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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  December 30, 2024 12:00am-1:01am AST

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all there is no limit to how far a dream contains sta in your own adventure, no counter and the . ready ready ready the hello, i'm how much in room this is the news our live for me to have coming up in the next 60 minutes is real. a tax to garza, city hospitals as its forces continue to destroy the health care system industry. growing concerns about the safety of cum, i'd want a hospitals director detained by israel. his family appeals for support to secure his release and his really are a strike on an ammunition depot. on the outskirts of serious capital kills 10
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people. south korea's acting president declares 7 days of morning after a plane crash. control is 179. people plus attorney chang on the end of the coast. where the rick this trying to recover the worst. carl bleaching events recorded history and spore and living full trash, west ham 5. now to extend their lead at the top of the primarily mom itself on the square sheets again as already for the record breaking season in charge. continue. the israeli forces have launched air strikes on 2 hospitals in northern gaza, continuing their destruction of the strips health care system. in the past 24 hours, at least 30 palestinians have been killed and hundreds of others injured. the attacks. com is freezing temperatures,
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bring new dangers for forcibly displays promised in and seeking shelter. honey. my mode reports from theater by and a warning. few words may find some of the pictures in his report distressing of these holes in the walls of a what the hospital. so the aftermath of another healthcare facility targeted by is re submitted because facilities and all the city were told only patients were treated and orders had fox shelters isn't rolling through the shadow. quoted, doors, medical equipment on pain says belongings lie dead on the concrete. a lot, a lot of us out by far enough, i was selling tea and coffee and suddenly and is rainy. miguel landed on the 10th behind 20, almost a dozen were killed and many more injured. we pulled off a number of dead bodies from the site and they're all ripped to pieces. just, i was barely hospitalized poison gas and its upper floors are now severely damaged
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. is ro phase it was targeting some of the fighters. he reads by these read an army show, no signs of stopping on friday is really forces set fire to canada runs hospital north da, the last functioning hospitals, forcing hundreds to lead. it's a staff included the director of this of the where a rested and his whereabouts are on hospitals are meant to be a safe haven for palestinians receiving medical care. but israel, the steps of military campaign is a crippling dial the health care system, since the war began. 3rd to 3 hospitals have gone out of service. many people are using them as filters. now phase further displacement thompson has been taught to him as guides or faces. one of which killed is winter in the years. several babies have died of hypothermia. among them is a 20 day old jamal baton. this is the moment his father had to carry his lifeless
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body out of the hospital. when his twin brothers fights for survival in intensive care. look at his color because of the cold. what do you see? how frozen here? where can i get it like this? the good neighbors brought me a number of them. it brought them quotes and i dressed them, have nothing to warrant them. they need a special nursery. i couldn't buy 4 metres of nylon to make a special nursery for them to protect them from dogs or forcibly displaced the winter brings more challenging for the blankets and other windows supplies held up at the check point. a waiting was very approval. families base of freezing temperatures intense without nowhere warm to run any more for more. how does your data from there, the last of the palestine the family of sam, of a severe, has released a statement on his detention. it's posted by one of his sons on social media and
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says, we do not know the fate of our father. we appeal to you to take action, raise awareness, exert media pressure, and produce reports to pressure the occupation for his immediate release. our father is now suffering from the extreme cold. you have all heard from eye witnesses were recently released about how my father was forced to strip off his clothes, including his medical code. and it was used as a human shield. but as a for roger's an assistant professor at business at the university and a researcher on political prisoners, he joins us from occupied easterwood and basil, thanks for being with us. what more do you know at this hour about the detention of dr. i've also for you this actually hasn't means a lot of we didn't, we didn't know much about about his, his whereabouts as you have to mention in the report, which is actually a part of a long standing policy that is written has been practicing against anybody's spinning that the team, whether it is from the get with the gaza strip or the west bank is there,
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it is actually intentionally hiding the about as of no, it is, but it's been a business including including the director of the committed. one of them is, of course, part of the policy that is there, it has been practicing to torture that it needs, but also to place the families in this a continuous stage of whitening of i'd say the nothing what's happening to their loved ones and actually a and why in the torturing, but it's been indigent ease and ensuring that they have no access to any legal visits. we know that the director of the card as well as with the husband that is not receiving any no, it was just because his dad is existing this policy against or but it's getting to the news at this kind of diploma. just the way to begin. basil, as you mentioned, this has happened to other health care workers and doctors in gaza from your vantage point. how does the detention of dock travel, sophia, compare to those other doctors and medical workers that have been taken from casa in the past year and a half as well?
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it's, it's part of the systematic policy that actually intends to destroy the health care system in the gaza strip. we know that notice, but his thing is that gives you over over 300, but it's been, it has good workers have been detained by this. and you also do some of the gaza strip since that will begin based. but as they mean, did you use way other cent this ticket has gone, including said the demand or the order or later on a move to also to present another minute of disability extensions. and there's across a, but there's no referred to as is, or we know that these, but it's getting to the news i've had in a holding this imprisonment conditions. they are denied access to lawyers. they are denied any form of communication with the family members that actually the course the conditions are very that they are provided minimum, minimum the fluids are denied medical goods. we know that they are, they are subject to to know. but as far as the violence of the things is that they have to mention that one of the palestinian busters and then bush was actually
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executed. and he died because of torture. in april 2024. and also the president, following his detention from a ship, a hospital enable to. so with that to be know, we do know that, but his pinion has good workers and medics a whole lot edited but is a i thought these are suffering immensely because it was really just about the quantities of torture and violence. and add to that the psychological visit, pressured, that is your yes sort displaced the feminist. and what do you have were exempt? you have no idea what's taking place. do you loved ones inside this? is there any business about? so since you're talking about the impact that all this has on relatives and loved ones, of those that are being detained or had been detained, i wanted to ask you about the fact that we've seen that statement now from dr. ebel sophia's family saying that they don't know his fate, they're asking on many around the world to exert pressure so that they can find out what's happened to their father if he is being held in indefinite detention. are they at some point going to be able to communicate with him? is that so at some point does say that. so it does are actually the way to do it
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from some for some lawyers and legal legal concept because we're about to the fact is that since the war began to zeta sorts had been intentionally hiding this information, in fact, changing laws. and we do know that these are the students heads from the guns is chipped. um i've heard under the what's, what's referred to as unlawful combatants. so, so they are, they're continually changing noise to hide the whereabouts into additional funds to the business. eventually they wouldn't be able to know where at least, where he is currently being code, but this does not take away from the, the urgency of it at the because again, there's a 3rd, a 3rd is intentionally hide information from somebody saying. so i mean is that in fact, we have to be very honest that there's a lot of this because of the violence that we have been hearing because of the daughter that the doctor has been subject to to in addition to other medic medical good workers. this is a very painful and serious condition. every minute the buses is crucial, we have to continue existing pressure on,
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on that one dimension for me to human duty organizations to into forced as a dispute additional what's taking place and what's happening to the submitting a workers. and of course, to, to change this condition where we were recently the w h o, a said that the diagnosis jim, when student have no access to any functioning medication, hospitalized across the guns and battle just briefly. um, this action taken by these really authorities, when it comes to doc, trouble, sophia, and other medical workers and the gaza strip. it definitely does contravene international law. i suppose it does, it does. but what we know, what that is, and has been continuously contributing international law making any form of, of, of the guy that the, during the world has um, an issue that goes to by the state but which is the 2023. but unfortunately, because of the company was a denial of unemployment, but as soon as rights it's got has been practicing it's would continue to do is to do so. so as long as the united states and other governments are providing cover
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and legal color, but as you guys are just all right, but as far as just as a professor at business that university thanks so much for joining us and just share a great to get your perspective in central gaza is really forces have launch airstrikes on and they'll say it out. the refugee camp children are among the several palestinians killed in a residential area with few ambulances available. the injured were carried on blankets and mattresses, to seek medical help, serve in protest and practiced on against israel's war on gauze and thousands of people demonstrated in islamabad against israel's aggression and us support for the war. the head of the mouth. this allow me party labeled israel's actions as genocide is the i the terrorism as well as committing is genocide against the palestinians. under all the conventions in cha has to be human rights via the geneva convention or any other. it is no
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secret that this is applied to genocide committed by benjamin netanyahu. it is right the at least 10 people have been killed in an air strike on the town of audra, which is on the outskirts of the syrian capital, damascus. the target, according to security sources, wasn't ammunition depot. syria has been on the receiving end of nearly $500.00 airstrikes from israel since the fall of the said redeem, much of serious military infrastructure has been destroyed. serious civil defense says it has discovered 3 mass graves on the outskirts of homes. it says it's managed to recover around 20 bodies, and it's continuing its search. numerous mass graves estimated to contain thousands of bodies have been discovered since i said was ousted. the former government was repeatedly accused of widespread extrajudicial killings, including mass executions,
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ash and i had about a joins us from the capital, damascus. as you tell us more about these is really strikes on damascus of the habit of statements by a senior official of the new administration in the master said that this was an at friday as part of the talking to munition depot in the honda, which is in the industrial hub on the outskirts of the comforts of damascus about 10 people. what can we don't know, but at least were civilians in the vicinity of the area for us. so just task with securing the arms depot and this is not the 1st time that these writers have targeted areas in syria is the collapse of the government of us out as that they've been dozens and dozens of as strikes here in the us goes in how much in data also, and also in different parts of the country. these ready governments position so far
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has been that those as price targets it made, it took capabilities to ensure that what this won't fall into the hands of iso and any other rebates. and because of that could use it to undermine security of the security of these red. it means that, excuse me, it's on situation. and these writers have this thing in the past, but they will continue to monitor l. the movers and define the developers on the ground in syria and hash. and we've been hearing about mass graves that have been discovered 3 that have been discovered on the outskirts of homes. but it's believed that there's many more correct indeed. so the latest one in homes where they are for they said it is the bodies of 20 people who kids during the uprising in city about that. they believe that the biggest is going to be in because they felt which is not far from the comforts of damascus. they said
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they could perhaps become the biggest, most gray in the country. now this is so crucial for the government for human rights are. this is fulton county for the people who are still looking for their loved ones who have been missing for many years. now, according to the city and human rights committee, more than a 150000 civilians remain on the list of the recipients of the policies us in the figure out. what happened to the united nations has been very active in these process. things that it's so crucial to find those best way. so i'm the identify facts of the ground to be able to get to the rates as of those atrocities. so that they faced via for those of us didn't here in the syria for those of the country including president was the former president of a sudden i said his brother my head. and i said, i'd see a members of the army and the intelligence agencies that,
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that's all these years has been, was about joining us from the capital of syria, damascus has them. thanks so much for breaking that all down for us. the new syrian administration is collecting weapons from different groups as part of a deal to unite all factions under the ministry of defense. but the agreement does not include the us back and curtis lead syrian democratic forces, which control large areas of eastern syria, encore, a designates, the kurdish lead, s d f, as a terrorist, organization, lebanon who sent back more than 70 officers of serious former regime to the new authorities in damascus, the officials had fled there after the fall of the shuttle said earlier this month . meanwhile, the new administration is stepping up its operations across the nation, especially in the north western regions of the talk you and talk to us. both areas are strong, hold of a sense of minority allied sex and if faced unrest during the past weeks, the interior ministry blames the violence on what it says are remnants of the former regime, solemn inch of a. it is at the port and we'll talk you and reports on the attacks on serious military infrastructure by israel. since the fall of us a,
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the entire fleet of the city and navy is now sitting at the bottom of the ocean. this is the port of the talk you is really strikes have carried a taken out all of this area and this, these are multiple ships. it's not just one. we can see the house of multiple ships here. the extent of the damage here becomes care. once you come closer to these boats, this was part of the top of the board, which now sits here are the area, the capabilities, the air defense capability of the air force capabilities. the naval capabilities of the city, an army have all being taken out and what be found in the rooms adjacent to these ship, sir, records logs, maintenance and other details of not just personnel but the, the, the rockets, the records, the, the, the maintenance of these ships etc, and it was maintained on a daily basis. so i'm of the show as government and says that it is going to focus on the internal security of this country. but even if it wanted to go for any sort
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of defensive procedures or anything else on the borders in the sea or in the air, it no longer has the capability. and what the people here have been tending in this ford is that yes, the civilian side of the port is intact and the ministry side as being taken out. but it even for the 70 inside to come back for any of the company. the operation the is going to take years because a lot of this has been neglected for decades. solomon jobs as a 0. it looks like you for planning more ahead on the news hour, including pro issues. presidential election is headed for a run off for life from the capital software was coughing, soil in dm in not in charge of voters i left last calls, representative for the main opposition costs. how 4th quarter of the election. i'll tell you why. the
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south korea is acting president. choice on mark has declared 7 days of morning after sundays plane crash that killed nearly everyone on board. only 2 crew members survived. 179 people died. emergency crews are continuing to search through the wreckage. both black boxes have now been recovered. the judge you airplane was trying to land at one international airport in the southwest. official say it's one of the country's worst aviation disastrous problem. mcbride has this update from the airport on the whole of the 2nd floor of the airport terminal. it should be the departure section. this has been turned over to the needs of the families. this is where the support teams off organizations like the red cross. so here handing out the meals and blankets as we get into the hours of nighttime and people are still anxiously awaiting for use of their loved ones. also, we've had the setting up a pop up yellow 10 says people here,
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stay as family groups together. and down at that end of the terminal building, we have government officials giving out information as of when it comes through and sadly for many people also, the confirmation of the identification of some of the victims is names poignantly red. as on the tunnel, we system confirming that people have been identified also as we get further into the aftermath of this tragedy. and that is also setting up tables for the collection of d n. a. samples, which will be the only way of roommate of identifying some of the remaining victims of this tragedy find everywhere there. is this a growing sense of grief? sometimes people uh, completely destroyed as you would imagine. a lot of times though, people here are sitting around in families or wandering around in family groups adjusted in a sense of disbelief, a kind of a stones silence and what took place here. the last moments of
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j u. s. like 2216, scathing on each valley along the runway. before hating a perimeter barrier exploding into flames. one apple to issued a warning of possible strikes at the time and video shot from the ground seemed to show one of the boeing $73.00 7th engines blowing out the play and issued a made a distress. cool. and then crushed 4 minutes later, the terminal building at the airport has now become the center of operations for the different emergency and support teams dealing with the optimal. but also for the relatives of victims waiting for news. the croft who is operated by south korea's biggest low cost carrier j u a who c o has apologized for the tragedy, but says there was nothing wrong with the plane of some people. one of the to we
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have services aircraft in accordance with the maintenance program, and there was no sign of anything unusual with this claim. but it's not known yet why it's lending get watson table to deploy. this is a almost 3 kilometer long runway, very long runaway compared to most other international airport. so i suspect that for whatever reason, the aircraft not only had a land bigger issue, it might have had an issue with other aircraft systems. those black box, like record, is, have been recovered from the seen as the investigation into the cause of the worst aviation tragedy on south korean soil gets underway. through the government will mobilize all available resources to ensure swift, risky operations and sadly investigate the cause of the incident. the 2 survivors were crew members, one man, one woman who was thought to have been in the very rear tail sections that separated from the rest of the plane. as it was engulfed in flames. emergency teams
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that being facing the difficult task of identifying victims. many of whom died in the pharaohs, just fire off to the crash. it's known most would have come from this one south, west corner of the korean peninsula were returning home from christmas vacation from the cried out due to era, the one south korea keith mackey is an aircraft accident investigator and aviation consultant. he says the videos from the scene contained many clues, but we'll have to wait for the official report. the landing gear was clearly up. so a bird strikes would not be related to not being able to extend the landing gear. now on this airplane, the higher plan has an emergency system to extend the landing here. the pilots would have to go through the procedure. and that always works and you get the land the year down. now if for some reason that procedure doesn't work and then we're going to land what the gear up they would have been formed, the tower, the remedy would probably have been phones. there would have been fire trucks in
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place. i would have been expecting a gear of the landing, but that wasn't the case. it appears that the airplane is a salary that they are cramped or on the engine pods, rolling down the wrong way, it wouldn't go very far. this lot of drugs stopped short order, but it continued to a cell or rate until it hit that wall for at the end of the run line. so i think we're going to find the, the crew added power and attempted to get the airplane back into the air, and that was the cause of the accident. now that was just my opinion from what i say, it was to be covered completely under the official accident investigation. we'll see if that was relevant or not breaking news to bring you former us president jimmy carter has died at the age of 100. he served just one term as president, but considered the impact he made once he left the office as the more important part of his life, patty go, hand looks back, it is legacy. at the age of 90 jimmy carter announced he had cancer and is it
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spread to his brain? i just thought i had a few weeks left, but i was a surprisingly edy's to say no i, i've had a lot of wonderful life. i've had thousands of friends and, and i've had an exciting and adventurous and ratify existence. so i was surprisingly that he, he would stay on the world just a few months later by announcing thanks to a new treatment. he was cancer free. at 92 years old he was briefly hospitalized after he became dehydrated, but helping to build homes for the poor. he was back on site the following day. his was the typical american story with very, a typical results. born in the small town of plains, georgia, he joined the navy, studied nuclear physics and married the girl next door. literally, he 1st saw his wife on the day she was born when he was just 3 years old,
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especially i have it. it was my writing mostly that that's a physical of my life of the peanut farmers turned politician. and after one term is the governor of georgia. he became the democratic nominee for president when he easily was a public dated by watergate and his slogan. trust me for a long white plains to washington dc, but we've had a great deal of progress slightly. jimmy called to do solemnly swear in office. his domestic accomplishments were limited, remembered mostly for high interest rates and inflation that led to a recession. his bigger impact was in foreign policy. he broker peace between israel and egypt within 1978 camp david accords. normalize relations with china, and negotiate of assault to nuclear treaty with the soviet union. but he would later, blake out the olympics there and protested that countries invasion of afghanistan, his legacy is most closely tied. with this november 1979,
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the u. s. embassy into iran was stormed. more than 60 americans were taken hostage . he ordered with turned out to be a bunch pressed to attempt in large part because of that card lost his bid for re election to ronald reagan. the carter successfully negotiated the release of the hostages, still around decided to fed them until just minutes after reagan was inaugurated, which he would later reflect on publish. i sent one more helicopter to forget the hostages, and we would have rescued when i would have been re elected. but that may have and that may have interfered with the foundation of the carter center. and if i had to choose between former years and the quarter, so then i think i would use the quarter. so one last name is wide open. the carter center dedicated decades to providing human rights and democracy overseen elections . often leading with leaders to us considered unfriendly and targeting diseases in the developing world. and she was a very vocal critic of israel are treated like
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then like a lindsey he was a man who reached the height of the presidency, won the nobel peace prize, helped millions by tackling disease and dictators and promoted peace even when it was controversial back home his 29th and final book was titled a full life for jimmy carter. it most certainly was jabber tom's. he joins us from washington, d. c. job. of course, these days. jimmy carter is really seen as a statesman. somebody who's respected by many international actors. but that contrasts greatly with his reputation at the end of his presidency when he was deeply unpopular. that's really quite a contrast where he was as a president and what he accomplished after his presidency. correct? or? yeah, absolutely right. if i don't talk to you actually him to them,
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some of the reasons for that popularity that because in many ways he was one of the 1st president was to really start dismantling the social safety net in the, in the us and an officer in the decades of the regulations that we saw underwriting it and then bill clinton, which of course meant that people were suffering a great deal with a high interest rates and everything else. you know, he really for all of his joe or shucks, good guy, stuff. he's the one who let corporate america into the us and basically destroyed you eventually what, what has become destroyed? is that middle class american dream of a house with a middle class. we own a middle class salary, so that's one part of it. and then yeah, as you say, i own on international policy is, remember to camp david, i'm gonna tell you that's still a bit controversial, especially when you're going to be around that. i'll just hear a perhaps because that's a debate as to what about rebec kept david in some way, but also he was a real cold warrior as i think patty suggested that with the boy code of the survey, the survey that lympics, he was a big part around putting up the very heart tools that we saw throughout the
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developing world during the cold war between the us and the soviet union here was the forwarded all the right wing depths, quads in central america in asia, and in um, in africa, in the middle east. and songs because as long as he was, this was part of this special x, a central, baffled against the soviet union from the genocide of east timor to probably got the south korean dictators as i killed students on mass and, and so on. so, you know, and you have published presidency, it was so different from a foreign policy started, but not afraid of a basically say no, this is, this is a big mistake. and all of this stuff was a big mistake. not afraid to leave it all at once. i bill clinton, who, you know, i mean, and then so many of you, the president obama, for example, they take the corporate cash and they go on that book to us. and they say, oh yeah, the palestinians would have never had it so good and so on. and i called her yeah, you write books about it. so i know this is nonsense, you know, the tentative most of the palestinians, the deal of the century on,
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on the 2 state solution. for example. it's a very, i'm afraid to challenge orthodoxies and foreign policy. post presidency, but very much part of about incredibly violent foreign policy. but the car drives us policy in general in the cold war should have the will part of carter's legacy be that he is remembered as somebody as a former president who was perhaps at least by american standards, more consequential than people 1st thought that he was the perhaps he was the head of his time and the way that he and the way that he acted and carried out certain presidential duties. i would not for good reasons. i would say he offered in that they're liberal, that new liberal dismantlement of the american dream and to us by lowering. yeah. but, but by letting market forces take over, whether was one's a social safety net, sir. um, you know, it was affected by reagan and clinton but, but he's of on there. so i'm, so i'm letting that in. you're breaking up that new deal. a consensus that and then
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yeah, on foreign policy, very much part of the, the stabilize ation of anyone trying to not be heads up, you know, not to try and challenge us to germany around the world. williams suggests that they may even fall into the so good, so good old but so yeah it we, i'm afraid if we're going to be nice about him and let me just pause. it has to be about his post presidency. i guess during, i was probably mention the one china policy which, which, which was a diplomatic diplomatic, the very courageous of the time perhaps, which is just yet to decide that we're not going to. yeah, the, what's the radically, we still have the one china policy older joe biden has put in most for games. you gotta give it to you about that. but secondly, i come in thailand, china. yeah, these are, these are perhaps things the best dealt with by truck, the china and taiwan. and i couldn't to 3 side domestically. he did try and you have a better public health. i'm sure, in a public health system which was more fair. it was with close to, to a universal health idea of what it was that was destroyed by will,
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the will be up in french and all these that we still see has a there. all right, there's obviously a sharper time to live for us in washington dc. thanks so much. you have barbara perry is a professor at presidential studies at the university of virginia is miller center . she joins us from louisville, kentucky. barbara, thanks for being with us here on alger 0. i wonder if i could ask you a bit about jimmy carter's legacy. here's somebody who was a southern governor known for being a peanut farmer in georgia, was very unpopular by the end of his term in office. and yet, after that fact, seen very much as a statesman, somebody who many years later won the nobel prize. what do you think his ultimate legacy will be? i think it will be the beginning of his presidency. you are right that he left office very unpopular, but then people did say also is you're pointing out that he was one of the best post presidents we've ever had. in fact,
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he created the model for the post presidency. so that's one of his legacy is not just the work, but he did do the carter center along with mrs. carter, the former 1st lady, i think we should mention her to as part of his legacy of the carter administration . but what i mean by the beginning of his presidency is that we need to remember why he was elected as a southern populace. i, as someone who said, i will never lie to you. he really righted the ship of state after watergate after the resignation of richard nixon to add the pardoning of richard nixon by gerald ford. and so it was jimmy carter who defeated ford and also became a moderate democratic president, showed the way for someone like get a bill clinton to win as a moderate democrat in 92. so i think those will go down in history, but i just don't think that you can gain, say, the importance of his setting the ship of state on a right course after the scandals of watergate. but barbara, let me ask you,
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there is a perception amongst some political analysts in the us that jimmy carter did what he thought was correct. even when it may have cost him politically. do you think that that's the case? was that part of was that part of his presidency? was that part of the reason that he was a one term president as well? i think the reason he was a, one term president was the iranian hostage crisis that he was only able to settle in the waning moments of his presidency after you'd already been defeated in the land slide by ronald reagan and 1980. but also the economy of miracles, white and as we are now looking back at the 2024 election are said to have a voted donald trump, back in the office because of their upset over inflation, which at its highest and most recently was perhaps 9 percent it was almost double that uh, in the jimmy carter presidency i. so i think that and the fact that i was yes talking about what he thought was right. he thought it was right to say to the
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american people that sometimes we have to sacrifice. so in the midst of the energy crisis in the oil crisis of that era of the late 19 seventy's, he told americans turned down your thermostat. let's reduce the speed limit. don't put up christmas lights. americans don't want to hear that, but he thought that they should and it may have that may have cost him the presidency as well. barbara, let me ask you about one of the cartridge signature treatments, of course the camp david accords. a brokering peace between israel and egypt. how difficult was that for carter and his administration to accomplish as well as we can see. now, it's always difficult to bring those 2 sides in the middle east just to the peace table to begin with. much less to get them to agree to, to live peaceably. and so the fact that he did that at camp david bob between the noncom begun and so dot the head of egypt, i think speaks to not only jimmy carter's creative and he and his ability to see
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into the future. and as i just mentioned, the oil prices, and particularly in those days, americans depended especially on middle east oil. and we couldn't have that kind of upset are periodic wars in the middle east and more over we couldn't have the only real democracy in the middle east. israel under constant attack from outside and again, we have seen how upsetting that is in most recent times, but all praise to jimmy carter for making that happen. and i also think that was part and parcel of his religious that he, that he did believe i very deeply in his face. and i think he had such a, a feeling of a connection to the middle east end of the abrahamic religions. and was what such a good hearted person. and i think that that helped to make that come to pass in the camp david accords. all right, barbara perry, director of presidential studies at the university of virginia miller center. thanks so much for joining us. great to get your perspective. thank you.
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the pro ration is presidential election is headed for a run off next month after none of the candidates secured 50 percent of the vote. they were early celebrations at the headquarters of incumbents or on the lot of it . after exit, polls showed he could e count the narrow victory, but as the vote count went on, it became clear, there was no help. right winter. a georgia swore and a new president. after months of political turmoil, former football player he fail capital s really was inaugurated by parliament. he was actually the only candidate who ran in the election back by the pro russian governing georgian dream party. but the outgoing pro western president is threatening to remain as the incumbent. sonya guy ego has more defined stride into the on known this was the day that solemn is basically said that she would not stand down for the presidency essentially 6 years ago. i swear
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allegiance to you on the constitution, and this agents will not change and i got wherever i am in the presidential palace or outside. i will come out of here to you and i will be with you around advice. suppose she's outside. she never left left the building without handing over the keys to her successor because of a last really a full of football. the ted for right politician who was soon and by parliament as george's next president of a country in turmoil since october's dispute to the elections. a hard line critic of the west have a last really is a loyalist of the governing georgian dream parties. billionaire found a busy, not even surely. the role is largely ceremonial, but covers actually these opponents says he has no digital vesee. since the politicians who chose him were elected in a process mode by accusations of fraud to win the georgia dream policy,
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one october's parliamentary elections with this empty liberal and provost go promises elections many georgians, believe what raked re don't even think about the outcome of this the fee collections that they who are tomorrow because it doesn't matter. it doesn't make any sense. so there is only one party in the parliament who's making this decision . they are, there will be no real position, made a protest against the election results intensified in the georgia dream like government suspended talks to join the european union. and again, when it around presidential elections with only it's candidates, this is a will to should move into georgia's history a time when his people are sharply divided on how they see its future. whether it's quoting close to ties with the west, are pursuing alignment with most of what assess him is that the term or caused by
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this crisis is saw from over sony by ego aus. is there a polls enclosed in child's 1st parliamentary elections in more than 10 years? the governing party says as the final step and returning the constitutional rule after 3 years of military rule. but the opposition called for boycott signing fears of vote rigging. catherine sawyer reports from incremental to pause how close and the doors are now home. it's going to take a while before we get. c one of the things that has been yeah, is that the number of people who have actually come to vote uh, well, very, very adamant that says very um, more when it comes to that alex. so essentially, the interesting the government's a figures and we, and you know, it's not just here in this holding stage and several other publications and people
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that we saw, the different parts of the country say you sustain race are now to all position. how for said the election, they say that they don't think that the, the elections will be all set. what's gonna happen going for what we've spoken to the civil society member who says that they're going to, they're going to keep pushing for reforms. political and electro reforms because that is what is needed right now. charges are electing and peas, provincial and municipal representative body to is. few voters are making their way to calling stations. this is a populated part of the city. one would expect a bigger town. we put the we inviting because we want everything to change and seems to be normal. president my, how much is this?
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that'd be cost to follow. alrighty. so let's be glad we now off the presidential election in may. the main opposition parties and civil society groups have disputed the results. and so some of the others, local and regional and election observers are in town. but admissions like the e u. n. a you are not here. some todd in private media houses are also not covering the polls. they say the government has not given them resources legally required for logistics. the main opposition park is a single society groups help with quantity election. that's a poor to say they feel connected from the electoral process. some say they believe that they absolutely will not come to the chart is an oil producing country. yet the majority of the people here see they don't see the benefits we now pull, god bless and are struggling with the high cost of anything,
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even before this election during the company. goodness, says popular, have any, any kind of i'm does. yes. because people are more pay up to 5 do that every day, leaving how to make a living. people can how the east twice a day. so of course, and that's in many elections like this. and nothing has changed and outcomes or has been the same, the ruling power to winning. this is supposed to be a significant moment in chas history. it's been more than 10 years since the last parliamentary elections. but people who chose to stay away said the vote changes very little. catherine story all does euro domino the world health organization is sounding the alarm over a global resurgence of cholera. it says after decades of progress controlling the disease numbers are on the rise. color is even being reported in countries that have not seen any cases in the years. the w h o says recent outbreaks have been
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more deadly with fatalities reaching their highest levels in over a decade. that we classify the global resurgence of color that we have been seeing since 2021 as a grade 3 emergency in january 22 in history, which is the highest in total level for emergencies. and this is junior so widespread outbreaks, the ulcer. and this is the real problem, this is why it's come, but results limitations. countries are dealing with conflict, but they've got pool of water and sanitation systems. they've got many people, so it displaced, but they assume play left the mains to prevent it. and also to treat it still a head on al jazeera, not employers are up to 2nd in the premier league, all of the actions coming up next. the god promised abraham. this is the land that is going to belong to you and to your
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children forevermore. right here in my back yard sales in the sense is there is some realtors here, just make sure you know where you're at. central michigan. we have people here from united states, from russia, from india, from germany. ready findings for the idea of israel's foreign army on a just yeah, that's all i could say examining the impact of today's headlines. no foreign power liberated the syrians and it's in syrians hands to determine how the future looks like setting agenda for tomorrow's discussions. if you all people from across the world can collaborate, why can't our world leaders international filmmakers and world class journalists bring programs to enforce and inspire too many to justin pratt and much. this should be on the agenda for now to sierra the, the,
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[000:00:00;00] the spawn for sport. thank you so much. mohammed live in full have gone 8 points clear at the top of the primary league after they thrashed at west ham 5. now mohammed fall, his impressive season continued. he was on the score sheet for the 17th time in the league, the season. his 3 clara fairly in holland, is also made 3 more assistance. any player in lee, this was his seconds on the light, is the set up the a good job to, to complete another memorable outing for army slot? saw that i'm very happy with this quote. we have,
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i said this 6 months ago and everybody lost it was it is this guy crazy. but i think uh the players show that's uh the confidence of the club. and me as well heading them 3, keep working with these pages because we're going to need all of them at a certain moment to. so since slot a took over lever pool has failed to win on just a 4 occasions and they were at the top of the champions league standings and our 3 to the semi finals of english lead tab. no manager has accumulated as many points of slot has at this stage of the primary campaign in their 1st season in charge. so i has never scored this many goals after 18 games and has already provided more assess than he ever has in a season. and the rates will be at least 6 points clear heading into 2025 depending on results elsewhere. and they have again enhance pep. corneo was celebrated his 5 hundreds game and charged for mattress or cities of material victory against lester . to lift the pressure office side savvy as for the open and before holland made
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sure of victory with his 1st school and 5 matches. it was just a 2nd when in 14 games and all competitions for the side, it lifts up to we have to do so please. and so have people to have done together is a lot. a lot of games are going to display when i land in this country, then we have done. thank you. a lot of things that would be the memory. it wouldn't be forever. and maybe that period that month of have to mount that look like $500.00 a month. and we make it realize how nice it was. and hopefully we can come back. maybe not be what we were, but more closer than that. no. and nodding them forest are the surprised package of the season and there. now that's the 2nd after they go to mil victory against advertising top score. chris, where did morgan give the white on this for sheet for their 5th when in a row? already one more games and points than they did last season, and we're only halfway through
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a tuesday. certainly talk them or how to draw it home by wolves. the visitors took in her leave for a spurs equalize to rodrigo batten curve. i've just done him in the midst of penalty brenton johnson for this side in front. it looked as though squares. we're going to hang on for the wind, the organ strand larson's go in the 87 senate and made it to to the result. we've taught them in 11 so here's how the tables looking with the season, approaching the halfway mark for us. now a point about the 3rd place are small who can reclaim 2nd, if they beat branford on wednesday. chelsea can also gain ground when they play it . switch on monday, us at football is governing body sci fi isn't just expanding the size of the man as well. cop from 2025. the under 17 tournament will be doubling in size to include $48.00 teams. cuts are, has been chosen to house the next 5 additions is and the richardson reports it is a it's
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a tournament that can provide early glimpses of future global stalls. name only took the 2009 and the 17 will come to present. much is the city still food and letting go into the world? $22.00 in 2017 can someone will be home to the next volley. tournaments traditionally hills every 2 years from 2025. it will become an annual event. the countries 1st on the 17 world cup will kick off on november, the 5th. it starts to show you who ends up rising to the top, who are the ones with potential for the ones that could come in. and, and you know, what? if you think about it in this, the, in time, the amount of players that are de viewing, especially as south america, let's, let's, i'll give you that example that are debut and net 15 at 16 at 17 years, right. even though the premier league, we see a couple of 17 needs, 16 year olds that are, that make their debut every once in a while. as well as taking place every 12 months. the competition is being doubled
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in songs to include full ca seems germany all the raining on the 17 champions with a consonant with the greatest track record of success. is that for co gone or when it twice? while not jerry have listed a trophy a record 5 times. folks have gone is on the 17 world cup trans came in, and $99.00 sees. well, nigeria, on the 5th of that's the only tools in 2015 cynical could be the african seems to keep an eye on next year. so to go with a particular happened, we're seeing producing an amount of talent and yes and consummate that's on seen. and they have a boom generation 1st thing when the african couple of nation 2 years ago, us. and you would think that more than generation as a sort of agent drop off the left hand side. you don't mind any kind of decree by the kind of go with struggle through january that tell us the amounts of topics coming through the ranks at the moment, including at the under 17 level is incredible. the threes on from ocean seen is one of the 2022 men's world cup,
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some slightly younger homes. let's see. be wrapped around another global trophy in capsule. on the richardson l g 0. so now that dr. rich has had, i was at the way tennis has handled recent high profile doping cases, the former, well, number one says players have been kept in the dark about how decisions are being made. yeah. like center and he goes to be on track in both fields. has this year for band substances, tennis, doping officials accepted of both players had taken the drugs accidentally, meaning they avoided long term babs, very 7 year old job, which is about to get his season started at the brisbin international. the issue is the inconsistency is the transparency of we've been kept in the dark with the onyx case. i mean, i'm not questioning whether, you know, she took the pen substance intentionally or not. you know, i believe in the clean sports. i believe that the player will do everything possible to be playing fair. and i knew i, i know younique's since he was very young. so he doesn't strike me as somebody that
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would do such thing. but i, i've been really frustrated is most of the other players to see that we've been kept in dark for 5 months to south africa is cricket team have reached the world has championship final, after they'd be pockets on in their 1st of their too much series box on look like they were heading for victory. thanks to 6 wickets. farm home and the boss mark lance and hit the winning runs for the host to silly to we can victory. they make it through to the final in london in june next year for the 1st time. they're likely to face either australia or india in that final. and the 4th test between the sides and brisbin could still go either way on the final day in jasper from rochester for 2nd, endings. wiggins, that australia was solely just to build up a lead of more than $300.00. 1. besides the match series is level at one point. okay, and that is all your support for that one comes back to you. thanks for call. reeves
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and thailand are still struggling to survive 8 months after a marine heat wave caused a mass, coral bleaching. divers are trying to undo some of the damage, but see temperatures are still too high. tony chain reports from coal on to, on the on demand coast. schools of juvenile fish, 6 center in the arms of a promising car. it looks as if its bursting with life, but look more closely. the carls bleached the living l get expelled from the hard show by high water temperatures. this is a marine environment that struggling to survive. the colorado is like, uh, is like, uh, 9 see 2. so you find, you find everything you of a menu leaving on. good, nice man. uh like any more vicious solar and everything in the create like, uh, uh, like to leaving you. uh, do you know each and do you see the nick,
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recreate like the buttons for the likes in in april regular ocean temperatures caused a mass bleaching that hit 77 percent of the welts. carl reese seascapes of glaring white. but once they had been vibrant, color even the and then i'm is with bleached much to the concern of the fish, the cool them home. now some of the color has returned to the marine environment. seasonal currents carrying cooler waters. but temperature is still too high. gilbreth, so has been monitoring the reef on this part of timelines coast despite some signs of recovery. in some areas more than half the carl is lost forever. but that box is completed that so a treat and that's what pulled up. but the, the car on it the wrong, you know, uh, still living in colorado. we can, you know, uh, put on these dates, you know,
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of the box. and the reef is and just struggling against the impact of global warming. marine biologists his favorite. carl is not only fighting to survive against the bleaching the high temperatures of the water. it's also fighting against pollution. men's tourism in the murky waters of tend to young. they a dim ray of light, a dedicated group of divers, have been propagating carls to try and promote re gross most of being lost, but a few, whether this story, of course, or try to our parts, both with all the searching windows, everything. but just give us the kitchen to try it again and try to find a solution to help. but that solution is just a drop in the ocean with so many of the wealth carls under threat of extinction. this vital marine results may soon be lost for tony taking out his era in the end and see off the coast of china. i'm sorry,
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that's it for me and how much enjoyed for this news hour. but i'll be back in a moment with more of a day's notice. thanks for watching the in depth analysis of the days headlines. what are we supposed to read painting through the use of this we miss all by russian informed opinions. finally, after over a year of genocide, the i c. c has come to this decision, critical debate. the difference between china and most of the rest of the world is a china plans long term inside story do conferences and meetings like cop $29.00 and others make a difference on out to 0. i'm harry davies and the kimberly in western australia or indigenous communities attaining at with sciences to create
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a new approach to marine conservation land rover even. but the bottom i'm, i found the one you're reporting from brazil is you're going to try. it's protecting by the adversity co defending themselves against the legal invaders. right? now there's 0. there are some of the media stories, a critical look at the global news media. on how to 0 government shut off, access to social media.
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the the hospitals under fire. israel's military keeps up its attacks on guards as health care system, with 2 medical facilities targeting the time how much i'm doing. this is alj, a 0 live from door. also coming up 10 people are killed and it is really air strike on an ammunition depot on the outskirts of serious capital, damascus. former us president jimmy carter dies at the age of $100.00. we take

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