tv NEWS 30min Al Jazeera November 13, 2024 10:00pm-10:30pm AST
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of the the israel bombs, palestinians sheltering intense and southern gaza after forcibly displacing them multiple times. the i'm sort of any, it's good to have you with us. this is allison 0 lives. some also coming up is really forces launch, at least for air strikes on civilian areas and bear with 770 and shaking the oval office as the presidential transition from joe biden to donald trump's gets underway. the protesters in support of palestine gathering amsterdam defying
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a ban on demonstrations in the center of the desk and the we started and gaza, where more than $400.00 days have passed since israel launched as genocide of war killing at least 43600 palestinians, and that includes 17000 children. the entire population is under systematic targeting, being forcibly displaced over and over again. this is all happening within a narrow strip of land where every inch is a military target palestinian officials and accused israel. as stepping up a campaign of ethnic cleansing in the north of this area has been under military seeds for more than 40 days. civilians are deliberately being denied the right to their homes, food, water, and medicine. at least 26 palestinians have been killed in multiple airstrikes
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across gauze since dawn on wednesday. this is the moment one of the attacks target attends housing forcibly displaced palestinians that's in milwaukee in the area south of the strip that is real, had designated a so called safe zone. but it has been under repeated somebody else's here as tar cowboy zoom is following the latest strikes from central. gosh, there has been a very remarkable search strikes on areas that had been designated by the isabel military to be said, humanitarians always including l. mosley in the western areas of the city of $500.00, which is only for a few kilometers away from what we are. we know that makes ship tents have been widely damaged due to that happening to especially sadie is today and not only and the last 4 people have been told to see critically testing targeted. but there has been more attacks have rained down on the, showed and seen that the noise will be tacked we at least 10 publish scenarios. i
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think on some one of the lights that tax in it devalue refuge account with age organizations have been describing the situation in the north to be incurred to clear from collapse. if we know that within the past 24 hours, only certain humanitarian, 8 folks were allowed to get into garza, a fraction of the 500 a troops a highly requires. it would have to sustain the population here and the secret service up as an out 0 there that i had assign michael factory is the united nation special rep or to or on the right the food and he says is real is using starvation as a weapon. of war i've been tracking the situation and because of since october 7th, 2023. and israel announced it's planned to start with the palestinians on october 9th. and it's done so it's focused primarily on the north. it's been clear what it's been trying to do over the past year is empty out the north. and when i say i'm to out the north there using starvation to kill people. and to forcibly
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displace people from the north while at the same time creating assignment across the entire strip. it's by denying humanitarian aid by restricting humanitarian aid, but also by destroying the food system itself denying the palestinian people the ability to feed themselves. not only is israel violating international law, its allies, such as the united states and germany, that supply weapons are aiding and abetting in genocide and starvation. so they are also complicit in war class war crimes and via fundamental violations of international law. so what's left now is what we've been calling for for over a year is a cease fire sanctions against israel. but what's changed now is israel is also attacking the un itself. it's declared the secretary general, a personal non grata. it's also shooting a peacekeepers in southern lebanon. it's killed a record number of you and stuff. and in, because we've never seen so many un stuff killed in any war. and they're attacking the independent human rights mechanisms of united nations. that means that not only
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is the israel violating international, it's talking international law, attacking the united nations by done by definition. attacking the world system itself is and israel's attacks are not limited to gaza. it is date $44.00 since the is really military launched, a ground offensive 11 on attacks of targeted thousands of buildings and homes across the country. at least 3365 people have been killed and more than 14000 have been injured. and these really military has targeted the southern suburbs they route with multiple airstrikes. plumes of black smoke rows over the area as civilians were forced to flee in panic. so in a hold, a reports from the lebanese capital, the israel controls 11 on skies. it's been dropping bombs for weeks and bait with southern suburb is about to be hit. there's atlantic at the entrances of what is known here as duffy. this is what happens when these really military issues force the evacuation orders. people leave the areas that are expected to be hit.
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there's still thousands of people who didn't leave their homes despite weeks of bombardment. most of the attacks come without warning, but at times this really military publishes maps showing buildings. it plans to target. and then this, this strikes begin. israel says it is targeting sites linked to hezbollah. for many of its supporters who live in these neighborhoods, these attacks are not just the form of military pressure. they are about the collective punishment. we've been displaced and this happens all the time. this is depression. what can i say? i hope the resistance will when the school hundreds of buildings have been destroyed since the war between israel and hezbollah escalated in september. the past 48 hours have witness would have been described as the heaviest daytime attack
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. so yet on what some call hezbollah stronghold. many people are too angry and tired to tell their story. human rights groups have said is rated warnings, are being issued a short notice and sometimes in the middle of the night. so social media, when people are sleep on on the 2nd, is she? yeah. what, oh, i live in she. yeah, we came here because they threatened to hit the building close to our home. we are waiting for the strike to happen and off the top. and that building was hit. her father has sense, like watched the strike from a few 100 meters away. he tells us he is not sure if he has a home and to return to the bottom of the lot shipments on the until now we have barely surviving wish to eating and drinking and sleeping on the bed. but if our home is destroyed, it will just listen to death situation that we're living in. and it seemed that this was going to be a long one. it's
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a concern many have is really strikes are escalating and not just invaded with southern suburb. the human cost and humanitarian consequences of this war have, according to the united nations, reached alarming levels center for there. and it shows you the data out the us presidential by and has met with president elect donald trump in the oval office at the white house. both men pledged a smooth transition from democrat to republican administrations. the white house described the meeting as substantive trumps team have yet to sign any official documents to formerly begin to process the transition test. awesome. thank you very much and
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politics is tough and it's many cases not a very nice world, but it is a nice world today, and i appreciate it very much. a transition that says as smooth as it could get very much. okay, let's speak to our white house correspondent, kimberly how can about this? kimberly. it's quite noticeable, almost humorous how, how different of an approach. donald trump is taking the transition now compared to 2016 and at the time of course he lost. so he had to give up power and now he's getting it back. a yeah. 2016. uh he won 2020 his last. sorry. yeah. uh 2016. was it? it's hard to keep it straight. 2016 was a little rough because he didn't expect when. so that was somewhat chaotic. 2020 was also chaotic because he didn't accept the results of the election. so there was
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no hand over meeting when he was the president. and joe, by him was the president elect roles for verse back then. and there was no hand over meeting. and in fact, uh what happened was, of course, not only did donald trump not respect the results of the election, but there was the storming of the capital on january 6th. and joe biden, in fact uh, was kind of left unprepared. there were no handover notes. and in when joe biden was sworn in donald trump kind of left town 2 hours before that even occurred. he wasn't even present at this ceremony. so things are very different. donald trump is now being welcome to the oval office that tradition has been restored. joe biden is very much a senior statesman. he wants to promise the american people. there will be a peaceful transition restore that transition, revive that tradition, and really make sure that the institutions of democracy are back and that people
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could have faced and then once again, right, kimberly how kit reporting from the white house. thank you very much. republicans have elected john thune to serve as the senate majority leader for the next 2 years through and will serve his term under president elect. donald trump. he replaces long time majority leader. mitch mcconnell who is due to step aside in january a we have a mandate from the american people mandate not only to clean up the mess left by the hi wide here as tumor agenda, but also to deliver on president trump's priorities. we will make sure that the president and his team have the tools and support that they need to enforce border security laws, and to remove the violent criminals who were wreaking havoc in every one of our states. we will work to make america prosperous again by streamlining the bureaucratic machine and overturning costly biting harris regulations. a she
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advertise sees in washington dc. she had 1st a little bit of housekeeping. how do we actually pronounce students name and my saying it? right. can you educate us and secondly, what control and what can we in the viewers expect from john? do what are you going to be worried? actually? i really think john figured, probably i didn't realize my producer. i just have to go to bed. why do i, i can inspect your typical questions from you, at least make it. i'm so i can jump even for now. that's that's that's, that's the news from here. um, beyond that, yes, i mean he's, he's typing fealty like the rest of the republican establishing party. he's made his basement on trumpet, even though he said some political things in the past. and frankly, what's not to like with donald trump, despite the talk of a revolution and make america great again, it's, it is basically a conservative establishing the drum, the tax cuts for the rich coast cutting, you know, cutting immigration, drill, baby, drilling, oil and gas, certain limits of defense fund pending unlimited spending on israel the only the
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only potential points of contention. not he is in the end and the liberal neoconservatives are. he's not someone who's in favor of tire of special serenade on trade is a new liberal passing on you credit. and he's very much someone who's outspoken about his love for the idea of proxy water games rusher. unless may at least normally trump and is move with or against against that. so that's interesting. but he said look, you were going to confirm all the terms appointments in the senate. that's one of the, one of the responsibilities for the senates. having said that, about the way of sing too, because we know some of the establishment conservatives are a bit worried about someone like robert f. kennedy junior at his controversial, he's got a few points on vaccines. other things that larry, if that was one of the reasons why, you know, trump is trying to change some procedural things so that, you know, he got, he got people like that confirmed anyway, that will be interesting to watch out for the film about spencer, you know, in the sense he's 60 votes deposited on fiscal legislation if from somebody's as well that we've only got 53. can we? can we scrap this on the bus?
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so yeah, that will be of the things to watch because to just as soon just said that he's a he's, he's committed to the boss. this is the potential platforms. but more often than not the content will establish things behind trump anyway. okay, i put that in your head and put the pronunciation in. sure. now you will correct the record or, or maybe not corrected, but you'll set the record straight when we speak again later. thank you so much. you have your types of reporting from the capital administrators or routing and support of palestine and central amsterdam in defiance of a band imposed after a week of violence. and the dutch capital pensions remained high officers, really football fans visiting the city last week of tact, taxi drivers, and chanted empty arab slogans before being attacked themselves. earlier the dutch parliament held an emergency session to discuss the rights. and it's full though it is. all right, politician, gear builders, you just saw him there. says those convicted in connection with a tax on his really football fans must be deported as 0 step boston is at the
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demonstration in amsterdam step. how is it going also, why was this bad? and since it was bad and clearly we can see behind you is taking place, how police dealing with that well it. so for the heated situation here at sam square and i'm to them, police is now detaining a all the process is one by one being the rest away from this throw that you can see here, behind me a policeman in black mass as well. they are coming in and out right away the central texas. so some of them i've read screaming, some of them have been dragged over to the ground here. they have been taken to these boxes and these buses are going to an alternative process location according to police. this is what the mirror has told them that they are of this thing. she was lifting the band temporarily. there is a protest band in place since last friday because of the riots that happened between them. a crab telling me to go so far because i'm residents and i'm so that
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she has emergency mattress at a protest that which is set to lift this one. but only it's also allowed to take place in the park, but for the last few hours, a few 100 protests which have been protesting against the china side and gas, or they have the know those kind of thing. as logan said, police has surrounded them from the beginning and now they're taking them out. so one by one. and some of them are really resisting autos are uh, comedy walking with them. it was a peaceful process from the beginning. they just been saying and then scrapping slogans. i'm out of place. you can see i see how we can see it. it's holding to fix to be to protest us who are not trying not working with them. no telling totally people falling on the floor on the ground here on them square. this is really the heart of the city. 2 of the dodge capital is always tory, is part of the city. so this is where this is all taking place. so right now,
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more police is coming also to assist. i think there's a few 100 police around the square right now. a lot of police times as well, and the people, even in the boxes are us, are shouting from inside, shouting slogans against the genocide and gotcha, so, so step i'm, we're continue to watch this. thank you so much for showing and we can see it very clearly. the scene you just described is playing out live for of yours. how are you able to estimate roughly how many people are there like? can you give us a sense of the crowd size and am i getting it right that the police basically wants to get rid of this protest entirely? yes, they want to get rid of this protest entirely. there were a few 100 protests of a 2 or 3 hours ago. i would say they were gathering up here on the square. so they knew that this was a bands progress. so they also warn people that if they would appear here, that they would fall under us risks to be arrested. so they also said bring banners,
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but maybe just bring blank banner. so that's, you know, as, as, as a symbol basically off being silenced because people were carrying also by, let's say, we want to speak out, we need to speak out against the china side and gas and yukon, just silence us. we have a democratic right. and what we heard today in parliament in the hate was that song parties, 12 for sale to limit these democratic rights. they want to limit demonstration rights. so that's also one of the reasons people gathering here today to protest against that as well. so yeah, a lot of anger here and frustration about what's going on here and answer them for the last week. lots of events and the sanction is still really pretty high. i have to say step nice and thank you very much. i know you'll keep monitoring that for us . you're in amsterdam and we'll keep checking back in with you. thank you very much step. so in your report, predicts carbon emissions from fossil fuels will reach
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a new height in 2024 according to the global carbon budget. assessment, there are no clear signs yet of the peak emissions that is urgently needed to limit the global warming, the amount of carbon being released into the atmosphere from both fossil fuel use and the land use changes increasing. the warning comes, this countries meet the nozzle by john. so the latest round of you in climate talks alpha 0 as environment that attorney clark reports from buckle. i think they will call that budget makes interesting, but deeply troubling. reading. personal feeling, emissions at a record high, c o 2 concentrations, 52 percent higher than they were back at pre industrial times. that was $280.00 parts per 1000000 of c o. 2, then now it's 423 parts for 1000000. all this demonstrates just how urgently money is needed, especially for developing nations. we're talking trillions not billions. whereas the money coming from who's going to pay for it. we spoke to
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a key climate finance expo. the financing gaps a huge. it's estimated that the developing world needs $2.00 trillion dollars. now to put that into some kind of context, once you get over a few b and it's hard to think of these numbers, all of the 8 in the world is 200 feet. so this is 12 times 12 times all of the i didn't watch, that's what the developing world needs for the energy transition. i'm fine with the finance in general. so that's, that's just me to gauging the climate, reducing emissions. it's also making them stronger, more resilient to the change in climate and for some loss and damage is already taking place about $2.00 trillion dollars towards the one trillion dollars big. so finally, optimistically, i think of some of that money is assumed will come domestic. this energy transition the, the much of the analysis says is good for the countries if they can afford if they
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can afford. it is a big question, but once they can afford, it is good for the growth good for development. it's for means of savings come from electrification. savings and fuel costs, savings and health multiplan dying from a pollution from fossil fuels to the dying from climate change today. so lots of savings to come. if they can afford it, the problem is they can afford it's moving. so they're gonna need about one trillion to come from overseas. so that's where the one trillion fits in of the 2.4 to one full trillion is all the finance we do for developing countries. but a trillion has to come from abroad because they don't have enough money locally to finance at old themselves. or patrick victorian is the chief executive at the global center on adaptation who joins us from back who and also by john. so we were saying just before we heard next report there that we have the carbon budget assessment, which is really the world way of looking how much carbon dioxide is released into
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the atmosphere. and this is exactly what needs to go down in order to limit contain global warming. and we now know that it is still going up. can you walk us slowly through that so that everybody so that we can all get on board with the very fundamental facts and this conversation as well. thank you so much sarah. sarah, indeed, and the facts are very simple and they're very depressing. why in 2015 impair as well, lead is a gathered and they agreed that indeed accomplishes, would go down. what do we see today that the comment of uses? not only going up where they're going on, how fast they're going to after before. so this parent has agreement, the climate agreement, this pollution control agreement, which is currently being negotiated again here in bottle and assets is failing. it's failing international community, but it's particularly failing local communities living on the phone line. we see
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the climate impacts across the globe escalating from the hurricane in florida. sort of lots in valencia and to the drought into storms in african, across the glove. so why do we need to do? we need to face the reality that the per areas agreement as it was set to originally has to be trans. it has to be re imagined from just a pollution control regime to dave park, so a resilient economy receipt. we need to make sure that our economies become robust against the climate sharks. what we see today is very different, what we will see tomorrow or the day off the patrick boss for a 2nd. any pause. can you post for a 2nd? you're getting this right? you're saying essentially we're supposed to bring pollution down, we're not doing it, we're polluting more than we used to. and so we have to we have to know,
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adapt ourselves to another goal, which is how to handle what's coming. is that what you're saying? instead of bringing down to pollution instead of containing warming, we have to adapt to what is now inevitable. is that what i'm hearing or? but that's what you're hearing, sir on. it's not like you're just hearing from me. that's what you already heard. for the last 10 and 50 years that we need to do 2 things at the same time, we need to lower a common footprint of calls does fall priority. know what happening. but at the same which is not happening and often at the same time, we cannot be enough if you live in africa, if you live in, say, canada in mclean, he is a small town outside. now, roby. last year you get the mass of drivers, the largest drought for decades. this year your props are washed away because of the floss. if you want smaller farm, i mean you, you have to face the reality that you are either adapt now, but they fact. so you die. so adaptation is the leaders from the global styles are saying here in baku has to be front and center of oil development. whether it's an
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agriculture in energy and industry in transportation, we not really have to step up and 0. the reality is this, we have these climates so much these climate gatherings every single year, 3 years in the international community, gather nothing by cool, but in glasgow and in gloss. go do rich country said, well, we will double climate finance for adaptation. and where are we now 3 days or 3 years later, this promise is also not full failed. so if you were to give a score card to the climate, government and system mitigation failure, adaptation failure. so we have to re imagine and but 1st and foremost, we need to face the facts if you and i believe in science. well, local communities don't even have to believe in science, the daily base. it's patrick, the message couldn't be clear. i'm sorry,
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we could spend more time on this, but i do have to run. um, thank you very much for that though. it's, as i said, it is extremely clear what you're telling us, patrick, their quote number to the banking of it, the global center on adaptation. thank you. all right, let's turn to gaza and the occupied westbank. now israel has banned the un agency for palestinian refugees from operating in the country, and the last hour its chief philip plaza really has worn of catastrophic consequences if on why i cannot operate the defense. so you in would not be able to operate and to provide this critical services so on, in that case, the only i've done that even an option is that the owners of the responsibility goes back to the okay, thank power. meaning that each one will be responsible to provide descriptive services. you start on the guys which is a, which is a steak,
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but we have also the rest of the west bank and is there was a them gabriel, who is under is that the united nations headquarters in new york? gabriel? we were just listening to that. it's really quite remarkable the head of a human agency who is basically looking down the barrel of the agencies demise. yeah, that's right, and i think that's why he was here un headquarters in new york. he spoke to the general assembly and a committee there. and then spoke to journalists, as you just saw, the state and future of unrra is very much in doubt. we've known that to and for the plaza, really told journalists, he said that the unreal has been under attack for more than a year. now, by a political miss information campaign, by israel, it's important to step back just for a 2nd and remind viewers because this is what was there any reminded us as well. 243 unrest staff had been killed since october last year
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in gaza because of is really bombardment in guys, a 243 unrest staff killed. that doesn't even mention their extended family members that have been killed as well. and also a 2 thirds of all unreal facilities, whether it be schools or medical clinics or offices in guys that have been damaged or destroyed to 3rd. so it's clearly been and it's terribly terrible here for on ro gabriel. so the israel's ban on wall comes into effect if i'm not mistaken, late january or there abouts. what happens at the end of january for the palestinians who depend on the food distributions on the shelters, on the schools, on the primary health care facilities. all of those things that one of our runs, or i'm gonna answer that question with 3 words. it goes away, and those aren't my words. those are the words from sleepy lives there any. there
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is no other un agency that has the capability to do everything that on read does to provide all of the services, whether it be financial education or health services to hundreds of thousands of palestinians that under a does and has been doing for decades. now those services would go away if fun route goes away. you are right that this is really legislation that goes into effect late january sleep with, as a really said, we will continue to work in palestine in guys for as long as we physically can. he said we will not voluntarily pull out. he says we will remain now israel says they, they, they, they think other n g owes for other un agencies can fill the gap and run. the un says absolutely not only american do the job that they're doing and it would go away if conrad goes
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away. gabe, thank you very much. that's the gabriel, that was under reporting from you in headquarters in new york. and people in the break away region of somali land has voted in poles to choose their next leader. it comes amid escalating regional tensions between smaller yeah, and if the opium over a port deal, they'll come lab reports president lu, safety. he is seeking a 2nd to the elections which you 2 years ago when parliament delayed them. critics said he was trying to eva, stay in office. he voted in hong k, sir, the capital of break away region of some money lands somebody loves today is a historic and golden data. old. the molly non people, the people vote for anyone or any party. they want to be the president point, the expected to be a close race between the.
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