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tv   [untitled]    February 6, 2025 3:00pm-3:31pm AST

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was dependent on the stage secure the story of the massacre. now to 0, what's most important to me is talking to people, understanding what they're going through here. it just here to we believe everyone has a story. we're hearing. the somebody bought a condo, how the top stories i'm, i would just say i'm, well there's 3 weeks into the ceasefire between israel and i'm us and around 2000000 postings and guys are still suffering. frontier survive, winter, and worn out tends stay, warm and dry is almost impossible. families are starting to find one clothes and shoes that children of course, are using cars are pleading for temporary shelters to be allowed in loans of the seas. 5 deal, 200000 tents were meant to enter the gaza. but any 2 percent of those have arrived . sofa masses accused each round of obstructing the delivery of temporary shelters
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and delaying the implementation of the ceasefire agreement tests. ingram is a communications manager for the middle east and north africa. unicef. she's in gauze, the ccs and toes as well. the media needs on the ground. one of the biggest challenges we're having is with items that were on the stool. use list that's a long standing restriction on certain items that can come into gaza. we need those for repairs of water systems. for example, pipes for, for was a and generate is to run pumps. we also need fuel to operate those generators. so there's a lot of things that are not necessarily caustic humanitarian aid, like nutrition, supplies, or medicines that we need to bring in to support the people in this moment of intense devastation and, and hopefully rebuilding us. and they will get fired westbank for more than 2 weeks . thousands of palestinians have been under his ready siege trapped to the homes, as well as she focused on jeanine refugee camp of the north. hold of 26000 public signals that have been forced to flee that homes. the u. an agency for palestinian
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refugees, owner says major sections of the camp, but being leveled at its chief is one of the situations becoming catastrophic is very fruit, also targeting talk of them which is need janine in the northwest. if you'll find west bank, one official that says more than 70 percent of the policy is living until graham being forcibly displaced is ready for us is forcing bulldozers to demolish homes and critical infrastructure such as voice and sanitation that works. why, how says bank tried home, so i'm a president trump plans for the colors, a strip after wave of global condemnation. on choose day donald trump declined to the us will take over cause i own it. now officials say palestinians could be moved temporarily to other countries while it's rebuilt. you're a secretary of state, monica ruby. i was also a peer to go back on. some of the terms comments on doesn't, is the only thing president trump has done very generously. my view is offer the united states willingness to step in clear the debris,
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clean the place up from all the destruction it's on the ground, clean it up, of all these, unexploded munitions. and in the meantime, the people living there will not be able to people who call that home will not be able to live there while you have crews coming in and removing debris while you have munitions being removed, etc. that's around to back to m. 23 rebels. how that 1st public riley in the main stadium of google, or in eastern democratic republic of congo. what appears to be a show of force. the fights is present to the newly appointed governor for the tv province and the man for go by the largest city in east d. i. c. m. 283 captured the strategic cities from government forces last week. meanwhile, the un says a ceasefire declared by i'm 23, rebel fighters does not appear to be holding a report. so the group have come to that mining town. you know, big way 70 columbus has from the capital of the south. key region for fighting is
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continuing between the sudanese army and the permanency rapid support forces. near hot team the ministry launched an attack on our staff. flights is fleeting that positions the army a slowly regaining territory around the capital. the civil war and sudan is approaching its 2nd, the 10s of thousands of people being killed in the fight 2, across the country. i'm going to demonstrate this in bangladesh of stormed and set fire to the home of exile for the prime minister, shaken, seen the festus were enraged by a speech has seen a published on social media from exile in india. you daily as ignore, caused by the government of bangladesh, the expedited shake of senior. she's accused of ordering extra judicial kings and we'll go straight to the 4th disappearance. hundreds of political opponents during last year. student protests against pay up to date for the news continue. so now just here i have ups off the palestine, the bar chase, stay with us for that. i for the the
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the 1st step aside, we looked at how these rails times and surveillance industry uses its occupation of palestine as a lavar tree to test products have been cells around the world. in this episode, i'm visiting some of those customers to see what exactly gets exported. is it just weapons and technology or something more profound? the
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we're in tucson, arizona, and it is searingly hot. i can smell the freight them. yeah. but that much of wanted freedom needs regular reinforcement, especially as we're right on the border with mexico. since 2021 more than 6000000 refugees and migrants have been detained, crossing into the usa overland, given by collapsing economies, violence and climate change. one thing it's really clear is that what israel's been doing for decades in palestine is very attractive to people who are trying to secure the us mexico board. and so the technology and the companies so operating in palestine are often appearing out of the countries around the world, including right here on the us mexican border. but 1st, to understand what it means to cross the border here, i'm heading into the desert to meet joe smith. he describes the challenges facing
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the migrants they'll just as he gets, it gets the tucson area and get out of here, right, the desert itself. so it doesn't work very well, where they have a choice of now is going across the mountains to avoid border patrol. they don't like the accessible areas you can't get through without a vehicle. the us mexico crossing is the deadliest land route for refugees in the world with over 600 dates for quoted in 2022. and the more remote the royce, the more dangerous it is. because it looks a little bit earlier. but usually they come from the places where they really don't understand their deserts, and they think there's one of the astray and they think there's going to be a creek somewhere and they can't really get get water from. absolutely nothing here . right. but people are dying of starvation out here. there's dinosaurs. mm hm. what forces people to take these precarious routes, of course,
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is the famous will along the border with mexico in tucson, arizona, illegal traffic, drop, 92 percent. if you really want to find out how effective a wall is, just ask israel's this section pre dates, president trump put under his 1st administration, is riley from elsa. was paid half a $1000000.00 to come up with prototypes for his dream of a coast to coast was what we say here. he's the physical fence. we don't see huge amounts of surveillance technology, but we know it's here. there are various parts of this border which use he's riley made l, but it's a violence towns. and now we're going to look for the surveillance house and we're going to speak to one of the world's expense about a ton. miller is a gen list who's been studying the us mexico border probably the 15 years. he's taking me to see one of the $55.00 is riley,
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elvin surveillance towers. don't have to cross this landscape. they're actually working together and that's, that's why they called us the virtual walk, right. these towers are equipped with light vision cameras. they that could see at least 7.5 miles away. the regular cameras, the thermal energy cameras, and a ground sweeping radar system that supposedly has a 13 mile radius, probably were standing on underground motion sensors. so if you are walking any step on one, it sends off a beeping sound in like the command and control center where they're watching the video feeds. then they're able to zoom in like say they see somebody walking on the hill for us or ice r us day might be zooming and right, we're on us at this, at this very moment on one visit here, a border patrol age and bows to, to him to just seeing the towels on the hill 1st migrants to take more remote
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routes. and then he said, well then we go to what is a top point. and we intercept the people when they come through the tell point. there's a correlation between people dying and these towers that work in tandem with the actual border walk. with the cindy, the sheriff's department and the homeland security director for the state of alabama american law enforcement has been turning to israel for training and equipment since 911. what is happening this evening is a compelling chapter in the war on terror. on for tonight's meeting is the culmination of a week in which top american law enforcement officials travel to israel to meet their counter parts. and that relationship has boosted sales of these rails so called homeland security technology. the arizona police are among many us forces using the services of these riley companies sell them rise. this allows them to extract all the data from mobiles and that position. we've had
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a password and the boulder has been controlled by a semi full 50 drawing. also made by help of systems. this is the problem i created in the bead for the talis contracts. phrases like securing the world's most challenging board is how these riley companies remind customers that their products might have been tested in palestine. the textbook at the university of arizona was categories rarely, company to the case here at the time l, which was awarded the tao a contract. we're going to age bruce, right to used to hit the arizona tick tock when he was a big secret. encouraging is riley companies to come and work here and train. so we're going to meet him and he's gated community fits of a welcome to the 2 side l, but is a, is really based company,
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but they created a us subsidiary and they wanted to demonstrate this technology along the us mexico border. we jumped on that opportunity because of our knowledge and understanding of israel and what was happening with that technology in israel. they were in some ways, very far ahead of the united states and trying to use technology to manage their problems, whether they be, you know, terrorism or border crossings or whatever it might be. national border security is all been challenged by a difficult topic graph conditions and advanced areas of interest since elbow to secure the $200000000.00 arizona deal for the fix towels have made it into the current tow checks board is probably not a little bit systems has the technology know how and real world operational experience in degree? co checks is also used by these really ami on the border with gaza and coastal protection solutions. this is amy one and the co op farm and its
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a whole no autumn nation just far as you can see. so yeah, we're pretty special fine because the land crosses the us mexico border. they have the surveillance towels across the territory. so lots of privacy, it's a lot of freedom. and if anything, it's not just them keeping an eye on movement across the border as them keeping an eye on us. what for, for cho, presence has done was basically make. everybody says back to go from people and a place that have basically been left alone for centuries 6 to being an occupied militarize community. it is very traumatizing. the what's being circulated, being here in arizona is that there is a lot as a direct connection between what's happening and tell us sign. and here on the us, mexico border in a physical sense, but also in ideological sense, the perception in the us, in some parts. he said he's rel,
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has been successful in managing, pushing back palestinians. and the same thing can be done here to push people, migrants in more and more extreme ways, which inevitably leads to more depths. mexico is a next destination. so we're heading to the board, a town of nogales which is a major crossing point. way in the lines across from the us to mexico, we have to turn the camera off and you can cite guns either, just in case you authorities having mexico city. so it allows this incredible country of a 130000000 people is renowned for its culture, food and easy, but it's almost as well known for its ongoing bundles with drug cartels. 430000 people have been killed since this started this drug war. nearly 2 decades
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ago, this round about in the center of mexico city is dedicated to some of the estimated 60000 people who bring disappeared. awesome, with a collusion of law enforcement. in 24, it's a new of 43 students who disagree. it's chinese on they say no, it just says now i can't ability. it's a huge scandal. yeah. and remarkably, it is actually a real deep connection to res riley, spyware. tomato, a band, yes. has been a regular with these protesting cabinets for the last 10 years. they say, okay, so i'll just do this, install on the collector. those as well that we need a guarantee going up. we're basically, i'm gonna send those 2 to see when that happened to him, so not so you will not be willing to check in those into india and on the, on those on there, i'm going to send you those 3 whitfield, and the remaining 43 were taken into custody by local police,
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they have not been seen since. various investigations have revealed the involvement of the army. this failed to locate the bodies of the missing the laid by the families. the movement for justice was seen as a threeish by successive government. and these riley, spyware, pegasus was deployed on them. we're gonna see central pro and legal sam here in mexico city, who represented some of the 43 disappeared families and to find out how that will take assessed for 2 piece to be as of now. in 2016 things with hands as the lawyers confessed to the governments account of what had happened to the missing. and then the private phone calls was suddenly all over the national media. i receive messages off a phone call that i have had with one of the parents of the 43 that was being
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published in the newspaper from mexico and canada, not from the origin for this phone call with one of the parents was present to the no way that suggested that we were talking about dirty money, and the whole presentation was signed by ethanol capital and so on. when that happened, we were shocked. it was my boy, you seen was a private phone call. you become afraid of what else can they have of your private lives? then in 2022 apples customer protection system, a list of them today with the subject of a state sponsored attack. nowadays, to have everything on your phone, there is nothing that we can do basically to prevent it. what everybody say is that these technology levels fast stairs, then what we can do, you know, in a small in
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d o in and mexico city at the time of the 1st attack, no one knew how this had happened. who else might be targeted? until this man helped identify the spyware. but before we could talk, he wanted to check the my iphone wasn't infected, it wasn't only compromised to, of whatever, everyone who has contacted you. so it's, it's surveillance, a goes beyond the main target. what we're gonna do is the, we're going to see if we can find something, pictures this can now get into your phone without the use and needing to click a link to takes control of your camera, your microphone and bro. costs it to the is controlling the software. they can see your location, access your data, and see what's on your screen, including encrypted messaging apps. so it's good. the negative, the yeah, this phone didn't show signs of the types of inspections that we check for, including i guess how often do you use these tools to check?
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i'm talking daily. yeah. almost. when the lawyers, phones were 1st compromise in 2016 lewis started investigating who was behind it. this is the 1st contract to get access to vegas. it was almost $3000000.00 and he mentioned so. so the number of targets, because normally the number of licenses that the, this particular client acquired, which were 500 have means that you can spice of 500 phones at the same time during these periods 10000 or even more people were targeted with vessels in mexico, many of which were journal as humorous fighters have to this point. patients, government officials themselves, another sales document. this one from 2020 to revealed, the mexican army was acting in an unconstitutional way. heading of the email and the document. it's called a fee, so it's more to balance or like deadly document. something like that. is that
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supposed to be funny? i know it's supposed to be funny or as opposed to like down to 8 days page secret that final user of this direct turn off in the motor intelligence center. this agency was secret the way it was supposed to be legal. they don't have any legal position to do surveillance. mexico's armies huge, almost states within the states. and mexico is the world's biggest user of pegasus spyware. it's controlled by the army intelligence center, behind gate. for if this message can it's totally secretive. there's no i actually getting there to have a chat, which would be nice not to say to files. despite the evidence, the me still denies, they use pegasus and not dynamic use. these rel, potential leverage by the pegasus custom is they could reveal their clients, they,
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they have allegedly backups of all the people who have been surveilled. definitely adaptive, sees real power over domestic and positions. for example, the mexican army has no legal basis to acquire with deployed a, to like pegasus. that definitely plays a role into how the leader in the mexican government or how the outspoken it is on the issues like the apartheid or genocide, calling on in, in palestine after gaining access to pegasus in 2011 mexico's tradition of supporting palestine of the united nations shifted and often it's in yahoo visited in 2017 mexico announced that would abstain on several probably palestine resolutions. the use of these riley technology is even more profoundly imbedded in the european union. d, u is the 2nd largest bio of these riley weapons.
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is riley. so called small expense technology is being installed on your land borders to control migration. and we're here in san most grace this 2 kilometers from searching to see how he's riley surveillance tech is central to the region for border security. we're meeting pitts, ramona, who is an anthropologist and a global expert on migration and borders ac you, i, to someone i think is a really important place to try to understand. because it was one of the 1st camps that was constructed to deal with a mass influx of people who were escaping the syrian war back in 2015, 2016 on the hillside, just outside the main town of bessie. the old camp was built for 650 people that was rapidly overwhelmed with up to 9000. there was a bustling sydney within
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a city, almost kind of spilling down the hillside like a glass of milk into the city of buffy. their people had to build their own ramshackle tents and there were reports of ripe and violence. and the, obviously the conditions were her effects. but it had a bit of like a community feeling to it. the people were surviving. there was a school, the people would cook and spend time together. as we kept getting more and more people on the island, and the authorities decided that something has to be done to discounts. and therefore they obviously decided they want to build something more hearted. and the yeah, that's right, with money from the european union and someone was the 1st camp like this that was constructed. it's just over the hill there. and it is very, very different from, from this one in 2021. thousands of refugees were moved to the new close
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control access center. will see, see i see much better living conditions. but at the same time, increase security provisions for the benefit for suddenly sick is of the benefit of the stop and of the benefits of the local communities. the c. c. a c's up a hill, a kilometers from the town. what really strikes you 1st, like it's a massive block of concrete. it's sunbaked, it's so hot. it's just, you know, there's very little vegetation inside the account. and also so much surveillance is when we went in for the official openings, we were able to go inside the containers where people are living and there are cameras in the core doors. there's also cameras on some of the taller pools. people have reported drone usage and where the data is going and who is being shared with is not exactly clear. so what does it like to leave the really came from syria and was moved from the old camp to the c. c. i see, you see the wire's the account realized the security to get it to police like why
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don't mind i am the one time i'm going out. sometimes i was existing my container to take a fresh air like a i can not be in this books. you look here, like there is a time that you're looking at like there is a come, you turn like this. there is a company and then decided that like a way to that, a police officer, security got your control, your life. it's under control. 247, you feel like everyone like to standing as like as you are like, like the most dangerous pearson in the war. i want to know what all the surveillance is fee, so amazing, and n g or that provides legal support to asylum state. because when people are registered and the code control access center,
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they're required to get the fingerprints multiple times. and part of this is for the assign them procedure is for the year a dock system. that's an e u wide data base of fingerprints of asylum seekers. but it's also for a p d on this biometric, a technology that the ccc has in place, but it's a 100 percent funded by the u. so they have a biometric cards and when they leave the facility and when they come back in, they have to scan the code and scan the fingerprint to be able to enter and exit. when you look at the administrative migrations website, you can see that they report that there's a behavioral motion recognition analytics as being used in the center of the system to our understanding. it's that the cctv cameras and drones which then um, live streams to control center in athens. this is known as central controls, assembles c, c a c. and for the similar camps at the heart of it is a system supplied by octopus. and he's rarely saying who's custom is include these
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riley military. octopus allows simply management for the entire security of those from one screen and on symbols. we discovered that the behavioral analytics is done by israeli company, vice thoughts, which is supported by these riley army and intelligent services. it goes to these policies of exclusion and technologies of control. i mean, i was in the occupied with bank last year, and some of the infrastructure that you see there is replicated here. i mean, it is the kind of same thinking that technology can be used to manage people and control people and keep people away that you don't want on your territory key to your ethics to keep people away here and drones. israel used to survival, gaza in 2020 israel aerospace industry signed a 50000000 dollar deal to provide the drones to the use bought a force from tex. introducing aaron maritime you
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way. us with a multi center payload tailored to the mission and with 24 hours of endurance known as a fix wing, drawing the hair and has a range of up to a 1000 kilometers from its facing volta. unlike a ship on the say, a drone has no obligate into risky vessels in distress. instead, forensics passes the location of migrant birds to the libyan coast guard. the boat capsized doing the deception the paisley b to set to migrants in just the 1st 10 months of 2024 by the 18000 and paper was stopped from reach in your experience or whatnot. yeah. by far, the lot of the sending at least 28000 people have died in the mediterranean, in the last decade of the, the great government and the a you deny that they do push backs. what do you think that logic isn't doing?
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so they want to make the passage into the you as a difficult and as violent as possible so that other people are dissuaded from coming. because the more technology you have, the more the bigger your surveillance dragnet is. and people also know that and so they will take risk your roots to try and avoid that surveillance. being a journalist is a preference i get to the heart of the story amplified the voices of those have been drowned out by the noise is a 4 is my driving force is what pushes me to take risks facing the trying to find that challenge and a huge responsibility, we keep politicians and decision makers in check. so the devastating human cost of their decisions working at the 0 enables me to make that positive voice is relevant
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to so that there's mode that unites us, then divides us the to some of the box and uh, the top stores allow just a rough, almost 3 weeks since the cx, 5 between israel and a mass and around 2000000 palestinians. and guys are still suffering frontier survivor winter and worn out tents. families just struggling to find room clothes and shoes for the children are farseason guys and are pleading for temporary shelters to be allowed in front of the seaside deal. 200000 tons. when men to enter gauze have 92 percent of those have arrived. sofa testing, graham is a communications manager for the middle east and north africa. unicef. she's in gaza. city of.

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