Skip to main content

tv   [untitled]    January 18, 2025 6:00pm-6:31pm AST

6:00 pm
phillips, their own voice in the seventy's in the arab world stage and screen on al jazeera, the . ready the hello until mccrae. this is the news i live from time coming up in the next 60 minutes. the safe spot is in size, and garza as well has agreed to finally stop moving the gear of a tax in less than 18 hours. but the killings continue at least $123.00 palestinians have died and is riley strikes since the deal was announced. the global support,
6:01 pm
the palestinians. thousands demonstrated in london ahead of the ceasefire on sunday, plus several venue in washington dc, kicking off houses here, a special coverage of being on your ration of donald trump. as the $47.00 presidents of the united states and south korea's impeached presidency and securing the p, as in court as support is rarely outside the safe spot and guns are as you were to come into effect in less than 18 hours. at $630.00 g m t on sunday is expected to hold more than 15 months of israel's war. because his kills nearly 47000 palestinians, an injured more than 110000. but since the agreement was announced as being no lit up in his riley strikes on palestinians,
6:02 pm
at least 123 people have died since wednesday when the cx 5 was announced. if this in good faith begins, al coverage more bombs on gaza, even after all sides agreed enough is enough. israel government ratified a ceasefire deal with him off in the early hours of saturday. around the same time, it was booming, the 10s of have done this family and on the wasi in their house. peace is impossible to imagine. besides marianna, just a few hours before the ceasefire deal will take a fix. they are targeting children sleeping in the tent. my sister was a teacher, she used to teach islamic studies. she finished university at l oxy university. she was not a military, and my brother in law was a civil engineer. suddenly we saw the news on social media as a family. how will we welcome the ceasefire after losing her sister as israel struck and killed more than a 100 policy news after the deal was announced on wednesday, the victims of
6:03 pm
a war set to end like it started without mercy. most people in this trip have had to attend several funerals like this. at least one in every 50 people in the strip has been killed according to estimates. so much of causes, homes and infrastructure have been destroyed. it said back the progress of its people by 7 decades, according to the un. now they say they want to return home. oh and show up they had did. this one took one heavy and we hope the safe spot is real and we were attend to our home and just by the in chick up on their families and friends, i hope we were attend home and check up on our beloved ones. but we hope that we will have silence and safety and a similar cease fire deal was on the table in may last year. but many people in garza and as well say political power play god in the way. all children like these
6:04 pm
can do now is wait and hope they'll keep safe until their hope of an end to the horror of his world. war finally becomes a reality. if this and get food. i'll just 0. these really government rather 5 deceased 5 deal optimal than 6 hours of meetings on friday. is there any medius is $24.00 ministers voted in 5 and i is against including to 5. right. ministers, security minister. it's not think of it earlier. it threatened to resign. if the deal was ratified, specifically deka is life for us in amman because as well has band owns, is there a from uprising there as well as in the occupied with bank? stephanie, we'll get to the cabinet meeting and just some of the 1st of all, can you just take us through the, the, the complaints logistics of releasing both captives and gaza as well as the palestinians in his room? yes. well, at $830.00 lead time tomorrow sunday we expect that ceasefire to fall into place
6:05 pm
and for the guns to full sign and then that is going to be put in motion one. israel will be releasing around $95.00 type of thing and preserves. most of those will be heading to the occupied westbank. this time it sees ready security forces that will be escorting them there and these res upset and they say this every time they reduce prisoners. they don't want any seeds of welcome applying the policy and flagstones of jubilation. but it's very difficult to control that at the same time you have 3 is really captives of how mass will be releasing. bringing out of goes out handing the mover. israel has set up 3 reception points if you will, along the goal is important depending on where the captives come out from. what we understand. there will be 12 hours of just start of surveillance so that we can move the captives uh this afternoon. they should be how math should be testing covered beneath the identities of the 3 captives. so that israel to then inform
6:06 pm
decided minis. it's why do you believe that will be 3 women? and 3 female civilians has certainly both sides is raise on palestinians, very much looking forward to something they've been looking, waiting, hoping for for a very, very long time. the end to get can just to cut through the, the flaws cabinet. and the thing that actually ended up approving this deal, finally a yes, it wasn't a surprise. it was always going to be approved. this deal is more than the domestic politics that has been really playing out a vital role in how long the war has played out. because benjamin netanyahu is really, um, it does say held accountable by its more bang could be or, and that's about smart trips. the 2 rights we ministers in his government because he depends on their support for his political survival. but now the pressures of outside have become too immense. so i've been basically,
6:07 pm
it's more vandevere has threatened to resign from government if the deal has gone through the deal has gone through. it is now pretty much the end of the jewish day of rest the shots. let's wait and see whether he will announce that he's going to resign. the thing is, it's not going to affect the deal and it's not going to make this government to so . so this is the situation when it comes to mass of disagreements within the cabinet. as to the cease fire deal, but the reality is at the moment it is going to go ahead many, still skeptical the weather, a 2nd phase, and that's off to 4 to 2 days. we'll go ahead because of all these complexities. but again, this is something we have to monitor day by day and date, and it is special. thanks so much this, stephanie, take it for us in a month. but this is what is expected to happen on sunday, under the agreements the ceasefire set to begin at the 8th through the local time. on sunday, when military operations will stop aerial surveillance will be held at the 12 hours, 2 and a half of hostages in prison. is to be exchanged,
6:08 pm
a mouse has agreed to release the 3 female captives and the 1st step. during the next 6 weeks $33.00 hostages, including women, children and men aged over 50 will be frayed and returned. israel is due to release $95.00 palestinian prisoners and detainees as part of stage $1757.00 will be freed and total from day $1600.00 i trucks including 50, caring fuel will into gallons of daily to supply power plants, hospitals, bakeries as well, as to clear the rubble this, i will continue through all stages of the agreements. you would have to pass through all of this switch. and now by i won't think house who is a form is rarely invested and consul general in new york. you joins us from televi . thank you very much for being with us. once again alone. before we get to the cabinet meeting, i just want to reiterate with you, if we, if i can. i mean, despite how politically for the last week or so has been to to get to this point,
6:09 pm
do you think there's going to be any more twists and turns before the seatbar is due to come into place at 630 gmc no. this, even though we're talking 15 hours from now, so i doubt they're going to be twists and turns. i also hope, you know, the, the military activity to do is at least 15 hours because it is, it's really silly to sign in agreements. uh, 2 days in advance and then start shooting at each other. um this is the idea is to reach a see fire and then a permanency fire. um, however, time is a good question to us because while nothing may happen, hopefully again, nothing may happen between now and 8 am in the morning. it's 5 pm, its just after 5 pm here in the afternoon today. but the next few days is the 1st days of the implementation. you forget the 42, just look at the next 14 days,
6:10 pm
are extraordinarily precarious or extraordinary delicate, in our extraordinary be amenable to all kinds of challenges and hurdles and a violation of the sci fi. and of course, do you think that they will be people within that as well as cabinet that we will be wanting the safe spot of fail? because as we've heard it not being advanced so they would resign if the deal was actually ratified that happens. so, i mean, was it just an idle threat or hesitating, you actually some help the case of him in some way or, oh, blue state, it didn't for white hot 100 percent of by saying, why are you worried? don't over dramatized is the, the sci fi or will not old. it's not really sustainable. you can count on how much to run it, or for that matter on israel. which is why go back to the issue of the next 14 days are critical because any at any given moment given, given the terrain,
6:11 pm
given how those java, it's given out any 0 and forces they are. and given that how much people are most accurate semesters could be anywhere this, this could um, erupt at any moment. now the question really is, what would constitute, how do you define precisely what a violation of disease fires? because if there are to come us members who don't follow, i'm just the lot or nbc or the bbc don't know exactly about the, the contours of the c fire. and there are some isolated building and they get an idea of your military patrol and they start shooting. and these rolls shoot back. supposedly it's a localized in the incidence of the likes of which you see in the following days. the any see tyron any are with israel then define this as
6:12 pm
a flagrant violation. now absolutely. cabinet. that was your question. um absolutely. there are many people in the copy, those who are praying not just hoping, praying actively, but the see fire fail. um, you know, i, i don't want to go into names, but everyone who voted against the deal to in the cabinet and, and 6 or 5 or 6 of the general government plan. um, i will probably hold for this to uh, to deluxe. okay. will have to leave it there alone. uh, obviously very fragile. uh over the next 18 now. and then in the days ahead. that's i don't think cost for us that and televi, thanks so much. i the thank utah with thousands of people have gathered in london to demonstrate in support of palestinians. more than 1000 officers had been deployed to police the demonstration. the demonstrators had been bought for marching through the streets of the capital and passed the synagogue as well. as
6:13 pm
the offices of the bbc and will stay in westminster. melina, this illinois, which has this update from london. they say that now the csr is on the brink, which is what they have been all over the course of the last 15 months from 2 consecutive british government. now that it seems to be on the brand, it is more important than ever august. it'd be here the present as see through, but they're also all the same stuff people. he has been demanding such as a man to trade weapons straight with israel. now the using government, the government has imposed some restrictions on rapids licenses. they spend some of them a few months to go for the trays up to you and people are here. say, that means you can make a government in depth about a month being how to be one year old. oh wow. that what we told you about and disagreement is the file rather than nice things he sent saying that without tackling the issue of palestinian it will be difficult to talk about now. it seems
6:14 pm
the sense that is not even on the table. the way you just days away from the integration of donald trump as the 47th president of the united states. but it's cost live to l 200 and then yeah, and team on our rooftop studio and washington dc. and is a very busy if you guys hit a few this url. the absolutely, tom is great to see you. thank you so much and welcome everyone to our little corner of washington dc where we are going to be spending the next few days. years ago, president trump pledged and what he called the american carnage of a broken political system and a shout to the economy with anger of fuel in his rise to the presidency. while 8 years on as far as an intellect, he promised the usher in a golden age in america. and it all starts here on capitol hill in just over 48
6:15 pm
hours for donald. trump will outline his vision for america and for the world. during his inauguration ceremony, a ceremony that is now being moved indoors because of the expected extremely cold weather. on monday, donald trump and vice president electricity events will be taking the oath of office inside the capital rotunda right behind me instead of the west front of the capital presidential parade. it was meant to march down to the white house, but because of those frigid temperatures, it's not going to be hosted at the capital one sports. serena a tron saying that he will join supporters there after he is warranted for context the last time and an organization was moved. indoors was 1985 when for president ronald reagan took his 2nd oath of office today. another sequel unfolds in washington and seen similar to 2017 when trump 1st took the oath of office. large protests are expected here in washington and across major cities in the united
6:16 pm
states. it's being called the peoples marsh. a broad coalition of activists and groups concerned about what the next trump presidency may mean for women from migrants for refugees. immigration activists have reasons to be worried that donald trump has said that one of his 1st moves as president will be to order a large scale report stations of undocumented migrants. and that is expected now to start in chicago. the day after his inauguration as go to houses here is john henry and was live at the people's march in washington dc. john, we'll talk about these exit deportations in a moment for ourselves. tell us how things are shaping up around then 0 people are just beginning to muster here at farragut square in downtown washington right now we've got some people. some would you was just singing a song called the redemption song. and then there was some chance in callback going on, but let me just give you an idea of the size of the crowd do of thousands of people here right now. and the organizers say, eventually it should be in the 10s of thousands. and if we could move back here,
6:17 pm
just down at that street, you can hardly see it pass the signs and all the people with bad is the white house pass lafayette square. and it's there later this evening that donald trump will be staying at the warehouse. that is additional place where the incoming president stays the night before he is or not rated. and these people are all here from various groups. they're very anti abortion groups, their pro climate groups, human rights groups, all gathered with one message. they do not support donald trump and they will not be silent during this administration 0 john, talk to me about the deportations. we know famously during his campaign, donald trump form is the largest deforestation program and us history. and we now understand that that's going to happen in chicago. the 1st on his 1st full day of office, which is technically day 2 of the trump presidency. what are you finding out as
6:18 pm
right, this has been confirmed by the incoming head of homeland security. tom homan, he went to chicago recently and we criticize the democratic governor of the democratic mayor of the city of chicago. and what his plan is mass deportations. we are told there will be a $100.00 to $200.00 federal officers going into the city of chicago, which is a sanctuary city meeting. it welcomes immigrants and it does does not give them up to federal authorities. so the federal authorities are going to chicago and home and says other cities as well. the 1st thing they say they're going to do is look for people with a criminal record that could just be driving adventures. and they say anyone else who's caught in their net who is not documented as an american, we'll also be arrested and reported 0 that's out 0 john henry, thank you very much. john will come back to you
6:19 pm
a little later this afternoon, especially as the crowds continue to gather where you are. i want to bring of yours up to speed on what's been happening this week on capitol hill, where it has been a hectic last few days. donald trump's cabinet, an agency fix that's his team, have been through a gauntlet of questions during senate confirmation hearings. several of them facing a grilling about their qualifications. do you name the importance of at least one of the nations in the us in, in austin and what type of agreement we have with at least one of those patients and how many nations are in austin by the way? i couldn't tell you the exact oh yeah, the question because i thought i know i've allies in south korea and japan and in august with australia and trying to work on submarines with the mr. how you have it's not up the country or allies. yeah. across none of those 3 countries that you mentioned are in austin. i suggest you do a little homework before you prepare for these types of uh, negotiations slips and there's been a ceasefire announced in gaza before we all celebrate the whole got. obviously,
6:20 pm
we're all going to want to see how all that execute. we don't know yet for sure, but there are opportunities available now in the middle east that did not exist 90 days ago. whether it's what's happened in lebanon, whether it's what's happened in syria, whether it's what hopefully will happen with this cease fire and the release of, of hostages after horrifying detention and unjustifiable actions. 5 by him off. whether it's any of the c, things are all in combination. there are now factors of play in the middle east that i think we can build upon and they open the door to extraordinary and historic opportunities. if i am attorney general, i will not politicize that office. i will not target people simply because of their political affiliation. justice will be administered even handedly throughout this country. senator, we've got to bring this country back together. we've got to move forward or we're going to lose. our country is confirmed. i will do everything in my power and it
6:21 pm
will be my great responsibility to make america safe again. all right, we are joined by steve clemens as us presenter of the bottom line. and we've got james based with this house. is there a senior diplomatic editor? i can't think of 2 better people to talk about the 1st steps of this thing coming. trump administration, both domestically and internationally. as i, there's one question i had been meaning to ask your cutting upset when you saw donald trump leave the white house 4 years ago in the shadow of the january 6 lions, his party had turned on him. even those who had been most loyal, had turned on him. was there any part of you but thought he might be back? i did. i've spent a little time with president trump in the past that his team and there is a burning volcano in him who resented what happened, who felt that he had been dislodged. and you could just tell at that moment he did not give up. now, i did not expect the democrats to fair as badly as they did over the next few years
6:22 pm
in capturing the enthusiasm of the american public. but he came back and when you looked at the numbers before, he ran 75 percent of americans thought america was on the wrong track. that's very, very hard to beat for anyone who was connected to that administration, meaning to by administration. so one i bought from had something burning in him, a resentment and wanting revenge if you will. and to when you saw so many americans kind of just made with where america was at that time. begin to see at donald trump's coming back. you know, there's a former us president bill clinton, big name to come back. kid is this what donald trump is doing right now, and he's about to complete on inauguration day. is that the greatest political come back and us history? i think it's the greatest political come back in united states history. we've never seen anything like this in the modern era. and it is a discontinuous moment because there's just no doubt that the policies that donald trump, he's not doing this to be light hearted and say, oh we're just going to continue this. or this is going to disrupt whether it's on
6:23 pm
immigration or how we approach crime america's place in the world. but we commit ourselves to and we're not committed to how when economy works, industrial policy, all of these things are going to be very, very different in the next 4 years. starting on monday, it's going to be very different. j space. what can the world expect from this 2nd incarnation of donald trump? i think allies and adversaries on edge because they know you, donald trump, and they know they don't know what's going to happen. he is going to be transactional and completely unpredictable. so that, that they know, but i think this trump is going to be different from the trump you sold before. i'm going to 8 years ago, right off the little duration i was working, the white house piece at the time, going into the white house. and it was our dry, they really did not know what they were doing. you'd go in there and you'd see some well known figures like kelly on conway. and then you just see young in terms everywhere. they hadn't filled the jobs. they didn't know how to achieve and the thing that donald trump said he wanted to do, yes, we knew what he wants to do,
6:24 pm
but they didn't have a clue how washington, what, how the world works. this time i think it's very, very different. make an america great again, it's not just a slogan, it's a philosophy. yes, there's all sorts of problems with it and it's not necessarily to have it philosophy, but they have a plan this time. and i think the, the clear example of that is what we're seeing in gaza right now. a right to eat. there is an achievement from the trump administration before the trump administration has even started. steve, what call the middle east and boy has been doing the work? they've been doing the planning? none of this happened. they used to show me different. so i have with james. i agree with almost everything is that there was a coterie of people around trump in the 1st years of his, of his earlier presidency, gary called others. and they were, they are gen madison to stop trump from his worst excesses. they didn't know how washington worked, and when trump wanted to rip up to south korea,
6:25 pm
us free trade agreement, they stopped him. they stopped him on a number of funds. those people will not be there. trump will be trump. no one is going to stop. trump for being trumps this time, and then that way, it's a significant change and 4 years ago. well, you know what, since you mentioned the people who used to be on trump's team, i want to bring our viewers, some familiarity with the people are now going to be on this new team. all right, so here's some of the names that we're going to need to get used to this. they get confirmed by the senate. here they are what we saw a marker, rubio being grilled earlier. he's a florida senator known as a focus stance on china. iran and cuba, he is trump speak for secretary of state real estates, i can see. see with coffee here, you heard james, they're saying his name, he's nominated as the mid east. and boy, he's got no diplomatic or foreign policy experience, but he has been key already in negotiating the ceasefire deal between israel. and i'm us on behalf of the incoming trump administration for governor mike huckabee for us and master. ringback israel now he's previously rejected
6:26 pm
a palace thing in state that's worth noting at this point, out of bowler selected as a special invoice, a hostage. busy and it leaves specific as his un ambassador. she has repeatedly accused us of being, quote, infected by anti semitic rods. james, i come back to you because donald trump is going to step in. he's already in the thick of it, but he is going to step in to a, a situation to a middle east that is completely in flux at the moment. completely changed the region completely changed by what israel has done over the last 15 months in gaza. and then the bombardments in september of 11, and then i just got back from syria, the complete change of a region that was in power full of more than 5 decades in syria. and of course, the position of a rom now, which was a really key class, so we couldn't in the region. what does that mean now, i mean, before we had trump with his policy towards iran,
6:27 pm
which was very aggressive policy towards the wrong, i saw him in the wrong think that perhaps they should negotiate with trump habits. it's time for a nuclear deal on the phones terms. so i think the changes in the region that we've seen that are being so dramatic. i think they will continue heavy us as a guarantor by the way, speak of gaza for us as the guarantor of the seaside deal. that is, we believe going to take hold by certainly officially begins on sundays. donald trump is going to have to guarantee the architecture of this deal, whether it works or not is going to depend in no small part on him. yes, because he's still extremely french. all the situation and the timeline of the steel 42 days for stage 142 days for stage 2, which we may never get to 42 days for stage 3, this is a very, very long drawn out process. we're going to see we think 3 of the captives released
6:28 pm
on the 1st day on, on sunday, then other cat to 37 days later. this is very, very drawn out. and lots of things i'm afraid could go wrong. all right, james base, thank you very much. steve clements, thank you very much. we've got lots for domestic politics to get to. we'll be seeing quite a bit of each other over the next few days and certainly over the next few hours as well. thank you very much, james. steve. thanks, adult trump has achieved what no republican has been able to do in 2 decades. winning both the electoral college and the popular vote. remember he's a convicted felon twice impeached, accused of inciting in his direction. we discussed that. and yet that did not matter to his base a voters, in fact, this coalition group and he is re shape the republican party in his image. here's alan session. trump is ready for return to the white touch. he has control of both houses of congress and don't was complete control the resume process. donald j trump, of the state of florida has received 312 vote. he's changed the face
6:29 pm
of republican politics when he voters on the weight. he is largely re made the republican party in his image. uh, 8 years ago when he was being sworn in. you had folks in the party, folks like john mccain, jeff flakes, who are very critical of trumpet. those folks are no longer with us and they're no longer part of the republican party. it's no longer the property of ronald reagan. our success has more to do with substance than style. donald trump is different for style to conventional thinking. establish practice on the stablish ment. tickets, miss bush run for president. he told america it was a dot dangerous place and he was the solution. it won him an election and delivered because texas installs conservative justices an order to america to buff get us that donald trump certainly has appealed populism. and he's created a right when, when populism that it turns out had a lot of cache and appeal amongst the american electorate. he lost in 2020,
6:30 pm
for many reasons, and faced the position from those who argue he is a to a conservative. it doesn't matter. he's modified republican positions winning support across the board, but even after 8 years is perhaps still too early to see if trump has them, or mega politics will sort of 5 and the republican party. if someone else can take the ingredients. donald trump provided and continued to get success at the pallet book, unless or until republicans can figure out a way to bottle that type of energy and magnetism. i think it will be very, very difficult for them going forward. all americas political parties have factions in groups. some say donald trump stage, the hostile takeover of the republican party changed it. but it was a proxy looking for change, but he delivered a note. there are 3 generations of voters that don't know. the republican party of reagan or.

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on