tv [untitled] January 12, 2025 6:00pm-6:31pm AST
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the people that file is a way to change the governor. in the 2nd part of this series out to 0 examined sophisticated white supremacist. people are trying hurt america and americans against all enemies on how to 0, the, [000:00:00;00] the hello until mccrae. this has been use our line from coming up in the next 60 minutes, a hospital and no condition to treat patients is around the siege of northern guns that has killed at least 5000 palestinians. and just a 100 dies. more international support on the sanctions, relief of syria from saudi arabia and european pounds military help is on standby up to
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a new with avoiding prisons to further inflame while finds only you with whisk. cost worn out by war, villages displaced in the battle between the army and in 23 font is the eastern democratic republic of congo. 7 days results is most of the people are very tight. they don't know how it is going to come in. today's the wave of popularity, but they could be turbulent times, it hits a mix, it comes to as female presidents up to $100.00 dies and power the votes, helping them all aiming to avoid unimed virus and results in the english essay couplets high against big time with, with a goal or something on c minutes for supposed have taken the lead in extra time the,
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the most terrific form of it, ethnic, cleansing, displacement and destruction. that is how palestinian officials are describing the israeli siege in northern garza, that has now lost the 100 dies, at least 5000 palestinians had been killed or i'm missing in the past weeks as well, has escalated its attacks. 70 children were killed in the past 5 days alone. the military intends to find its campaign in october, climbing to stop him boss from regrouping for human rights groups. i of tags have deliberately targeted civilians and shelters, as well as residential homes. almost all it has been blocked, resulting in famine line conditions. hospitals have been attacked multiple times, putting them out of service. and patients and medical stuff has been arrested. a wind country is a lot for us now, and i'll butler and as we've seen, who risk scenes in the north, 100 dies on since the beginning of the stage. can you just give us an idea of what
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is less than now and how people a surviving day to day? well just let, let's make it clear that now the area is a goes area. it's at a place full of destruction. all of the houses have been reduced to rubble, but i missed all of this. there are people's sales magnet to say in the another, in parts of the garbage trip and refuse to leave. what so ever. uh the uh the situation they went through were talking about 100 days of continuous air strikes are kind of you were sending lots copiers locating a, a food watch or a, an even medicine. and we saw a couple of attacks on come on at one until the, the, for some of this will be, it was arrested and until the hospital also went out to the service, we're talking about thousands of how does the news workforce to get this place into different parts of the gospel cities are living in tents now,
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amid all of this cold weather. now what we also need to know is that during this 100 days there were continuous attempts from you an agencies like wsp units to double, you watch all and to to go and to visit those areas. but that is where the forces have denied most of the access. the situation there is unbearable according to the policy and you still living there. but we know that there are still policy new sheltering in some schools. and the last i talk on one of the shelters where as yesterday was then up and was it as cool as cool in your body? it was targeted and 8 palestinians among the art it to palestinian women and children were killed. you're talking about 2 weeks and there has been escalating every single day and, and the houses are not built are not the bomb. they are literally burned because
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this was the strategy. israel has been following into another in parts of the gods . true and, and i was going to say a children had been, uh, i guess disproportionately affected civil defense now saying at least 70 children had been killed in just the past 5 days. incredible. the told that uh, the is really strong. so taking on children right now, well, i saw one of the children yesterday where a child, a girl, was killed with her grandfather. they were sheltering in that sense. every single day we received children either with dead bodies or their injured and the hospital behind me, the laptop is on low, a very low equipments and as and supplies and medicine stuff. but there are thousands of children in the hospital waiting for any medical treatment transfer approach. and not only that, the facts of our children dying, freezing that's, that's just the law you see right now,
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our children tearing pots and water bottles to fill in at water and to find food in the community kitchens. those children are supposed to be in school. they're not supposed to be killed, they're not supposed to be searching for food and water. what the children in the bottles are, which is a horrifying reality. and we're talking to parents and they're saying that they're either seeing their children being killed and they can't do anything about it. there is no safe to put their children there. and that's the most horrifying story is they can even feed their children or keep them warm as you say, the horrifying reality of life and gaza right now. thank you so much and hadn't caught already for us and i'll follow or the genocide in cancer is taking an increasing tell not only physically but mentally and children once again are among the most vulnerable. uni save says nearly all of gauze is 1100000 children need mental health and psychosocial support and the ongoing from the bottom and displacement and dia,
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living conditions. children have not missed anxiety and paralyzing fear because of it strikes and the loss of family members may become aggressive withdrawal. and we'll stop speaking the united nations estimates that at least 19000 palestinian children have been opened since the war began. mental health experts caution that the scholars inflicted on these young minds could persist for generations. was all call cause the head of protection at musical age, the palestinians. she's in doubt bothering it, condemns the is ready violence and abuse against children and cancer. a, a catastrophe that has been inflicted on children and because of, for the last 15 months is really created on car allows and unprecedented mental health crisis amongst children of all ages. and what we can hope to achieve is no f lloyd's diploma buttons being inflicted. but try to mitigate or minimize the
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impacts of about trauma, the violence and the abuse, that is an interpreter. it is against children to be a psycho social well being is a, is a key tendon of healthy childhood development. and it's entirely lacking at the moment due to the situation that it's being faced by children here. what we're trying to do is, as humanitarian says, provide a semblance of normality, mid the hara that children are experiencing on a daily basis. so that might be providing a space for recreational activity to reduce the stress, to help children express their emotions in a, in a, in a healthy way. as well as the most sort of tailored especially life support for those with really a tooth. this symptoms of distress, such as, you know, the symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder. another more chronic conditions,
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um therapy, individual therapy, and also specialize treatment including the outside shopping medication, the lifting of sanctions. again, syria has told the agenda at amazing of european in arab foreign ministers and the saudi capital. re add the european union's foreign policy. chief cit. the block will meet at the end of this month to discuss ending sanctions. when you, sir in administration, has been calling for the removal since december. when the bus y'all sod was almost as with saudi arabia as foreign minister, prince font is open for hon. outside, wrapped up the amazing and cold on the international community to support economic stability in syria. the future of syria is the syrian internal matter. we confirmed that we will continue providing all the
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humanitarian economic aid and to achieve stability. construction paving the way for the proper environment. facility is to go back to that country and lots of things will be done. and we will do our best to enable the syrian administration to provide necessary services to the syrian people. we also confirmed the necessity of lifting sanctions imposed on syria because the sanctions and the emissions of syrian people in development and reconstruction. let's take a closer look at the sanctions on the syria, which have been in place since 2011 against special assad government restrictions focused on financial transactions, oil exports, and tried since then, the economy has shrunk by 85 percent g. d, p has dropped from 67500000000 to just 9000000000 and 202390 percent of syrians now live in extreme poverty. nearly 13000000 don't have enough food. the sanctions also made it difficult to bring an aid,
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as well as medical supplies experience estimates. it could take a decade to return to 20 live ins, ged pay, and another decade to fully rebuild the country. let's go to the homes of a homeless who is in damascus for us and as well as saudi arabia, usually does a meeting later this month to discuss sanctions release relief. can you just explain how positive that is for the new administration, but also the syrians as well, of the the city and the city and delegation came to the looking formal countries to support the beat, to have the sanction lifted on what we saw today. they would be quite happy with the outcome. the cdn foreign minister has been traveling across the region and meeting foreign ministers from you to convince them to lift the sanctions to date. so did it just 4 minutes that came out and said pre i was the functions listed,
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the ones giving us the thoughts bit further on said they would provide financial aid, the cd and for the minutes step. also ahead of meetings for the 40 minutes is including the, the british foreign secretary. so this is quite a positive, a development for the new administration here in damascus. the also in the, the you came out and said they would hold a meeting at the end of this month in process where they would discuss lifting of the functions. but not everyone in you is convinced about lifting the sanctions complete to the general folder administer at said some parts of the functions, especially the central was put on former members of the site begin to be in place and they should be held comfortable. the meeting, india today is a follow up of another meeting that was held in jordan to discuss the development in a city. but today's meeting is quite different from that one which happened in december
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days after the said redeem was stopping. what the difference is in, in the, in the meeting that we so enjoyed on there was no representative from the seat in administration. then you said in administration. but today, there was a, a delegation, led by default administer to join the meeting to focus, focus more on supporting syria to form an administration that's inclusive. and also make sure the rights of minorities was respected. but today's meeting, the focus was all about the functions on how to help. ready yes, i nice and as we discussed, the 90 percent of syrians living in extreme poverty at the moment 30000000 don't have enough food. can you just explain how ordinary people a surviving right now in syria and how disparate that will be to, to get the sanctions lifted as quickly as possible? the sanctions have really hit the seated economy, hug it's c that is unable to have access to the international market. it's unable
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for almost impossible to input every day. goods items on the market to in the most, cuz that expensive and even across the country. seat is also not able to go out into the international financial institutions on board. the countries destroyed. if you look at the health sector, hospitals do not have enough medicine. what does the hospitals even function? the schools have been destroyed, the pal agreed is opponents needs at best seed inside access to electricity for 4 hours. then that is the issue of those displays. those who leave in internal comes public, his thumbs up from 90 percent. the new administration to see fully to provide essential services they need access to the international financial markets to go to see that sovereigns have to be paid and they have to be paid on time. so all of these things will depend on syria being able to access those financial markets. thanks so much. sounds a appreciate it. as always,
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homes mohammed for us in damascus. i'm gonna stay with the story and go now. so i get up the lie, who is a non resident senior fellow at the middle east council on global affairs. he joins me from oxford in the u. k. thanks very much for being with us a once again. so as we've, as we've heard this are in the syrian administration is clearly desperate to try and get these sanctions lifted as quickly as possible. but can you just give us an idea of what some of these foreign governments, especially in the you are going to be looking for and return for lifting those sanctions. a deposition off many your payments that has been the transition process all inclusive and the new student who emerge in uh, austin metal. the revolution is increased, but the question of increasing it, they can is many things. it kind of means the new government should the representative all wolf unable to 0. so i did, but it's kind of them and means like the type of to the domestic probably bit older death looking much easier to that is more of
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a democratic that is relying on the elections and for these 2 things, i think the crucial point will be many your think comes with the looking at the more step by move forward and turn in time government and the national reconciliation conference that the new administration are supposed to say. the outcome of this problem without implication on the nature of the european and the west. an approach to this area. as syrians going hung hungry, 13000000 at this point in time don't have enough food. presumably that is only going to get with the longer these sanctions remain in place. i mean the discontent is going to quickly grow. if the sanctions lifted, can you just explain the repercussions full, then you would ministration if they tons quickly get movements here. i think it's rustic because the don't forget, this is all right now in the post revolution psychology. so now they want to see changes in their life. they want to see changes in their daily lives,
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and that means their life needs to improve. and that is very much dependent on the function listing, so that for the listing of this tension is crucial for the new administration to cultivate legitimacy at the domestic level. because due to dissension, assuming an economy has people the syrian how 2nd scribbled to say in the energy infrastructure as cripple. so now they have to get the space up and running and they have to deliver for the site. the, the delivery for the sap is crucial for the new administration to out, and they get them to sit in the ice stalls that people going forward. obviously a massive amount of money is going to be needed to redevelop and not to reconstruct syria pretty much from the ground up. was that money gonna come from? well, i mean, potentially the true source system. money is the goal and then you, you and obviously on the top of it that would be international boner conference on an international institution that might contribute into this process. i mean,
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obviously the us as well, but the true bulk of the money probably is in, in, in the goals. and you and both places will look at where the student is heading before they decide whether to invest money or not. but the question on investment because or reconstruction rebuilding also yes, on the mentally is that both the legitimacy of the domestic political order in syria. so you will have back to me the, the, the nation level, the regional level, unintentional level be very interconnected. so the expectation that it should be in the increase of domestic book, the order that they should, we see that we don't consensus. and that probably will say the intention, the chickens and the western approached by the to so how do you and the goals? okay, thank you so much for breaking all of that down for us as a get up to life. thank you. the,
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the head of the u. s. federal emergency management to say is military personnel, our own stand by to help contain full wildfire spinning across los angeles. it comes as the national weather service issues, a red warning. the critical by conditions, wind gusts, through the center and a car don't directly above the parasites area, could reach up to 120 kilometers an hour. will start he's won't. extreme conditions could last until next weekend. like 16 people have died since the 5005 days ago. risk you cruise a focusing on full, major fives in los angeles. these other locations, palisades is on the coast and ethan, near pasadena. of all the kenneth spot is north of calabasas, and the 1st 5 is in the san fernando valley. the pacific palisades blaze is the largest and has been through mobile 9 and a half 1000 hit as it is only 11 percent contains. the agent by has been the most deadly killing a living people. it's 15 percent contained and has destroyed nearly $6000.00 hit as
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of land. the kenneth by us started most recently, but is nearly fully contained. and the respond that began on choose day hasn't go to $320.00 hit this. so still a valid got a 1st time look at the danger and the devastation from the he is what the possible to say if los angeles looks like this one is being split from the app, but only while weather conditions allow a best. the problem with these been set to pick up a lot over the coming guy. you spoke us this avoiding that this could be about to get a lot was here. the palisades via has already claims more than 9 hector's and more houses light, and it's passed the flames approach menacingly. almost the whole thing, homeowners, as they wonder if this is and they've watched this dozens of times this week on tv, how different it must feel when it's your home. the pacific palisades was it,
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did it up. market and buzzing was life this time last week. from the at it now looks like a bomb side. what you get from this perspective. why up high is a sense of just how much they just eliza had because the palace sites why it has to be moving towards densely populated areas like brentwood, like the san fernando valley, which has millions of people living in it. 3 and a half 1000 firefights is a bustling the palisades fly around like it is strategic, coordinated to planes, flight together. a scouts identifies whether drop needs to be done and sends out a signal to a tank of which dumps the ritz hot and piled up right on the spot. every pulse to refute needs critical minutes last slow, but what else can they do? machines have their limits, unlike by the nature. i've never seen a situation where helicopters were lined up to drop water. there was a traffic jam on the 4 or 5 of helicopters. myself says, this is the most extreme fire he has ever seen. and he's seen
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a lot before them here, but 23 years. firefighting is the most craziest game of chess you've ever seen, right? just when you think you have it blocked off. mother nature changes everything on you. and you have to basically pivot in, adjust your tactics. the flames are also threatening iconic landmarks like the get to sensor not to mention the thousands of homes around it. the santa monica pass, a place usually filled with fun and laughter. now, against a backdrop of sadness and ruin, hollywood can see the smoke from the policy. it's via, i'm from the eating fire behind it. that is still burning to in a place that has made so many disaster movies. this disaster is happening right here in real time, but nobody knows when this one will be over fill of out, i'll just say right, los angeles, california homeowners are facing a growing insurance crisis. even before these 5, several of the state's largest insurers stop to limited new policies,
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leaving many people struggling to find coverage. all 15 of california is biggest and most destructive buys have happened in the past decade. that's led to insurance companies paying outlines claims with many insurance, pulling out the state government started its own insurance program known as the fair plan. nearly half a 1000000 homes are included with the plan only offers basic coverage of up to $3000000.00. that's often not enough to rebuild a house in an area with extremely high property values. state officials are trying to resolve this by leading insurance back to climate change into their rights. they hope this will encourage friends to return to the mock as well. the premiums may be much higher, but david glen drive is the head of industry analysis and strategic advisory at holland re a global bri insurance broker. he says title tardies should improve on 5 prevention . so insurance companies can, again,
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offer coverage to people in california. in recent years, wildfire frequency and severity certainly has increased um, certainly in california and certainly in the los angeles county area and part of their there are a number of different reasons for that. one of them is, as you say, um there are state regulatory caps on how much insurers can raise rates in the mid market. previously, they weren't able to take things like climate change and the cost of re insurance and other factors into account. but is also um, things like um, you know, creating sufficient fire breaks um, sufficient sweeping of the forest floors, calling the forest legislation around community support for wildfire as fuel management. all this, i hope this is a wakeup call. really for the state to implement all of those things in earnest. there are other states like oregon, washington, california, colorado, utah, where admittedly, and, you know, there's, there's less exposure because they just don't have the same population density as
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california. but they have actually undertaken more of those measures. i know how difficult california is give just given its size. but the hope is that those actions combined with a state legislation around how insurance is priced, will bring coverage back into the state. i have the financing has around to the eastern democratic republic of congo as the army tries to regain ground from in 23 funds has not been advancing in the region for months aligned. what kind of reports from the village included. so this is the village of google, one of the big data. where did you have on the has been funding for most of days right now. it's almost the same fighting which is taking place in most if it's sent out, then a decent will just 2 days passed and $22.00 wanted in this a to and now the data, how many pas as managed to push them away? this is why so maybe sort of deals around here and who to so yeah,
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we still have big guns. so to just to be i in house here. and this is why we cannot spend time. yeah. sort of just doesn't want to take any risk of weeds, julius, and also some of those was still coming from different areas. going to get shelters that. how to disabilities, because all those almost close here because there was no any business going on. heavy fighting has been taking place here as the same type of thing and must see see, people documented in this video i saying that there wasn't a lot because they don't know what would happen up to notable still just to behind the mountain where we are still fighting up to now we couldn't even hear is it some heavy guns and also some overall kits. and i want to do this suggest as being very confused. also because of the logistic disability company is connected with any car or whatever. so you have themselves, they are using motorcycles, as you can see, even as to not least we just did. uh,
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we just use the motorcycle course. and this is why people have been very difficult successful here because nor any money tardy. and it's called the which this popular, so this area because of the ongoing fighting them $23.00. i've been battling them then you have to think on your phone once a week right now, 7 days without is most of the people are very tired and they don't know how to distinguish when you go into the coming days. like on the 0. the most recent territory, the democratic republic of cool to what's more on this, we joined now by david monkey who is the world vision director for eastern democratic republic of congo. he joins us from government. thank you very much for being with us here now to 0. so as we heard from a corresponding to the people to tie it and an uncertainty about what exactly is going to happen is we've seen this finding intensify. can you just explain the effect that that is having on so many people right now? as people are exhausted,
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they're burn totes. there's really just the collective burnouts throughout north keeble because people have been facing this conflict now for years and an initial, let's just say 500000 people. this place has come up to almost 3000000 people displaced the last 2 weeks alone. a $100000.00 new people have had to flee from pilots escaping conflict situations, but going towards these camps, which are really under resourced. despite our best efforts, there can be hellish conditions, extreme difficulty, m fox continues in these camps. so there is just a climate of fatigue and fear and a concern that the worst is yet to call it. okay, and can you just explain with so many people now affected like you say, a 100000 people just displaced since the beginning of this year? we're not even 2 weeks into it. what exactly are you able to do for people right now? for all we do our best were among many in g o's including mercy corps, and our c. i'm ss many local in organizations and national organizations that are
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trying to provide the basics, basics of food assistance, water and sanitation, health and nutrition, and hygiene support. it's not enough, we've seen many examples, despite our best efforts with the world program, for example, that families reading once a day or less. this leads to protection concerns, neglect and abuse of children. so the conditions are really difficult for overstretched. and again, as i say, we're looking at a grim future, you touch on this before, but not only people are trying to flee the fighting, but they're often getting directly caught up. and in these ongoing, in the escalating attacks. i mean, can use explained about the insecurity and how that is clearly making things so much worse for civilians. right now it's, it's a very difficult and in some ways intractable situation, where we look at this conflict between m 23 and connelly's army and its uh, accompanying forces. and it really just kind of, it will stop for
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a while and we're unsure of how it's going. and then it starts up again leading to we're getting more displacement. so we're kind of in a climate of uncertainty. but we can see something will happen. for example, today alone, there was issues of the bombing around goma, closer to the camps which could again lead to further displacement greater vulnerability fire mortality rates. so it really is a precarious situation. and like you've mentioned more and more people are getting pushed of all of these cams that you described as having hello slight conditions. can you just give us more of an idea of the results of the racing needed there to help the growing number of people that arriving? it's difficult to say, i would say again, it's really the basics, ensuring potable water ensuring necessary hygiene conditions. ensuring again that there is enough to each ensuring nutritive support for young children and babies. but it goes so much further than that. as i had mentioned, are the children getting appropriate education? are we ensuring necessary protection for these, for these individuals?
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