tv [untitled] February 10, 2025 1:00pm-1:31pm AST
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say that people with fluorescent vision would be able to recognize every day objects, women mix science, global gals, episode full on al jazeera, the, [000:00:00;00] the alarm 0 venue a, it's good to have you with us. this is the news, our life from the coming up in the program to day warnings that the aid coming into gaza is not enough. as winter conditions make life even more miserable for millions of palestinians. china is retaliatory towers, saw the american exports come into effect while the us administration threatens more measures on steel and aluminum imports. also head this,
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our ecuador is heading to run off both after producing no clear winter and sundays close presidential election. and a i race is on a global summit on artificial intelligence, kicks off in paris with europe seeking to make advances in win over skeptics. i'm devin ash, with the sports b. philadelphia eagles crowns the new c football champions. of course back jaden huts leading them to a force $8.00 to $22.00 point thrashing of the kansas city. chase to deny the chase and unprecedented fed straight with the bad weather in gaza is making life even worse for the 10s of thousands of palestinians returning to their homes. the tents that they've been using for months through the wind and the rain are now in many cases,
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barely usable trucks and cars are trying to pass through the net same car door. they're slowly navigating muddy roads because of overnight rain agencies save the 200000 tents and $60000.00 mobile homes that are supposed to be delivered under the ceasefire agreement, need to be urgently brought in many buildings or destroyed or damaged, forcing people to sleep outside or houses there is abraham l felice reports from gauze. the city the climate is add an extra suffering to the hundreds of thousands of palestinians return to the northern parts. as you can see, the they are having a hard time just moving to due to the month. this month is caused by the destruction of the general infrastructure and the environment that took place during the 15 months of the portal is what you do or we can also clearly see the tense is set up by the people here after they returned from the displacement journey during the 15 months of the brutal war in south 7th southern parts of the
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gods. for as you can see, this is the situation here, not, not only month. this is still was mixed with model. when shall be necessary. hopefully i'll situation will improve and a solution will be found for this problem. there are also children who passed through and full. as you can see, there is no improper road, very much. all of them are flooded with both sides or causing diseases. for sure, that's a how i left mean was that there are no symmetry facilities. i know how fast i have someone to get sick. there is no way to receive treatment. there is any of the field hospital and it's for the patients and those wounded from what we can see in instruction on my left hand. as you can see here, this, this rushing close the destruction through the streets and that so we're just bidding you to the fraction of the by of live and must be in the presence due to the climate. and the heavy rain in that is taking place in the gods for if i am
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sending a 0. does a city by this time a more on the living conditions with honey my mood who is live also and goes to city. honey, it's good to talk to you can, can you show us around you show us what it's like to restart your life in gaza right now to thank you sir. we are still in the northern western part of gaza city, better known to us different one district and in the past 15 months or so, this district particular district has been relentless, the bombarded by these really military, all of it's a high rise buildings that have been destroy completed, we get it just in a little bit. we're going to show you it by on the, through this camera, the destruction as being cause to this and what people are doing right now in order to rebuild their shadows. i've just as you look through the freedom of the camera, these are just a couple of the tents that were set up earlier today. as soon as we arrived here, we seen people here who try to get back to their destroyed then and,
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and the damaged buildings and homes here. but they could not now many of the buildings here at the risk of collapse. and because of the kind of bumps that were used by these very military, when it bombed the area, i quake bonds that shook the foundation of every single building. so with a strong wind, lots of rain, there is a risk of these building collapsing over people. so into just not trying to put themselves in more harm, then the try to set up these 2 tents right there. we showed them struggling as the boat that everyone, the women, the children, the men, the elderly, everybody cooperated to set up the students for at least the 3 of the families who returned back here to the the northern part of district. many of the surrounding areas here, if you look closely at some of the buildings are still intact. here they are severely damaged, but there's still a standing on what people are doing in the past, the few hours it was quite heavy rain here. so there tends that this set out did not protect them,
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did not hold them to stay warm and protected from the cold and there. and so they rushed back to their homes that are still somehow standing and to try to fix whatever is a broken inside these. but they fix into windows put and cover and shades on the balconies. and the windows just do in order to protect the children. because as we walk through around here, from the moment we arrived, we see many of the children are in the streets here, bare foot, no sound as no shows. and we look at the kind of a close that they are wearing as well. they're not protecting them, they're not wearing the code. the. the ring code did not work anything heavy to protect them at franklin. so it's not only the physical aspect that is going to be terrible for these young ones, but also the trauma that they have been through. it's more than a year now in these difficult conditions, whether it's summer time because they have to struggle with the over heat inside defense. and now the cold weather as they are staying. and these tense over and or
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over or an old difficult living conditions by the hours. it's like removing the lead of a new tragedy in need some housing our honey. and we can see very clearly a great work by your camera crew. by the way, people trying to fix the, the apartment that they move back into trying to fix the window. they're the people that we see walking along the road behind you. like what's their daily life like? where do they get food? how do they handle? there's the basics of human existence as well it's, it's very difficult to say, and people already the, the queue that we seeing in the past the 15 months, whether in the central area or the southern part of this trip, as people to cute for long dollars to get water and bread and foot, it's repeating itself once again. here in the northern part of the strip, let's not forget people are coming back to
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a pretty much annihilated area. the 1st few days since we arrived here. there was no one here. there were only brussels and destroyed buildings everywhere and life looked very, very impossible to start. but it gradually step by step as people uh, they get started to come back. these they have, they had no other option, but to start looking for signs of life here. this sort of many of the many of the street vendors are, are in the are, are working right now. and some of the bakers went back on track and started to be operational. but again, the same struggle with seeing cues that are very long and taking long hours for people to get a pack of of bread. in addition to the other necessities, other food supplies in the, in the market, for example, this particular street right here used to be a very busy market. but as you can see, it's more of a visit right now with only a few people of the displace population will return to their homes. and what they're trying to do now as a priority is to find the shelter because without
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a shelter, this is not, is not a starter for them a shoulder, a proper one is a starting point for everything else. without it. they're going to be on the move all the time, constantly searching for a place to protect them from the worsening where their condition to cold, the severe wind. and as, as far as we know, by the end of the day, the weather conditions are going to get even worse with a stronger wind in the area. and what we, where is us the most now is the 10 that has been set up right here in the back. brown are going to be uprooted by the strong wind because these are not the kind of tense that the displaced people were promised. they were going to get as soon as do they get to the northern part of the strength of the $0.20 little by homes. only 2 percent of these items been allowed here and not enough in the face of the greater demand, the displace people have right now. okay, only 2 percent of the items have actually made it to the gaza strip honey mountain with thanks to you and your team for bringing us all of that, that vivid account of what it's like to start rebuilding your life. i don't even
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know if it can be referred to as rebuilding your life in the gaza strip. and in the middle of that, for children, of course palestinian guys in children rosalia bowling is a spokesperson for unicef and gaza. you're joining us from darrow, by the in central gaza. thank you. unicef, of course, is that you an agency that deals with humanitarian needs specifically for children . it's hard to think of a worst place on earth to be a child. how are the children have gone to doing? the children and guys are miserable, but the ceasefire is bringing much needed, responded to where you have aid coming in. but you know we're human periods. we're not magicians, we come take the suffering away overnight. the needs of children are just a door because there is no end to their software. again, every aspects of their lives are suffering right though in god. so as, as tiny already told you, it's very, very cold. it's wendy, it's rainy. there's rain showers throughout the days. couple of nights ago when there was a rain shower at the moment it was over. i went outside of our units of compound
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and i entered a tent of a family that was right next door there tend to partially collapsed under the weight of the rain. and the little belongings that they had were old soaks. there's um, a family that has 3 children, uh, 2 teenagers on a and a 3 years a 3 year old boy. and those 3 to get stuff to sleep on this a mattress that mattress was wet, the blankets that they were rats because it was reading inside. i have no clue how these children were able to sleep at nice. um we will so we visited. ok, so hospital yesterday and they at all are where we get him across several severely ill children that need to be medically evacuated immediately. their lives are at risk. their lives are in barrel and unit stuff is bringing in much negative medical uh, items medicines, medical uh, disposable vocals, midwifery,
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kids syringes you davis, um, but the needs are so enormous that humanitarian aid on its own isn't going to be able to address the sufferings that i observe myself, they are due to the cold due to the lack of medical care who's really the, the conditions that children are in. what do the children of gaza talk about when they meet your teams on the ground children. and as i talk about going back to school, like the vast majority of kids that i may use, they actually talk about their teachers. they talk about their favorite subjects. they, they really miss the daily routine of going to, to school. they talk about their, their belongings that they've had to leave behind when they set their homes more than a year ago. they talk about their back rooms, they talk about their toys. there's such modeling to, to normalcy. and they also talk about this. they spoke about the losses that,
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that they've experienced themselves. lots of children have lost relatives, have lost friends so, so those are common themes that children raised when the, when we meet with them. it's hard to listen for the stories, especially the children speaking about all the relatives that they've lost or, or the injuries that they have experienced themselves. those are things that no child should ever have so experience and yet here in gaza, those stories are unique. now that's the other thing that is, is really, um, quite unbearable the, the kids that i missed, the stories that are record, those are and unique stories. those are just examples because every single child in gaza today has the story of loss of trauma and the deep suffering and deprivation. the children have got to talk about death loss and wanting to go back to school originally above. and thank you very much for sharing everything,
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all the information that you're getting on the ground there and it has a strip thanks for having me. us present. and donald trump has repeated his comments about taking over gaza and says countries in the region could be allowed to develop ports of it. a committed to buying out a gas as far as us rebuilding it, we may give it to other states in the least sections of it. other people may do it, is we're committed to owning it, taking it, and making sure that back is nothing back is how mazda has condemned from this proposal in a post on telegram, how mazda official is that a risk, says trump statements or absurd and reflect the deep ignorance of palestine in the region, gaza is not a prophecy that can be bought and sold and it is an integral part of our occupied palestinian land. dealing with the palestinian issue with the mentality of a real estate dealer. is
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a recipe for failure gas. it belongs to its people and they will not leave it except to their cities and villages occupied in 1948. the joining us now is mohammed and must be a professor at the doha institute for graduate studies. and until of eve is along the former director general of the foreign ministry of israel alon. i'll get to you in a minute. let me start the with mohammed. as a journalist, i'm acutely aware that there is an inherent danger in, in listening to every word that trump says, and i'm taking it too seriously. however, donald trump has not just double down on this. he has tripled quadrupled quinn to pull down on this notion the words we heard buying, owning and taking the gaza strip. mm hm. how seriously do you take this, and do you think people should take it? i think it's very serious and i don't think this is a, a trump uh idea. and i, i've been saying this and other contacts and, and other interviews. but this idea of greater israel is very mainstream,
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actually in israel, it's worth noting, but the us owning it, that's not so mainstream. that's true, that is true, but we're, let's remember that joe biden presented almost up the very similar plan, let's say on october, the 11th 2023 and shopped around to egypt. and jordan, this is published and all of the american newspapers who just didn't talk about it publicly and the way that that trump is. i must also remember that this is a pretty main stream idea inside of israel. when trump made his announcement, it was praised, not just by the far right, i keep hearing that this is a far right idea or a far right dream and is real. but just not true. if it were a far right idea, you wouldn't have any gas who was a centrist, come out and praise the idea, you wouldn't have, you're lucky, the opposition leader. also a center has to come out and praise trump's a plan for guy. so you wouldn't have a pull like this pull that was done by the jewish people policy institute last week that found that 85 percent of these really jews support the plan and the majority
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of those want to see it executed. now there are some that say it's not realistic and so it shouldn't be pursued, but they, but they, but they also liked the plan. so can you pause there for a 2nd since we've got along in this discussion and just a reminder of viewers along the outlet, former director general and the find ministry of tennessee. so he was near the top of his really diplomacy alone. does this plan sound mainstream to you? is this something is really diplomacy has seriously engaged with before or might engage with now? spruce the just to the say basically correct. i don't think it's 85 percent is closer to 70 or 75 percent of these way. so that a big, big cation, few homeless because it's the right way. it is a big deal because 1st of all, know who to be united states even. oh,
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very good point because she is coming back. okay, great. the magician was the person you spoke. it was oh, we closed the door. oh sorry. and uh well this american family behind this way. so it's the express of position that will be, it shall be all over the duration of the gods. off the street is ridiculous. they know very well now. the monster is ready to go for his. we're always way craze. so the inside, he's the globally do the most alone again,
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you were near the top is really diplomacy. when you 1st started hearing trump talk about this owning the gaza strip. the riviera. all of that, i mean, what was your reaction? i actually use the plan is not humane. it's reading colors before the minority. here it is a full full most of these way these to see a crop expressing the ways that they didn't give them the to express all side effect because facebook is even better. yes. i these way is fine this because the quotes, the damage in the international court to just the city, the people in the so when people say they were silent. but when the united states, you say these people, oh,
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very happy to see the county american president. what do you call them for? well, i'm in the language of force displacement of palestinians out of gaza is clearly as you said, as a loan has confirmed as well uh, music to the ears of many in israel. however, until now it has never been considered practicable. everybody is against this egypt, the neighboring country to the other country, the borders cause it right is against it. jordan, that has been against the idea of welcoming a palestinian saudi arabia, which benjamin you know, recently said, oh, well, that could be the spot for a new policy and stayed there against it. katara was angry and just put out a statement everybody's against it. so what happens though, as well, that's the $1000000.00 question. that's the $1000000.00 question. you know, it can kind of country can one of these countries be bribed? that's an open question. there has been the idea of debt relief floated for egypt, for instance, egypt isn't a massive amount of debt and in
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a world of economic hurts. so when they consider that money on my sense is know that they would not consider it, that no amount of money would, would, would, you know, cause them to take in this, this huge political cost. it would be a grave political loss. but there are, as i want, so there are huge, not implications here for the rest of the ceasefire, which we have not spoken about for normalization. i mean, it almost seems as though israel and the united states are going out of their way to say that they no longer care about saudi normalization. if they did, you know, this isn't the way to show it to go out on national television and, and tell the saudis of nation taken the palestinians. so i think there are huge implications in just one clarifying point on, on the poll that i mentioned a moment ago, it is 70 some odd percent of israelis, but close to 85 percent of israeli jews in that. in that po and people pay. now people can look it up, so this is a very mainstream idea. and the last thing i'll say quickly is that i would, i would push back
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a little bit on the idea that this has not been pursued. this is something, this is a goal for is really political elite and they've been pursuing a slow as in the cleansing for it for many years in the got in, in the west bank for instance. this aggressive program of, of a settlement expansion is actually meant to sort of start shrink, not only posted in territory, but the palestinians, and ultimately pushed on push them off the land. that is, that is one of the objectives. yeah. and there's 0 question that the policy and territory for starters, has massively shrunk from investors. fact mom and a must read. thank you very much. we'll talk again along the o. thank you very much. i. this is really military has continued its raids in the occupied westbank. detaining 2 people on monday is 4th, is also set fire at the house and the town of steel at the heart of the west of janine city. this was at dawn. the fire forced residents to flee several houses in the area had been destroyed in the past few weeks as this really troops step up the
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result houses. there was no days in amman, jordan, she is there because these really government and tell us the authority of band else as you are from reporting from both israel and the occupied west bank so nor at least 35000 palestinians have been displaced in this recent and expanding is really military rate. do you know what's happening to them where they've gone and how they're getting by it's a very important question, sir, because these people, these thousands of people are seeking shelter with family, with friends, with loved ones in community centers. but really to understand just how dire that their faith is, we have to zoom out of a little bit. let's consider this the palestinian authority, the governmental should be offering them some sort of shelter assistance and so on . is a cash strapped? it's money, it's income is being hijacked by is honora,
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which is responsible for the refugee camps in the occupied west bank and around the region has been banned by is really continues to operate in the occupied to us bank, but it is also cash strapped. and then you have us aid donald trump pull the plug on the agency. so even that source of possible humanitarian relief is absence. so for now, families will take in their loved ones and friends, but how long can they sustain that? given the fact that the economic situation of old families in the occupied west bank is at an old time law that is low. that is the question really, that is on everybody's mind the specially that these assaults are continuing and expanding across the occupied to us by no stand by for just a 2nd to something else. we'd like your reporting on and it is this, the owners of 2 book shops in occupied east jerusalem have been arrested. is really
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forces confiscated several books after reading the stores on sunday night. and they've been the owners of the bookstore as have been detained for 8 days. the lawyer says is really forces search the stores saying that they contain books, supporting violence and terrorism. listen to this, holly, i'm have to the old couple of the higher. they got an extension for the rest for 8 days. we believe this is part of the political prosecution and part of the is rarely policy of shutting up the voices of palestinians to stop them from learning . it's part of the attacks against the palestinian people for 10 years. so nora, this is a bookstore that our colleagues mom's room had reported on a some months ago. why read a book store? i mean, israel always says that it's addressing a security threat and it did so once again. but what's behind this a so we have to really look at the pattern of behavior is real attack. these bookstores now which are iconic destinations for
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intellectuals, for researchers, for students, for even visitors who want to learn more about palestine about a palestinian routes in the city and about the israel palestine issue. they have books for people, including someone likes a world renowned is really historian ilan perfect, who, whose books were also confiscated. but then if you take a look back, israel has rated the edward site music conservatory. it's rated one of the most important control centers in jerusalem. as well, this is as the lawyer set part of a very clear systematic effort to fight palestinian identity in the city to make sure that it is as israel that says at its own on divided capital, where no palo city univer which exists. and the only way to do that is to fight textbooks, palestinian education. i will send you an bookstores cultural centers and to make
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sure that expression of palestinian presents and roots in the city is at a minimum. yeah, i just reminder of yours again that we did reporting on this mama junctions reports and overview as we'll have seen this a few months ago. and as part of all the time he spent there, he saw no security threats present in the bookstore that's nor day reporting from amman. jordan, thank you very much and is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu is back in court for his corruption trial. netanyahu faces charges a fraud breach of trust and accepting bribes, dating back to 2019 prosecutors accused him of granting favor. as the media organizations are favorable press coverage is also alleged to have advanced the personal interest to the 1000000000 their hollywood producer and exchange for lavish gifts. net. yeah, who has pleaded not guilty. the the u. s. president donald trump says he will impose a 25 percent tariff on all steel and aluminum imports,
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including on his biggest trading partners, canada, and mexico. trump also threatened reciprocal paris on all countries. the tax imports from the us will also be announcing the steel tariffs on monday. is going to have a 25 percent of those threats from trump. com is fine, is retaliatory towers on about $14000000000.00 worth of goods from the united states. take effect aging announced the move last week off to the us, imposed levies of 10 percent on all chinese products. china as measures target us exports of liquefied natural gas, coal crude oil and farm equipment. as well as some automotive goods, katrina, you has more from vision aging seems to be using this as an opportunity to position itself as a champion of more to naturalism,
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in opposition to the us speaking monday afternoon ton is foreign ministry says that there are no windows and cradles will tell us the dialog before you need lateral terrace increases and stop with noise in trade. now, when it comes to the steel terrace, it seems so far that this will impact country such as mexico, canada, more than china. it's true that last year trying to explain to the rest of the 110000000 tons of globally. but most of that ended up in vietnam, south korea, and in fact, it only explodes about one to central. let's deal exports to us. that being said, though, china is certainly impacted by these 10 percent tariff that us impose at the beginning of february. and in response to that starting today, monday, look in time midnight's tunnel has imposed an extra 10 to 50 percent terrace on us goods coming into trying to in particular goals, oil liquefied natural gas and farming equipment, as well as some large vehicles. in addition to this, china has filed
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a lawsuit against the us at the w. t or extension to us. companies implies an export controls as a crucial materials such as and finally, china has also launched anti trust perv into us protect giant google. and according to the wall street journal aging is currently compiling a list of other tech companies in the us, the potentially target should the target ministration said any other sellers against china is a good the dream. how does 0 say i'm planning more coming up on al jazeera, how this traditional clothing and ukraine is taking on a new style of importance in the countries fight against russia. and we'll be hearing from the 2 star quarterbacks off to the eagles. and the chief hopes of the historic 3 piece of the super bowl that's coming up with jenna later this out
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