been a, i've each other competing, almost with each other for a year. but galant is talking about the need to reach an agreement to speaking to the sentiments of the families of is really captive is who want
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a deal no matter what. these are the chance that they keep repeating in their weekly protests when international dignitaries come to israel. they want a deal. they don't care how it is reached, but they want it done. and that is in start, you know, opposition to what they hear from these rarely prime minister. the timing of course, coinciding with the relaunch of efforts in the how is quite interesting and it probably goes to, you know, apply some pressure at the very least to create a push towards a little bit more, more flexibility on these really side. but let's, let's talk about that. let, you know, has consistently argued since the beginning of the war, the military pressure on the home us was the way to bring back the captive. now we know that hasn't been actually very successful. the truth is that most of the captives have been released through a previous and the only so far ceasefire deal. how much pressure would you say
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netanyahu is actually under to get a deal done this time? as well? there is some pressure from these rarely public sarah and it's important to kind of bring back or remind our viewers that in israel. there is a lot of polarization. you have the families of the captives and their supporters, people who are calling for a cease fire deal. and then you have the supporters of the israeli government, who don't want to hear anything about compromise or deals, or a political horizon to and all of these waterfront, whether it's in gaza or 11 on or anywhere else out. but then you have the international community leaders who want an end to this nightmare who wants to see an end to the war on gaza and who have been saying very loudly, especially after the killing of the 2nd leader of have a c, a s and who are the 2nd leader to be killed during this war,
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and that there is an opportunity now that they believe could lead to an end to the war. so some, i would say at least rhetorical pressure is mounting on the streets in tel aviv and across as well. there is also some pressure, but nothing yahoo keeping his cards close to his chest to try to buffer his right. we can coalition from all of that with the supporters. alpha 0 is nor, or de reporting from amman and jordan. thank you very much, nor ron supreme leader i until the early human a has made his 1st official remarks on israel strikes on the country for a rainy and military personnel were killed. but there on insist that there has been limited damage. israel says the strikes were a response to an, a range and miss style attack earlier this month. but it run and turn says that that attack had been a in retaliation for it is really assassination on a range. and so back in july and how to get the shad, ronnie's get 2 nights ago,
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the cut it out, the malicious. the of course is the rate at which is wrong. but at the same time it shouldn't be, don't play. and either by saying it was insignificant or unimportant designers through gm's calculations must be solved. they are making serious mistakes and judgment. they do not understand that running and people they have not recognize this trends, capability, creativity, and determination of their running a nation. they must be made to understand these realities and it's up to the countries authorities to determine the appropriate response, the best surface, the interest of the nation and the country. i told you most of all of us democratic presidential candidates come with a harris has been asked about her message to ron after this latest round of his really attacks us go straight to rosalind. jordan was in washington dc. ros. this came during a sit down interview with c. uh, cbs news. what did a couple of harris have to say?
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well, essentially the answer that tot. com, a lot. harris, the democratic presidential candidate gave reflects the fact that she is still the sitting vice president in the bite and harris administration. and she essentially repeated what the president joe biden has said in the past 24 hours. this is pamela harris, the democratic presidential, candidates speaking earlier on cbs news. israel launched an attack on iran that has raised fears of a whitening conflict in the middle east. what is your message to iran? well, 1st of all, i do not respond. that would be a mistake, and we are prepared to defend israel as we have before we will again. but the critical point is that there must be the escalation in the region. and we are working through diplomatic channels and other channels to ensure that there is a, the escalation of the region. is there any indication, based on the intelligence that you've seen that iran wants to respond?
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i can't speak to that, but we've been very clear as the united states that they should not respond and that it would be a mistake. what are the consequences that they do? i'll keep you posted. it's also worth pointing out that a senior administration officials told reporters here in washington on friday night that through diplomatic channels, the us house at the same message to a ronnie and officials to essentially let the is really air strikes be the end of it was this another really interesting aspect to all of this, which is the why the button and harris administration are actually in office and power dealing with is real dealing with he is really prime minister iran and all of it. donald trump, who of course, isn't in office at the moment, says that he's been holding regular conversations with the is really prime minister benjamin that you know, what did come with harris have to say about that?
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well essentially this is raising the specter that a private citizen is violating something known as the logan act, which means you can't to conduct the foreign policy on behalf of the united states . if you're not actually in political office. now, while the us government isn't going to probably prosecute donald trump, because they have this 30 day, unofficial period of trying not to do anything that could persuade voters before november 5th, which is election day, it is worth knowing that connell harris was asked about this. she said that she wasn't worried about it, because the us itself is very actively trying to achieve a ceasefire. ben garza gets the remaining captives out trying to was search matters, hearing aid into the region, and try to work for a larger stabilization of the region. she basically dismissed what many are calling trump's shadow? foreign policy options here is rosalyn jordan reporting from washington dc. thank
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you very much. the ongoing conflict in sedan has worsened an already severe food crisis, leaving millions of people hungry and some on the brink of famine. before the conflicts, 14000000 sudanese did not have access to enough food. that number has now searched to 25600000. about half the country's population in zemzem camp in north or for famine has actually been confirmed. among the 400000 displaced people who lived there, the world food program warns the 13 areas or its severe risk of famine, particularly into our 4 and cartoon and core defend andrea 0 states. and more than 750000 people are facing catastrophic food shortages, putting them at extreme risk of starvation. the conflict is also displaced. more than 10000000 people now do not have any access to income or basic resources. well, earlier we spoke to cindy mccain, the executive director of the world food program. and i began by asking about the
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situation in the sam sam camp. the situation is catastrophic because we have not been able to get in that scale. and access has been very difficult, so i'm pleading with the world to help me gain or uh. 7 are access within sudan and be able to get to people who are suffering from famine and help stop famine. nevertheless, i've been here talking to many of the leaders here within the country, please. in our case of regard seeking to access, making sure that we, that we have, we are able to not just gain access, but we have gate crossings that are active, like audrey and others. and, and actually helping the world focus on sudan and not forget about some down. this is a crisis and we need the dentist do it. multiple parts of the country right now are considered to be at risk of famine. now, just to make this very clear, for viewers them and as measured in the number of people who die of starvation every day,
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can fab and still be prevented at this point in those areas. if we can gain access and i mean access at scale, we can probably preventive but the list of times to time support here we have no, you know, we're not in there. and as in the scale that we should be, we haven't been able to reach the most of the people that we've been trying to reach because of various issues. so it's really important that we, that we gain this access and gain now, so that we can get in there. otherwise, fam, and this could be the largest humanitarian crisis on the planet. if left alone, you've talked about access. you said that several times. the aid isn't getting everywhere that it needs isn't getting to all the people who need it, not at the speed that they need it, not of a scale that they need it. i know that you and agencies and a groups in general or low to talk about the political situation. however, however, the army and the parent of the true group that they're fighting in sedan have been
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accused respectively of obstructing access to aid and eluding aid. in the country, is that still happening? that is still happening? yes. and so they made it very difficult for us to operate, but we haven't left and for, for the record, deb, he was the 1st one on the spot one this price is began and we're not going to leave . but it is important that we gain co would that we, that we help politically here not, not many develop people that, but that are diplomats around the world. take a hand in this and help stop it so that we can get the idea of what's it going to take for the aid to get to the people who need it. well we just, 1st of all, when i say access, i mean we need to be able to, to travel safely and, and again at full scale. but remember right now she managed parents have been targeted. we're not targets. and the respect for humanitarian law is almost nonexistent. so both of those 2 things combined with our, with
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a inability to be able to get through the roads, get through the crossings. if the amount of food in that we need to get in is really what we need right now. is there communication. busy going on with the various belligerents, you know, it's as often referred to as d confliction to say where the convoys are going to let them know that those convoys shouldn't be attacked. is all of that happening. mm. as well, yes. or there's d confliction that you have to remember. remember, communication is very difficult. here. we're in a country that is, you know, is not set up for broad communications. and if it is not working. so we've asked for communications equipment all also to be brought in. so that we can communicate with not just our teams, but the other u. n. teams that are on the ground should certainly can coordinate things. but let's remember what's, what we need right now is complete and clear access to these regions who have not been help or not getting any age at all. and large part of this is also what has
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happened this year is of course climate change. and so the heavy rains was a debilitating factor, the, the flooding was a debilitating factor. so it's been a kind of a perfect storm of problems i would for with regards to being able to get in. the shots have been fired at a convoy carrying bolivia as former president eva morales. look at this, morales says he is now safe and he posted this video online which appears to show his driver being injured in the attack. it happened in a small town near. sheena hotel, that's in central bolivia, pensions between morales and bolivia. as current president, we are say, have lead to violent protests officer, as daniel shambler has more from neighboring argentina. well, we know that so saw it. well, what all this was in a call heading to a tv station in his strong hole, where does the culture bump region where he used to be the leader of the coke of uh,
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lease, growing union, a very strong support that. and as he approached the tv station suite cause a paid a full team, shots were fired, wounded, his drivers like a wounded able morales himself. with hood saying that firing shots, let's get out of pay and move quickly. they managed to escape and he went on tv shortly afterwards to denounce what he said uh was an attempt on his lives, ordered by the government also. or it is somebody immediately off the woods from the government's security ministry has gone on there to deny any kind of responsibility and suggest that this was perhaps a move by april more dollars to elicit a sympathy, a mock attempts on his lights, to elicit a sympathy among his simple, which is still shrouded in some confusion, but certainly it seems shots were fired. i have one. all this has escaped on escape voters in error while you are heading to the polls to elect their next president. opinion polls suggest the opposition that central left candidate has the lead
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against the incumbent, with a conservative security and poverty are the main issues in the south american country. georgia is election commission has announced the governing party one saturday's vote. now the president is calling for a mass protest on monday, with almost all ballots counted, the georgia dream party has 54 percent of the vote, but the opposition is refusing to accept the results, calling it a constitutional crew. the chief charles michelle has called for a swift pro, been what he described as electro irregularities over here to be on the bottom and teams. witness in some prisons, high tension confusion and chaos. in one case by the book stuffing physical assault on of servers attempting to report on violations of server and media removal from forwarding your stations steering up of service complaints. intimidation of voters inside and outside of forwarding to stations precedence of
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multiple body affiliated off servers, boasting a citizen of servers. furthermore, bolting secrecy was not always a shoot unless it's a nice 0, then a weather is next analysis 0. then we'll have the inside story and we're back at the top of the how to stay with the how are we got a bit of a breeze blowing down the golf at present? it slots a trifle. the most popping seem to find a cloud plus northern parts of the gulf some weather weather fast and when few weather over towards i've got his tom is that brisk when that shamal coming down? maybe towards cuts out temperatures haven, doha. around 33 degrees celsius. wanted to show us just around the southern end of the red sea as we go through the next day or so one or 2 of the shelves just creeping inland at the central pulse of saudi arabia. but nothing much display
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copay for i don't know if it is generally dry and that dry weather extending across the eastern side. also mediterranean valley, a cloud in the sky. here's a lots of hazy sunshine. i'll too much to report in terms of the weather. and that's the case to into the northeast of africa, north west and parts of africa. we'll see some shala's longest spells of rain, the possibility of some flooding across the northwest of africa that just know the pos of morocco. northern areas of ouch area went to whether to just around the ac, up in highlands, seasonal showers, just having southern parts of west africa in the coming days. the shows the coast thinking a little further south with just some west to weather, into the fall south of south africa and rain pushing right top, pennsylvania as the world economy. those strikes are those with
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a strong result. indonesia is where it's supposed to be solved by the right place for your business, the, the right spot otherwise on. so with this strategic downstream industry on your better tomorrow is a piece dealing. does that possible also the getting the highest and want me to is gathering, they'll have for yet another round of tools and hopes of running high, he's wise says, how mazda assassinated the. that was an ops to punch a piece. so after so many things at times come the 2 sides weights in agreements. now he's gone. this is inside story. the .

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