tv [untitled] February 3, 2025 8:30pm-8:46pm AST
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country to develop a national, sustainable tourism program in collaboration with the global, sustainable tourism cubs. village life here retains its job. every meal is like a feast from the farm to the table. hundreds of excavations and restoration works. this country is a place to slow down history, cool. the map of the middle east is there. any prime minister is in the united states? well, he'll be the 1st world leader to meet donald trump in his 2nd term. missing you all who believes working closely with the president will help him to further change the face of the region after the war on cause the ends but weeks off to signing the ceasefire agreement with a mouse. israel has ramped up a tax on refugee camps in the occupied westbank. these ready armies, as the operation is, be noised to prevent the building of the terrorist infrastructure experts will in the military, rage, and amex and bull pulse of the entire tree is donald trump's return to the white house encouraging nothing yahoo to push ahead with his dream of a great to israel,
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and what does all this mean for the future of palestinians living in the occupied westbank? we'll discuss all these questions without guess shortly. but 1st, this report from joe levins, has hundreds of thousands of palestinians return to their homes across garza and the federal sees fire purchase. the 2nd phase is ready palms rank down on the occupied west bank for the last 2 weeks. these randy minute tree had been carrying outrage across the occupied westbank saying that necessary to prevent terrorist infrastructure from being established. large numbers of his ready troops have entered the city and is refugee camp, and are supported by drones. helicopters and almond photos is hundreds of palestinian families have again been forced from the house. and there is another battle on us. they still wanted to cool us, find the drawing to leave the neighborhoods and he'd to out of square. so we went to training of the situations and so they've rented up in the west space to,
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you know, show that they're still in control. and, but they're still dictating the terms. now, they're not talking about eradicating, come us in jeanine or in the west bank because it's not really about from us there it's, it's all kinds of crowds, factional, an affiliated groups. these are very young men who are only know occupation and they only know netanyahu included us. but it's very clear that israel is trying to do the same kind of things that it's done in garza, in terms of evacuating. people tell, you know, ruining rows of infrastructure, making it very hard to live there. and yet we, i don't think people expect different results. i, you know, they, they've done these kinds of operations on lesser scales over and over again. i think the 3rd time in the last 2 years, they've operated in jeanine so many times and it never seems to create the result that they want. so i don't necessarily expect this to be any different model is, could i just check with you though?
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you say it's not home us and published and you this moment you had, we've had all sorts of other groups. i'll accept monitors lines. then are you saying this isn't really any organized group of tools? i mean, i'm sure that my colleagues of others can speak more to what's happening with it and how soon in society because i cover these really died. but yes, i, what i'm saying is, but it's not about you rally keating from us. it's about what, what these ideas is talking about is eradicating tears entire cells and those tears cells might identify more or less with these. so i'm a 200 or other members, but they're not really identified with the specific groups. and this is all over the west bank. you know, like you said, there's other types of groups and they recruit quickly and they come up quickly. so it's not the same as in gaza, but in israel, they're talking about it and kind of the same type of language that they need to eradicate. what's growing engineering. i have a 70 palestinians killed in the westbank since the beginning of the year. if it
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wasn't for the attention on the war and cause, i mean this is, this is huge, isn't it? i mean, what's been going on the westbank since october, the 7th really is been overlooked by much of the world. because a huge some. but i think when october, the 7th, it took place and some western countries it wanted to at least admit them. yeah. well that he had the right side of the funds. i think many of us expect that what was going to happen, not only in golf and we were very clear, this is a war against the palestinian people and, and the main goal destroying the government has. it's not the old one group or the other is about how to keep denying systematically, the palestinian right to self determination. and that's can be seen the most here in the occupies the west bank. so this is not about what's happened before him. the limited sanctions that the a by the administration had placed on them several months ago. i think of it not that it stopped being taxed here over 1400 attacks after by the impose the
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sanctions. but as long as the settlers keep terrorizing the community, the community is going to strike back. now i want to show something that was said a couple of weeks ago at the world economic forum and of all see you and 2nd, general antonio terrace was speaking. there and as i saw on behalf of the international community who stressed the need for a 2 state solution, but he said, he said there was another possibility. listen because i think his comments here a very telling you have the possibilities for israel to begin. bolden by so many sadie successes that because they have to see that these is the moments to do the next session of less than uh and uh to keep the guys the kind of the legal situation with the pen please. and clear farmer
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which is clear to me that you see all these lots fundamentally interested in thousands of them. if we need to speak the west bar of those last words that it's clear for me that israel is not fundamentally interested in gaza. it's fundamentally interested in the west bank. would you agree with that assessment from the un secretary general? well, i would certainly say that is really government has an open agenda. the next thing the west bank and gaza, it's a different story. but israel. busy policies, as we've seen them are to displace and disrupt pulse in the livelihood everywhere. so that is common to both guys on the west bank and israel's defective control of both the territories continue to control over decades and to various degrees and levels is also common. but i think it's true that in many ways the far right, while it has studied sites on recently and gaza, that seems to be much less possible now that
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a residence in uh guys that have moved back up north and there's a ceasefire. and trump has kind of a different vision now, and i think what we need to pay attention to is that the west bank is already under defacto acts, asian. i mean israel already, especially in the last couple of years under finance minister because much ridge who has also started to move authorities from the military into civilian hands and is very, very open about what he's trying to do. so, you know, there's, there's no question here that this is what his role is doing. and i think what we need to think about is whether it's in mention the items interest to actually formally and next, the west bank last time he threatened to do so. he got the abraham accords and i think for is wrote for the practical. busy right, waiting israel, it's more in their interest to defacto next to the west bank and not to make it formal because then they'll have to answer to a lot more legal question is that they don't need to deal with today. have a you'll in ramallah, you are living through this, you're well aware. as of you as our i think that is real estate to attend
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a ride on the west bank focusing on jeanine again last summer in august and september. and then in recent weeks, the policy knew the source has been carrying out its own right in a very public way, with all my vehicles going through the streets of janine, the spokesman for the policy and helps out with your patients that the english to put an end to submission and tell us what message was the policy nuno saw it to you and your view trying to send with that operation the kind of thing all sorts, he was trying to send a message to the trumpet, ministration with regards to the willing method, past to an effective control, but i think the most important elements here is that this really government has been weakening, not just any sort of kind of thing, an organization on the ground, but they've had a single 30 p itself. it's virtually impossible for any government to have an effective control here in the elk by its westbank, under the mattress or the starting, the government the let's remember that this really government,
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the student is confiscating a hundreds of millions that belong to the signal authority. and at the same time, it's making very difficult for the p a to function with the problems they are facing regarding movement in between different policy and areas. steve of a year ago, the us and the you. what demanding that there was a reinvigorated leadership of the policy and authority in almost a year ago. a new prime minister mohammed mustafah was appointed to lead the palestinian authority. isn't the reality though, the p a is probably weaker than ever very much so the combination of its own, of corruption and the, the, the view that in increasing view that they are essentially a collaborators with the as riley's other inability to, to stop the war. and how they even going to get basic services. yes, i mean israel's law against the owner. i went into effect this week a few days ago and they were evacuated basically from their offices in jerusalem
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and their future is unclear. um, obviously the most urgent situation is that you might have terry and then the services in the education that we provide. but i think what, what his role is really doing here. and again, it's very open and clear in terms of the color of the, the government's agenda, and extremely concerned. some of them i'm really afraid that the, the c as we have witnessed in gaza. i'm going to repeat this here for the sake of this on. busy and an exception process, and i think most importantly a piece of state which is the survival of the government that is taking place through the suffering and the denial of rights of dependency. new people steven, i mean, it seems to me as nothing yahoo, it meets trump. there are 2 possible scenarios, maybe the remote, but the main ones to me, all the trump pushes ahead with the abraham a cold skits saudi arabia to join the you a ball, rain morocco and well sit down is probably a little bit of
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a moot point to give them the country's been in civil war for nearly 2 years. he pushes ahead with that, and if saudi was to agree with that, then he, we wouldn't have westbank, an exception of displacement to people from garza. but that's the other option. the many in these right in the cabinet would like to see which way do you think trump is going to go with drop? well, certainly try to push for deal with saudi arabia, but even saudi arabia is a 3rd hearing that may be can ignore the views of 98 percent of their population, which i think would oppose recognizing israel without recognizing palestinian statehood as, as well. a viable state alongside israel. so i, i think he will, into the alternative would be essentially to give a nothing yahoo a blank check. no, either for outright annexation or increasing the de facto annexation. i think we
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will see increasing violence. we're going to see a situation like we did in south africa and the 1980s of with the war and the townships and ends and or, or do use another analogy from that period. no salvage or where the united states, you know, allow the desk squads and, and the political calculations of the coalition. interest of the yes, well you have a kind of very different dynamic now that you from that i'm, it's in yahoo to get their fellow citizens out of gaza. and you have this conflicting kind of vision. the term it seems to be putting forward a mega deal with saudi normalization. but how do you get that without giving serious concessions to the palestinians? a steven was talking about there's no way to kind of square that circle. and you have people in terms of ministration, who are greater israel annexation is like huckabee, like at least defining an attorney. i don't want to survive and his coalition. so
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if he's going to continue with the guys ceasefire, he's going to have to give something else in return. so it's very unclear and of course the saudis as well are not going to be able to move quickly on this because they're going to have to see serious measures taken. and 1st and foremost, a complete withdrawal of ideas from gaza and like a permanent end to this war. and on the other hand, we still have some ice and power there, which is something that is relevant to me. i don't want the saudis presumably don't want trump doesn't watch. maybe that's the one major commonality, but it's unclear how all the pieces of this puzzle are going to come together. and right now it seems completely unreasonable, but i, i would say that i think trump has a different vision than that to me on right now. and so that's a very interesting dynamic that we're going to have to see how it plays out. i, i really don't think that he is going to be willing to push a nothing yahoo into a compromise at all or to crack down on the hard liners with it within his colon.
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should have a briefly, i mean you had stevens, the say he believed the bite and paid some lip service to international legal norms . is that how it is seen in ramallah? and is there any anyone that who thinks it could be better with trump? the 1st of all, i don't think you've been there to pay a leg. the big thing they say keep with divides that's nice. comfortable. and then for trumps agenda includes everything from tax cuts to integration, but how much is real and how much is bluster? is it runs footprint across the middle east? frankie beach trump administration is wing options to end the rest of your brain more. but what does it mean for euro? a quizzical look at us politics. the bottom line, february on the jersey, we years own from the outbreak of the war and you cream out of view. it explores the human costs and asks whether politics or the battlefield will determine its outcomes for cause new direction. looks at the challenges facing nations across the
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continent as they move away from dependency. aiming to re define their futures after a vote of no confidence in germany's transfer, people had to polls with a sense of right christian democratic union parties expected to take power. russia's shadow on africa examines of russia's growing influence in the region through the prison. the central african republic. you'll see a whole the african institutions as a chooses leaders. february on a jersey at a. this is turkey. turkey a is the 1st country to develop a national, sustainable tourism program in collaboration with the global, sustainable tourism council. this country holds more beauties than just those. you see blue flag, beaches, historical and cultural treasures, euro valley rooms, and michelin, greenstone restaurants, come and discover not true. historical and cultural beauties, the,
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[000:00:00;00] the hello, i'm sammy say that and this is the news out live from dell coming off in the next 60 minutes. us president donald trump agrees to polls town of san mexico for one month as they work towards the deal on issues. trump's threats to impose talent, if so next bullets of the shadow and the you leave is me think in brussels. only
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