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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  October 28, 2024 6:00pm-7:00pm AST

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alpha dream contains to study in your own adventure, now counter arrange the . ready the color and serve any age. good to have you with us. this is the news, our life from doha. coming up in the program today, grief and anger in northern garza. more than a 1000 palestinians are killed and israel's 24 day siege. many of them women and children is really politicians debate bills that could band the un agency for palestinian refugees while blocking food, water, and medicine ports of gaza. they have no other way to express that they're both have been stolen and that's death to,
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to has been stolen. georgia on edge presidents urges people to protest holding saturdays, election results for fraud. and we have both candidates on the campaign trail about a week ahead of the us selections. we will be reporting live from the battleground states, the restart. this is our in northern gaza, where israel's 24 days siege has killed more than a 1000 palestinians. airstrikes of targeting heavily populated areas, wiping out entire families. the women and children account for the majority of those killed gases. civil defense says at least a 100000 palestinians remain trapped in the north. and those who have fled to say that they were forced to leave at gunpoint and palestinian say the rest of the gaza strip is barely any safer houses. eurostar, cowboy zoom, joins us from adero,
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bhalla in central and gaza topic. in the last few minutes you have just alerted us that there's been an attack in the central part of the gaza trip. the gaza strip. i understand that we've just lost communications with tar cowboys. whom he's just outside main hospital in darrow bottle. that's the central part of the strip. and there was an attack not far from where he was some 10 minutes ago tara, can you hear me? this is sarah lindo. huh. okay. yeah, i can hear you. ok. sorry. tell us what happened to narrow bottom well, the situation as you can see of the bucket ground is incredibly, very t all take more than 5 cause loaded with fixed and just came from a slight town, which is only a few kilometers away from well, we are starting extremely loaded with victims, off tops and as to why that top slice a very densely populated area that is bucketful with civilians,
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etc. residential buildings that was hit that with no sort of one and getting by the way we still have not sold injuries. that with young children women, or at least so far we have been getting confirmation for medical services in a box of hospitals saying that full palestinians have been confirmed, killed weight, if any of the casualties in fact reported we show use in just by the way when they have been proved by civil caused by entrances and also by costs food by donkeys here to the courtyard of the oxide, which is by the way, the form of a lot know what i can see here. this is for the lights of the bucket ground, which has been created, lights, uh, resulted from that a load the attack on the bodies of goose palestinians. situation by the way, is getting much more grim not only in as to why that before before this i talked with approximately 30 minutes there where there was another strike just place in
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the eastern areas of rage. refuge account was it was a residential building that was hit, somebody is ready to fight to get it to be some sort of escalation with the ground . why we have been getting confirmation of from eye witnesses. that one thing to do is casualties by the way, which one's fed to unlocks the hospital and the vast majority of them was critically injured and the head and, and the hands as a part of the is valley ongoing escalation on the grounds here in the central areas which is by the way, the most densely populated parts of the entire garza strip well within a 1000000 palestinian right now. it's creased and tracked in that very tiny strip of land. they're kind of like we know the israel has crippled causes. health system is along the hospital that we see the mind you able to cope with this influx of patients. now we just took a look by the way, what's going on the ground, the hospital right now. everyone's here isn't in
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a state of care. your medical teams inside of dealing with a very just that during rates of casualties. and now i can hear by the ways then since that are about to into from the gates of the hospital on the right corner of may. we've been hearing for medical sources that really facing shortages with central medical supplies. they did not really not do you know, medical supplies sent by humanitarian and medical organizations to the actual hospital and they help run out of some essential materials that are highly required . and surgeries, according to cute specials in the ups, a hospice on a day by day, the hospital is dealing with very high rates of casualties. one of the medical sources confirmed that these kinds of things are quite similar to the beginning of the military offensive and gaza back in october 2023. which means that there is no, i'm you sort of a skill you back hope is by the textbook completely. the contrary is happening on the ground. there is more strikes on casualties among civilians, by the way, uh,
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taking a slice and every single then could be an hourly by just by the way it says tar, extend by please. because there's another major development that we're following today. and i need to ask you a question about that. the 1st i need to introduce it to our viewers is really politicians are debating bills that could band the un agency for palestinian refugees on the wall from operating within israel. it would also significantly restrict and was activities across occupied palestinian territory that includes a occupied east jerusalem, the occupied west bank and gaza. a 7 countries including the u. k. france, canada, and germany have issued a joint statement expressing their grave concern over israel's plans. israel has repeatedly targeted, earn watering its war on gaza in an effort to dismantle this agency, or nearly the entire population in gaza relies on on the loss of their basic needs . so let's take a closer look at this agency. the united nations relief and works agency for palace . the 9th for palestine. refugees, that's the name was created in 1949 to support palestinians,
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forcibly displaced in 1948. that was because of the creation of israel, known by palestinians as the knuckle or catastrophe. in arabic today, it supports nearly 6000000 palestinian refugees and 58 camps across guns that'd be occupied, westbank, jordan, lebanon, and syria. as of last year, 545000 children were enrolled in on was 709 schools. the agency also runs a 140 primary health care facilities. and more than 30000 palestinians work for the agency across the middle east, also encourages and supports the right of palestinian refugees to return to their homeland. that's stipulated in the un general assembly resolution $19.00 for the resolution which israel projects. so target we can come back to you now with that with that pre load if those bills passed and these really parliament, the knesset, what impact will that have on palestinians and guys as well?
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so really if that bill, by the way, you could, uh, would be completely uh, authorized and issued by these by the side it will have a very wide discount impacts on palestinians. of course, we know we grew up, see and corner what is a brain thinking in science concept providing essential health. everyone on the ground has been responsible for taking care of more than 2 palestinian $2000000.00 palestinians. a trapped inside the gaza strip in the west bank. and also in this a for about the situation for what is quite different from any other organization is. right. right. thinking causes, trip is one, has been focusing, in fact, sort of since day one of the fights. and in my using the owner, what was the ground they are trying to completely, uh, is the, legitimize its what? um they have been multiple and for feature that tax on a what, what, cuz bare facilities, educational, medical, and humanitarian, even more houses across the gaza strip. palestinians believe that the owner was
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incurred to be the back for a whole shows of you many terry and responses in gauze. that means that it's only what will complete the bombs from a brain thing in the gaza strip. it means that the palestinians won't be able to get the food up, the essential humanitarian supplies. and it will be one of the biggest flows being ever made against palestinians here in the gaza strip, simply because is read this, not only it is working to village, it's a 2 completely different noise. a, do i wonder what and guns about the, our joint even to eradicate the right of return to eradicate? and if i used the direct q g issue, that has been one of the main sticking points. and this is very promising and complex for the course of the cost. 70 kind of houses, aerostar cub, with whom reporting from inside the gaza strip. thank you very much. stark. let's go to nor owed a indeed jordanian capital, nor you were covering this from oman because these really government has band else
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is 0 from the forwarding in the occupied west bank and from inside israel. where do we stand on the, the process, right? the legislative process and israel on these bills, who, who introduced these bills, what do they actually say? and do we know when that mess it will vote on them? well, sterile, there are 2 bills. one would outlaw the work of under an occupied. you're east jerusalem because remember, israel has a legally annex jerusalem. it considers it to be part of it as well. the world, of course, doesn't recognize that the other bill would prohibit the work of underwater in the occupied. the rest of the occupied westbank and in gauze that it would prohibit any contact up by israel or its representatives with under war. and it would not allow even in direct work of the agents. now the, the bills these bills there were about 10 of them and they were reduced to 2. they already passed through committee,
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the foreign affairs in defense committee and the chair person of that committee, who was a look quote, a member from nothing. yeah. host party said yesterday that he expects the bill to pass on monday. when that can that's, that's meets again when it opens the winter session and it is ongoing right now. he expects a 100 votes. so very broad support, not just from the ruling coalition, but even from the opposition. we've heard speeches throughout the day from different members of the conduct. and we expect the voting of the deliberations to take place later on in the evening. but again, wide support for these bills that would have as part of explained catastrophic consequences. nor can you put this in broader context. otherwise the agency that is providing a to the refugees, palestinian refugees that israel drove out of their land in 1948. that is right, it is an agency that was established by the united nations 75 years ago,
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settled by a un general assembly resolution. and that is why this is so unique. it's a precedent that a country would outlaw the work of a you an agency. i to an agency that renews its mandates every year. and this is why this is not an is really hello send you an issue. it's not even and is and is really un issue and it's not an issue of logistics. this is not just about how can the world compensate or, or replace the functioning of under was thousands upon thousands of people who work for the agency and serve millions of palestinians in the west bank and gaza. this is about a you, an agency being outlawed by a you and member states, and that is exactly why countries of ward that this could jeopardize the status of israel at the united nations itself. it is a precedent to countries,
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or at least rhetorically, for the moment, saying that it's the syrians that it cannot pass and that it would have consequences if this legislation is adopted later on this evening. all right, your day reporting from amman. jordan, thank you very much. for that, nor a chris goodness is a former spokesman for on the line. he says israel's campaign to dismantle the agency is part of the ethnic cleansing of palestine. ready this is another serious assault by the state of it. so the international law and the international system itself is completely illegal. it's a legal foreground, supposed to be. it's a violation of us code $1.00 and $5.00 of the un shots of which would cause many states to cross privileges underneath which is to you and organizations base to simply be removed. secondly, it's a violation of the 1948 convention on the privilege of the meat, which is of the noise of measures which spells out those p and ice as the cool oh, such as tax exemptions, infinity to whole bank accounts, infinity to lease property. certainly it's
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a violation of the rules of which ones. busy the patient under which as well as the upon power, is as long as to deliver the services which existed before the occupation to be occupied population. so it's only the stuff that's quote, i would say, must be respected by his local unwrapping working in johnson. wes thing since 1950 became operational in may 1950. this is also for the violation of the genocide convention. i'm the provisional measures on the 26th of january this year is rarely supplies to facilitate the delivery of international humanitarian aid of attempting to enter the operation of the largest provider. oh, do you mind a terry? the 8 is clearly all ation of those measures to be clear. maxima just does not in the game, is well international obligations of the very last the. this is premised on the notion almost all took place in the 7th of october attack. and the smell of this may be repeated on occasions. but the ex sunroof cooled by the full french foreign
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minister, kathleen colona, and the internal un report as fails to find any conclusive evidence to substantiate as well as plague. so it's illegal counts and it's based on what type, including the mother who lives. something like some of the mental happening here the far is where the politicians have been very clear what they told you did a scenario. the lance of the river to the mediterranean sea is solitudes about implications. that should be noted, palestinians, of course it already exists. the organization which the international community has created to stuff those pop ups to you. but of course it comes in part happens of the big picture. well, i fear with it we're seeing as part of the incident, cleansing of palestine right in the spring and then perry in tel aviv. he's a former regional editor for the associated press. and you're in the middle east and africa. dan, it's good to talk to you. thanks for your time today. why is this real pursuing this, the shutting down or crippling of hon. um, i think you know,
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the audit claims against, on or on beginning with the notion that monroe uh, basically looks the other way as it's stuff or is work part time or maybe full time for almost. and as long as you hon, all the way through one room while we get facilities or areas adjacent to it so, so it needs to be used for munitions on default versions of hamas. and you are going through the fact that on our end of the schools allows it isn't, there is, this is actually, but it allows a curriculum that is real views and i think recently of use as encouraging violence against jews and, and the non acceptance of peace with israel and beyond that, i think there was a larger issue which, which is impractical, but not, not, not philosophical impossible, which is an are in its various manifestations, perpetuates the, basically the invention of a permanent refugee in the case of the palestinians, increase the dependency of
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a sort that is indeed an opposition to the right next to our definition of a refugee, which is on the 4th generation or 5th or 6th after someone has been forced out of their homes. but generally speaking, i would agree that it's highly impracticable because no matter what you can say about it. and i think a lot of those rules claims are true right now. and it does play a role in providing services to the palestinians in gauze, in particular, which uh were uh it to be blocks from providing someone else would have to then. uh, it probably would be as or uh, there is an argument for allowing the pallets, i mean, sorry to move it to garza and maybe you get, i get maximal aide so that they could do the services because it isn't the ridiculous. the un refugee agency is doing it, but of course those are all if you just allow the piano to go into that either i'm so what can i say, the message, the message to me then there's a lot there. i don't know if we'll have time to, to get to everything, but i'll start the 1st thing you said,
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which was this really claim that. and while it looks the other way as employees work for arm groups, a mazda is the armed weighing is only $200.00 cetera. i mean, that's just not true. the, they don't lift the other way. there's been 2 investigations if we, if, if we want to go down to the nitty gritty, earlier this year, israel accused 12 people and then it added a couple more to the list. so in all is realize accuse 19 people and it was 13000 and stuff in gaza, of taking part in october 7th attack that triggered to massive investigations one independent, 11 within the when i have the results of the investigation in front of me and all the people that is real said had been involved in october 7th, they were immediately dismissed. so it's just not true to say that and one of the other way hold on their own. okay, there are dismissed after it was exposed. i've seen that claims. i've seen the reports and also been on the ground and i sort of know it goes on there and there israel's, i'm happy with, with uh,
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the entire scenario we discussed including the size of the dismissal of people after. ready spent this time, but they, they, they are the limits of the fact that teachers and on schools least on one case were, seem to be, were understood to be holding hostages. they are apoplectic about the fact the under facilities are ours, somehow used even tangentially to a system almost as you know. i also know, i also know that when really such a large organization, but in this situation is we haven't done where uh, maniacally, the tutorial is even poses compromises on people you're going to have, you're going to have such cases. i realize all of them and beyond, beyond even that sort of excuse, i would have to ask israel, what do you propose to be done? you're not happy with the schools, you're not happy with under his behavior. and it's actually essence to and position is x, y, and z, but how else i got all the but what's the alternative like a lot of what israel's currently doing. i fear there's a lot of what they don't agree with but not. and also is what they propose. and in
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exchange i've made my case. what i think should be, should be happening is really shouldn't be the s holding firm to it's a system. so how about as not be allowed to return to the to power and gaza. that's primarily the interest of the forecasting, but they should be taking active steps already after a year of this incentive to, to create a better after. so it's so yeah, you made the point that you think it's impractical just from a practicality standpoint, regardless of the, the, whether the arguments are founded or not. and i explained that the, the investigations and why has been carrying out more than one, etc. you're saying it's in practical for as well to, to dismantle god that you made. another point, which i think is very important. you said this body or cannot be this mountain. and also where the west bank is this, through the radically the control them. and as long as it's not appliance, they're going to make it difficult for on are going to what do you mean is real, doesn't theoretically control that it's occupied land. i mean that's, that's, it's occupied land, right. but whether it's westbank,
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what the weather is guys. and so we'll occupied, as has been decided by the international court adjuster, you're forcing me to for somebody to come to this. israel never extended and small over the west bank are gone. israel denies color category for your occupying dawson are currently does the free x over 6 know it was located in the west even even in the settlements. the waves of which israel imposes law upon its own settlements are sort of circuitous and, and not exactly permanent. israel never next, the west bank, so it's rarely law doesn't apply, which is why by the way it came down to 0 in the west bank or the canon. israel is the part and parcel of the following up certainty lead tires in the pals. demeanor of what? i'm sorry, but then now you're forcing me to correct there is a world's top court, which is called the international court of justice, as i'm sure you know, they have provided an advisory opinion after the united nations general assembly
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asked them to do so. they spent more than a year looking at the status, illegality of israel's presence in uh, guys that occupied east jerusalem and the occupied west bank. and they said by an overwhelming majority, yes, it is an occupation and it leads to end and it needs to end quickly. this is the world's top court, right? so i mean, i think that case is pretty what. so i hope you have a good day, and by the way, i'm not representing isn't, and i'm not a big fan of the occupation, but which it is. the c j is market is largely political court, which rolled in the majority, but not in there. you know, which has absolute no powers of what they say, what the international law is. right. and there are 50 judges and they're more than 11. have then decided with rocky portion they wasn't close, the advisory board was not finding. so they made a political, the israel claims, i think, was with highly justifiable reason that it is not defined. awesome. israel claims i think falsely,
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that is not all defined was right. and that's very stressful. and it's been an x that you can claim it was unjustly indexed, but the sort of the history as well. mm. okay, well, you're telling us what israel says and what is really law says, and i'm just providing the information to our viewers. that there was a court and the associated with, of course, and they had a ruling on this and they said it's occupation and the legal end that it looks. and, but what i'm more interested in is, you know, i think, i think the information was there and our viewers can make up their minds to building cleaners. when we put out what i'm more interested in is you said the only want makes palestinians permanent refugees, and that is somehow unfair for israel. so if i am as if i understand your logic that you can correct me if i'm, i'm sorry, go ahead. i think it's, it's wrong, but in the case of the palestinians, certain actions are taken to perpetuate a dependency on un court, on the one body and to enable the section. the people who are 5
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generations removed from our fugitives are still refugees. if you ever been to guys and i have, these are shanty towns that should have been long ago normalized and fixed in the past days is a monumental aid to, to help them elevate themselves into a status where they're ready for independence and sovereignty which they deserve. as opposed to maintaining the fiction that someone born to a parents and gone. so who's going to grandparents and drugs who goes to the living? god is a refugee, is that definition and that attitude doesn't apply to any other conflicts on or the way sion is complex is pretty easy problem. so what you're saying, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. let me, let me just get this in front of the what you're saying, what you're saying is the logic is israel. uh, essentially the, the, the world should remove the problem with palestinian refugees for israel. and you're saying we should stop calling and refugees because it's been
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a long time. i'm saying it's not helpful to anyone to have them. you don't think universities they should be rated. that we said people who need a refugee definition as long as possible. and it is, it is contradictory to the ones on definition of a refugee which doesn't, which is not hereditary. so we have the fundamental narrative problem here which creates difficulty on the political side. all right. but practically speaking, of course, they need medical attention. they need schools, they need also social services because of an absurd situation that was created by everyone involved in all his resume provisioning the cleansing in his out in 1948. israel's not responding to that in a way that is may be possible given the misbehavior, but incredibly impractical in the middle of nowhere where he mandatory concerns or parent about. so i repeat, it's an unfortunate situation and i, i don't think it's necessarily sustainable no matter what the cost of the time.
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okay. and then i think we'll get to talk again later today. thank you for your time . uh, that's temporary until of a former regional editor for the associated press in your middle east and africa. thank you them. so i was thinking more one discharges. you're a senior political analyst who joins us via skype are one i, i suspect you're going to have some thoughts after the conversation. we just had. the i did want to start here with you though we can't talk about on the line. this is kind of where we ended the conversation and then we can talk about in a while without talking about history, right? because overall helps the palestinians were ethnically cleansed in 1948. when israel created it, states some of whom are still alive, it helps them and it helps their descendants. yes, absolutely. that's why it was settled. and in fact, when the 1st 5 years of its existence also helped jews who integrated to palestine as they even asked if they started business,
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a visitor at 5 years. uh many jews within is around. so we're getting help from on or off that for setup for different a senior director, richard question. but it's not the also just a functional issue as you're, i guess folks that are what they called philosophical or humanitarian or principal aspect to it. and that is really quite simple. there was an injustice done, taught people that to continue to link or in refugee caps and m. so you're not technician scripted that how i think about the mission does in so many i let her eyes on her. busy complex awards, the problem here of lingering so long. it's because it's read has rejected over 75 years. i need just for even on just the resolution to the part of fiji questions back in 1953. that's what 70 years ago. the president eisenhower,
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i believe at the time, no problem. it's too much. i think that'd be over the time. anyway, one of them, i think guys in our deposit is there and stuff like that. or could you come to the question by allowing 300000 refugees and then several of our issue. and of course there to check that even back then. and $300000.00 was even less than half the futures. and then of course, as we all know, is there i went on and did to define it. so as a jewish state by law special code, the jewish nation law is simply to make sure that the features never never make it back. so it's not the question that there is a tragedy out there, or just unfortunate as a good number of your guests would put a slot. unfortunately it's, it's a deliberate injustice by a country that called on your lives the home like the country. and because it is by finding who, by the way, that's just, you know, very funny aspect over this. this is no other place in the world where are you in order to just be treated so nicely? well, i tell you, you're not the person in the world. people claim 2005000 years later
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that uh, this brand is there's, i'm god, is the real estate agent. i'm that the bible is the real estate. all right. i'm in no other place in the world that i know. i've made the claim that they would come as refugees 2000 years ago, but the people would have made refugees on a few decades ago would not be allowed. and so it's really old bizarre, it's one to one side. it's basically based on miss. but the whole thing continues to be that sort of and as you went straight to the city and then your um and your uh, and your questions. it's not a question of, is there a lights on the wall or not? i can give it down what is really likes. it doesn't like i don't care for it. so pinion, or footage space. i don't even care for what these are things to slow for. not most of this is the most outlawed states in the world. no other state that was established by you on security council resolution have been so much in violation of
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every single you on a stack. those you, i'm shocked to you and speak of the constitution uses un general assembly or solution to this is a now called state the state. it's think something about the law. now they claim that shouldn't ward's body guard was under was you know, they keep lying through their teeth and we really do, we have to come back and really prove that everything. this is a lie. would we all know that everything they say is online more when would it be fair and i something i want to deliver this point, but i do think it can be helpful for me to yours. wouldn't be fair series to say that for israel to under cut on the wall helps them politically. because if you're undermining or even maybe getting rid of the agency that helps palestinian refugees, you're getting rid of the problem. to some extent at least the problem of palestinian refugees, rizzo. the whole point. everything else is b s everything
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else is b s. that's what i say. everything else is lives and protects and propaganda and, and you know, and the, how much sign is and then whatever this is. but there's, there's no other point and we'd been sending it back to the past 15 years. that is there in haste that you one and hoops on it a lot because data present that if you g question and then a few g question is that question? what we call the doctor that natalie says, right. the 1st, since this one is very great, that there are things you call that problem and as you would stick it back in 1947, 21949. there was a minority of jewish immigrant such colonialist colonizers, right. that at the time there was a united dishes made up of 50 plus got there's only all the other $140.00 countries that they just agreed to talk to exist. and they were all also called the lies before the duel guard federal developing world. so that influential world of post,
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2nd world war post, 2nd post a 2nd hold more for you to the surveys. right, right. and the ashes of the senior problem on the i just got a few g problems. the majority of the students, people are more than 75 percent. what made refugees? so the piano came into existence by the 6th by to sign the petition organization to the present, the 1st thing and refugees. it does not represent the single under conditions where he twice 1st existed. there were no occupied west 2nd goods and they came to bring back the produce to their homes, the people and cause of today 80 percent of them come from fish. caught on, come from joshua, come from those thousands that today is the eclipse to be its own. they need to go back to their homes, or at least buy some of them to be compensated, or both, whatever they choose is that it refuses to compensate. so as i says, it's not the 3rd generation for generation to be called directly juice while it keeps about a person who was born refugee or is i see june, guys spend 6 decades,
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5 decades not allowed to enter into is not once in their lifetime, to see their home, how does that fit? how is that just so it really is an or is really don't have a point. i don't hear what as it says, what the like and don't like. does it matter what matters? these are trying to do away with the refugee problem by taking on not the admissions ages. for me, the big question now, what would that you wouldn't do about it? yeah, you mentioned compensation of palestinian refugees lost their homes in 1948. i went back to the un general assembly resolution, it's resolution 194. the year was $948.00 and uh it says black and white. the israel has to allow the return of refugees wanting to return to their homes. so allow their return, allow them to get their homes back in for those who don't return, compensate them for the loss of their property. 1948, my one to shar. we'll talk again. i'll just, you're a senior political analyst. thank you very much. i. the sirens have sounded across
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northern israel after a number of rockets were fired from level some of the rockets were interested in the attack comes as israel bombarded deliberate east city of tire killing at least 7 people and injuring 17 others. st. ahold that reports from southern level the residential blocks are being brought down in huge strikes after forcing people out of their homes under threat of bombings and the cities c front were restaurants, and cafe is used to be packed with people are now destroyed, livelihoods and history erase this has become part of as well as policy in areas where has well a support based live the i'm a power of the today the, these attacks are part of pressure by these ladies on the muslim she community and
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those who represent them this way. it helps, by pressuring them, it will change the position of hezbollah and it's, i like amazon and force them to give in and make concession was witnesses will not be, they can. israel doesn't appear to be interested in a ceasefire. and 11 on it says it's in a phase of destroying hezbollah. this is a neighborhood bordering the southern city of sight in more families were made homeless and what appears to be a target to killing of a husband, a member that also killed women and children. left not because the power shots have been destroyed, our homes are being destroyed. people here are not fighters, there displaced people who left their homes in southern lebanon, but as well controls the skies. but there is fierce fighting along the border. has been the hopes that by maximizing casualties among is ready the troops. it will give it the leverage and potential ceasefire negotiations. the army group has also intensified rocket beside and drone strikes on military targets in northern and
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central as well as well. however, is continuing its escalade tori pressure. israel appears to be showing its strength with attacks like this one. the feeling here is that it's wants to make it more costly for hezbollah and it's supporters. hundreds of thousands of them are now internally displaced. there's little to suggest that there's support for hezbollah is eroding center for their eligibility to how that site though. so there's nothing on the georgians of protesting against the results of saturday's parliamentary elections in which the governing party was declared the winner. so let's look at life pictures now from the capital. the leasing where people are rallying outside the legislature building presidents celebrates or a basically called to the demonstrations and accuse russia of interfering in the poles. allegations that must go denies. the head of state also urged european countries in the us to support the people rallying on the streets. i'm closing the
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routing party of having use the russian forms russian messages and probably some type of pressing timing for this a really special operation. we need to have the firm support of our, your pin partners of the american partners to the parts of georgia. that is your pin that is a georgia in population. the georgia and government is not to your pin is not for your pin. it is today working 100 and you with russia. giga lemon. java is the executive secretary of the opposition dro a party. and he was elected as an m p at the weekend, but won't take up his seats in process. you'll joining us or from the demonstration in the least you thank you very much for your time at this critical moment. what are you hope to achieve with this protest with this demonstration? to say on the yes it is, but that says we moved to suspend here on the street from the car to cover it and
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it shows system it changes, but you have a separate account number which was wrong with your member id patient by election, this toner the election was stolen by using the tools and the mac. i leave it from the pictures label. it was, it has been russian actual operation against georgian democracy, which is a reminder, my niece in my country is 0 piano 0, which are that is why we, the opposition kwanisha is very far make the progression attempts to georgia not acknowledge and not recognize the official results of the election. we're the president of georgia nova international community. so does acknowledge results. we're not going to enter the parliament. so they want to be the type of russian, do my henry demand, new elections to the doctors by the international organizations, but do not for us. and from the next information of our job, as i found names to pull the public opinion, both pieces are least trusted institutions and georgia. so it would be meant we
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will access organizers from dr. mason organization. so we heard the president of georgia sell them is, or basically she says, she's calling for the support of the west europe in the united states. what can they do? so we're on the street to our passport, gave us a retiree and russian regime of direct. and we're only part of the thing i have. i'm training and with needs which rational preston website shows from the you. i'm from the united states. it is personally me still going to say like, i'm pissed circuit. uh huh. okay. yeah, that's the, that's the, uh, the leader or the main figure behind the, the ruling georgia dream party that you just mentioned. correct. is right. and all these are like, are back, right. in mind, from the restaurant. very important. uh give me tell them, okay, you say you're not gonna answer the parliament, you're not going to take your seats as a member of parliament because you do not want to take part in what you're
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essentially describing as a charade. as you give them thought and consideration to the fact that you might essentially just be sidelining yourself from politics in georgia. and you might be removing any power really that you could have in, in this new parliament x. and that we approach and find that stuff from, from that point where, you know, party politics to georgia and all because georgia, 0 pin and we don't have time for, for your term is under, under the linux threats such as, i don't want to be part of this process be we do not have the legislation government preference moment. those elections are, we don't want to the part of this rate, the browsers. thank you, but i am nothing for the time limits because it's not to get me to russian view. my rush, i come stars every single state institution in georgia except for the president position of president of georgia. and this is why we do not want to be part of
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a part of this competitive. what's already terry, in milledgeville, which device really has already built new georgia. the only that we can do, we protest internally system might be a very active process inside georgia and we need support from already threats or partners. if i already mentioned, we need is national personal sanction. we're going to do, i'm sure we're not, we're not way back way with face the minutes read from russia. as i already explained, the situation, this is dispatcher operation come back to by last time we were not talking about. okay, and of course georgia dream would completely deny, as we have done any accusations that makes during the election or irregularities in the vote. but we've heard your points giggling when you have a executive secretary of the opposition dro, of course, who thank you very much. thank you. thank there. the
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us presidential candidates, complet harris and donald trump are continuing their presidential campaigns with just over a week to go until the us election. trump is scheduled to speak to supporters in atlanta, georgia. well, harris is another swing states, michigan. we have correspondence in the battleground states of pennsylvania in wisconsin. we'll go to them in a moment, 1st the speak to kimberly how kit, who is at the white house, forrest kimberly, it's great to talk to you. it's been a while. give us the status report on both the harris and trump campaigns with 8 days to go until the presidential campaign. let's start with team hours. yeah, tim harris looking toward a big day on tuesday. that is when she's going to deliver her closing arguments. as vice president of the united states, she's going to be delivering what was supposed to be a raleigh for 8000 people. but now we're hearing, it's going to be closer to $20000.00 people gathered on what smartest the lips that is where the official tree lighting ceremony at christmas time here in the united
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states is let, is just in the shadow of the white house is supposed to be a very presidential looking moment we're combo harris's, vice president is going to make the case that she should take the oval office pays a contrast between herself and donald trump, that she believes that he is not fit for public office. that she is offering a message of joy that she is going to offer a new sort of era and break with her per part assessor and the joe biden, even though she has been a part of his administration for the last 4 years, offering help and even changed a sort of peeling from the message of brock obama, and this is what she's going to deliver. and as for today, she is in the state of michigan, which has of course, a very important battle ground state. she needs to win a what about team trunk?
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doing a little bit of cleanup after that very controversy o madison square garden rally where he was holding his closing arguments. this was really supposed to be billed as something but would kind of hit the high notes in terms of where he score and picking up votes on immigration on the economy. but unfortunately, the speakers in front of him did kind of sway into all of the worst parts of the kind of mag of movement make america great. again, sort of appealing to the worst of the republican party. kind of striking out some of those races tones, making some derogatory comments by the time donald trump thought they're those inflammatory him but sort of rhetoric that he said them the campaign trail, he really sort of piled on. and so he, this is really something that the democrats are seizing on. and in fact uh, this is really hurting donald trump the day after. kimberly, i'll get reporting from the white house there. thank you very much for that.
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kimberly. let's go to mike hannah, he's in gettysburg and pennsylvania. mike, you're in the biggest swing state. 19 electrical votes. so awesome. the person who wins their wins, the whole thing right? goes to 1800 pennsylvania avenue. so tell us what you're picking up in the commonwealth of pennsylvania. mike is indeed the fun fact is that since 2008, 10 obama, every single president, has one in pennsylvania. now this has been a traditionally blue state, but has been increasingly going republican. now gets his but the side of the defining baffling, the civil war isn't the 13th congressional district, which has been controlled by republicans for the last 6 years. now, behind me here is the internal life piece memorial. now that symbolizes the sense, doesn't of the union, the slight, representing the confederacy. and this is supposed to represent the union that resulted off to the civil war. by thing gets his book guessing so much else of this
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divided nation unity remains elusive. the rolling hills and fields of gettysburg mocked with reminders of the blood, the buckle that was faulty, a part of a civil war, but pitched americans against each other scenario that it goes in the divided nation of to day. when we start to see people who think differently than us as our enemies, then i don't know that there's enough elections enough democracy if you will, that can save us from that. the republican incumbent in this district, backed by donald trump, did not reply to a request for an interview, but his democratic opponent, best phone him. a former republican is adamant that donald trump support could prove costly at the polls. the majority of people i've spoken to, including several republicans recognized what a threat he is to our, to our democracy. so these republicans recognize that while they don't agree with
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every platform i have, they understand that if they vote for him, he takes away the right to vote in the 1st place while the civil war was still raging. in november, 1867, abraham lincoln came to gettysburg to dedicate a new symmetry for the thousands of united states soldiers who died in battle. it shows the address was an impassioned plea for preservation of the union and the fulfilment of the young nations exercise in democracy is what it co till this day. that the government of the people by the people for the people shall not perish from the. it's an ideal for which so many died. that struggles to suffice. today's clement a plus style division. mike kinda, oh, just sierra guess he's the pennsylvania. let's go straight to heidi. so castro then
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heidi you are in madison in wisconsin. wisconsin is another swing state. it went for trump in 2016, then it went to buy them in 2020. and both times it was decided by less than one percent of the vote in wisconsin. how is the race shipping up there this time? that's right, 0 less than $20000.00 votes. decided this race in wisconsin the last time around and so both campaigns are battling it out for every last vote. and the latest polling numbers that we just got today from usa today. and stuff at university shows that trump has a tiny bit of a it advantage really? it's a neck and neck raceway. he's got 48 percent versus harris at $47.00. but i want to get our guest here. this is john nichols with a nation. thank you. so much for joining us and you are a wisconsin election expert. what did these numbers mean to you? means were heavy. a typical wisconsin the election of the last 6 presidential races . 4 of them in have been decided in wisconsin by under 25000 votes. so this is just
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about an evenly divided state, but harris was pulling a little bit above this earlier. so should, should these numbers be worrying her campaign? i don't think so. i think that here's right after she came in for joe biden in august, really shot up for numbers. got very, very good. and she opened up the lead. but i think her campaign is always known that they were gonna have to fight hard for wisconsin. that were standing downtown madison talking about the 4 blocks from here on wednesday night. she'll have a rally with 15 or 20000 people. and so she has come here again and again and again, so strong. so the fact is i, i think here is people kind of know what they're dealing with. and i also remind you one little twist i come on here as, as a child, lived in madison for several years. and so she's kind of played that well in wisconsin. my sense is that she kind of knows how to come at this state. and the last thing i'll say about it is that in picking tim walls,
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she picked at someone from a neighboring state. and so all of these things i think give her a high level of competitiveness at the end of the day though, i suspect that if we talk on election night, we'll be talking about one of these candidates, winning by a very small market. right. thank you. so much john, and of course this is a 10 electoral college most that we're talking about in the state of wisconsin. and democrats have considered this as part of their blue wall 0, which of course means they see this as a must win state in order for harris to take the presidency. and of course, this is a state that is so emblematic of the challenges that the democratic party is facing as well. 58 percent of the voters here in wisconsin are white voters without a college degree. and they, and they leave historically, tend to vote more for republicans. they really tend to be more of trump space. so really, this is the race for both of those campaigns are fighting for each and every one. last of those votes, 0. yeah. and in 2016, as we know, donald trump broke,
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actually he smashed the blue wall. and that's what got them into the white house, heidi joe castro, reporting from madison in wisconsin. and thanks to you, thanks. mike had a thanks to kimberly. how could also the white house next to all the and it's time for sport with me to senate, who has joined us in the studio, people. so thank you very much. we'll start with the major news out of the premier league mattress. do you live the sex? the coach? eric 10 hug. the decision comes off of the clubs was start to a season in $54.00. we use. david state supports sundays to one defeats at west. him turned out to be the end of the road to manchester, united, manage it every 10 hug. it was that full last at the season, which is 3 big trees from 9 games. united a down and 14 just 7 points above the relegation. places is that was start to a campaign since the $198990.00 season. yeah, i think it was a think this time to be on us. fail a day fail for and a little bit. the pharmacist has haven't been good enough. i think it's about time
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we really like fresh energy, new perspective and new ideas. 10, how took the job in 2022 and went to trophies. then you sleep cup and the cup in may when they beat manchester city to the trophy. it was that victory, that convinced you know it's, it's new coding to jim ratcliffe to stick with 10 hug. but results and performances have forced the cups hand with just one. when in the last 8 games, you know, competitions, it seems like they've been swimming around in circles despite the 600000000 outlay from, from 10 during this time. uh, there's no discernable progress whatsoever. so it wasn't just take care of it. they've got a difficult jump in to turn it and turn it to and the stricken oil tanker around, you know, it sort of one of record 20 english titles, but nothing since 201310 hawk now joining david moiz, let me find how joe st marino and all they can associate in folding show to the
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standard set by alex ferguson. 10, how is the system the for me, you know, it did strike a route by mr roy will take charge of the team is entering the head coach until a permanent replacement is found. they probably less the in the lead cup a wednesday. they be stokes out, is there a well joining us now from manchester is also wayne boston who has written several books on the club, including ready to print the coming mattress to united to identity crisis. what am thank you for your time with it at all the wrong full 10 hug. uh huh. what a question that um. well i think really the, the problem stall owed the we cost uh we, when the car about co 18 months ago and we lost 7 mill. i'm field is the result which set alone bells ringing and we finished a season quite paula. obviously both the season was never going to be, you know enough to write it money dropping and we didn't qualify for the champions league. so as far as the 1st season when you know, mission accomplished,
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but the phone says in the 2nd season, one never really, really convincing that a lot of injury problems. and so there were a group of suppose myself included with giving him the benefit of the doubt. while that injury crisis subsided. you never really date. so i run a claim. know if i think the, the crisis galvanized a bit of anonymous fear around the cup from which the name a stay of execution. so the problem has been when the plays of come back, really like, but for most of them really being convincing and the season, you know he's being but it's heavily financially in the, in the transfer market, most of the players the back inside now. so there's a balance that's closer to what we should expect from him and the performances of them improve. and the results of they've got was so really pushed the, the ends of the, the people making the decisions of a and the football side of the club. so since alex ferguson is
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a time if they've been several high profile managers that have taken charge at old trafford, and it seems as if it's always the same old story. what is the problem at the club? well i do think that this time is a little different. like i said, there's new ownership structure that so new decisions are being made by a new leadership team previous to the 10 logs appointment. and some of the issues with familiar with similar, you know, money just being back to the stall and then financial constrains being applied later on in, in the ears and souls. consultations with the money, the real stuff away. it was at the time. and then the leadership, which would have been edward within that time. oh, richard donald afterwards. the difficult decisions that would be made in those periods. i think this, this is a little bit different that it may look the same because all these sites a failure, failure is on, on remain when, when you look at in the about lens. i do feel like this time around the money is
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being by, it's all the way he's been given a lot of time. i think that is a very remote some decision made by the ownership excited. obviously, jim radcliffe and the people in, you know, even in place in like the osh, with an all mob router making those decisions, i think that they would have really preferred not so being stuck in advantage of 5 months into their operational direction really. and so i think it's actually we also think because obviously the question will company is a similar, similar failing, but i do think is different as a feel like he's been given every chance. i feel like the operation around him know the system, the scope is around the managers much elvia for money to succeed. and the question was really, is there enough evidence, even with the 2 co twins that united about in the last 18 months? is there enough evidence in that said that the progressing and unfortunately the results of be not in place and less 34 weeks. it saves being quite brutal um for 10
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whole oregon. and i think the last, the real problem for him as being his reaction to those defeats the famously site. well, we, i think it will go down as a famous called last week when he said he denied the result against spares because that was a red called the the, you know, the jaime league referees came out afterwards and saw civics in the box. and while the results still happened in united will play poli before that read called economy 9. what happened yesterday either even though it was false, columbia and, and a great manager could not leave so many results open start time to fall freely. and i think you didn't reweigh and i'm going to have to start your very i'm afraid we have run out of time, but thank you so much for your time. it is very much appreciated and that is all this volts news from the ser. oh, all right peter, thank you so much for that. and that wraps up this news. our we are back in just a moment at the very top of our office here. so to state
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the attempt and the costs kind of breaks group of emerging economies counterbalance the us led, weld order. china has an ask the measures to stabilize its housing market. will they work? plus we look at why type joints are increasingly turning 10. you can the energy counting the cost on that, which is 0. business latest a sponsored by intellect, global, your real estate destination into by the
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business, latest responses by him to like global your real estate destination in dubai. investigating the use and abuse of power across the globe on out just sierra, our oceans are on the switch by a for rushes, fishing industry, government, people are thinking of bring deep sea trolling back global war. he's eating off the choices, sees echo systems are going to suffer more and more with climate change, and we need to adapt. now. marine conservation is, are in
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a desperate race against time. the ocean provides services for us that we require as humanity during the last show. oh no, just and the grief and anger in northern god, more than a 1000 palestinians are killed and israel's 24 day siege. many of them women and children, the officer of any age group to have you with us. this is l 0. live from the also coming up is really politicians are set to debate bills that could band you in agencies of palestinian refugees while blocking food, water, and medicine, and parts of guns. also ahead.

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