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tv   [untitled]    February 19, 2025 12:30pm-1:01pm AST

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are planning to have moles, summit's. we will open all the time, those the partnership channels with the african continent. and even after the live saw the union, there was a corporation, we had been stopped. the laces with the applicant called some of the lectures were reduced for some time because we have other priorities. but now we go back to the evaluation period of our friends in africa according to what they deserve. because they have been the elizabeth for a long time and we need to do whatever we can and then all that to both of the relations for the sake of both, both isn't both sides. love seat also. it's there guy. laugh for all of the russian fight. foreign minister addressing the russian parliament in moscow, we're going to go to a correspondence in most guy. usually
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a shop with all of this one comes of the kremlin, announced a little while ago that letting me a person and donald trump could potentially make as early as this month as well. that's why it's uh, so at the moment. so sir, gala ross is uh, speaking at the state d mount, which is the law house of russian parliament. and basically this is just the very early stage of his speech. and at the moment what we hear, he hasn't actually spoken about hugh crane yet. but of course, we've had from the kremlin, from cremeans folks pest and demetrius calls, that's a very much dentist to pace. it may seem between the legit, pearson and donald trump may take place before the end of february. but at the same time, it's not 100 percent because they may also take it may also take place later because it needs some sort of preparation, of course
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a pass code. so i also said that's a, uh, this very fast and very important step which was made add on, choose the in re add. it has been take, it has a, it has a, it has to restore relations with the us to launch piece process in ukraine. but it's to add a to voice any results or conclusions, but the mood hain russia is quite business like. ok, thank you so much, julia, julia, ship of all of a for us 5th in most guy. but will have much more on this developing story in the coming hours. that's all for the moment. i'm from the crime to stay with us. the stream is coming up next. the the pumps agenda includes everything from tax cuts to immigration,
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but how much is real and how much is bluster? does it runs footprint across the middle? the shrinking? the trump administration is waiting options to end the rest of your brain more. but what does it mean for europe? a quizzical look at us politics. the bottom line. after nearly 500 days of war and almost 50000 killed, fragile troops offers palestinians an opportunity to return home to berry, loved ones, to breed. for how long on and these voices, and this is the stream on a month long cease fire. after 15 months of genocide in garza its been one month since a ceasefire. deal negotiated between israel and her mos came into effect and uncertainty looms over whether it can actually hold their just 2 weeks left until
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the end of the 1st phase of the agreement. but several terms in it have yet to be implemented, including the delivery of 8. and while the entire world watches tens of thousands of palestinians have been trying to pick up the pieces of what is left of their lives. and wondering when and how to rebuild. sure, sorry the uncle with a video diary on what the ceasefire has felt like 2000 so far a hi on the why and welcome to every 10 to the north. i'm so happy and i have a special meeting this morning as a b b o. dawson the . 6
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the no, no god, this is the we wrote down again how i quote and then the do this people think of these for you mean like go talk to an old mother, but what does normal look nice as you see, this is all i like to discuss where things stand and what it will take for this truce to become a permanent reality. i'm joined today by our with damon, former war correspondent and founder of in not a,
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an international network for age relief and assistance. british palestinians, surgeon, dr. hassan, i will see to he has worked in several hospitals across gauze as a volunteer, and honda and i, osh professor of sociology at mount royal university. thank you all so much for joining us here at the stream today. our as the strip lies in ruins, there are many have already that started talking about reconstructing. and this could be the largest reconstruction efforts in modern history. the u. n says it would take 15 years to clear the rumble. can we even talk about rebuilding when the future looks as so on source and as well? it certainly makes it a lot more difficult to talk about. rebuilding one at this stage mandatory in organizations are struggling to just bring in sufficient shelter items like tons or those pretty 5 units that were supposed to be coming in under the agreement. a lot
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of families right now and when you listen to them the, what the greatest needs are, are talking about the need for shelter and access to, you know, basic necessities. and that is one of the 1st things that needs to be provided before one can actually talk about reconstruction. in addition to all of that, there is the reality that just about everything you would need for reconstruction does not really exist in gaza at the moment. you need be heavy machinery need to be able to, you know, tragically, go through the rubble and find the thousands of bodies that are estimated to still be buried there. you need to be able to have the trucks and the various other sorts of construction materials inside. right now. it's a huge struggle to, to even have a conversation about letting that and never mind trying to circumvent all of its rules, rules and regulations when it comes to what isn't, isn't allowed into gaza, me, dr. obviously to do you agree that it's very difficult to actually talk about rebuilding gaza at this stage?
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we've always known that these really strive to it. she's been, this is fire what they kept to cheat in the more. and this way it has created as part of the genocide project mechanisms for kids that are be on the bones of the mist. and these mechanisms are related to the destruction of the lady in gauze and instruction of the house. and so what is right at this point is she is a continuation of the dentist through infectious diseases, through the denial of health care to be allowed to die off their moons even as the smallest or no i said is in order to continue this project and licensing what we've heard of the trauma president trump in the last week. he is in education this genocide project that there is a platform to continue well into the spire through the denial. busy busy the basic
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needs, oh my god. and so that is continued to die, can be small. so the destruction continues, even as the guns fall silent, i'm 100, we're talking about deal does barely hold a to be fair. i mean, there's been reports of at least 265 of violations. 120 palestinians have reportedly been killed since the sea fight sees fire came into effect in that in garza alone. obviously, can we even call this a truce? you know, and, and. ready a serious violation, just a day, a 3 policemen were killed. still, no caravan, still no mobile homes built nowhere near enough humanitarian aid to being delivered to gaza. if they're not even living up to phase one, what makes people they're going to even get on with the face? do they still have not gone on with their face to negotiations?
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it's set to started. 2 weeks is already delayed and uh they have no intention of getting into phase 2. there is reports that nothing. yeah. who wants to extend phase one and continue to violate a phase one a to, to basically release a captives and continue with their genocidal plan. if they're not living in mobile homes, it means that they do a want to pursue with this is a quote unquote truck or an engineer who plan um, uh for displacing the palestinians and, and continuing the genocide. so this is where we are at. despite all the difficulties that we face right now in terms of making sure that the reconstruction takes place in my view, that is the critical thing to do for the international community is to insist on total reconstruction as soon as possible for the work to make guys a continuously uninhabitable and force people to leave. so the international
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community, very serious about opposing the explosion of palestinians from their homes in lands . if it is serious about stopping this genocide once and for all men it needs it's just on. busy the full reconstruction of gaza to, to begin immediately on the question about whether the international congressman serious could have been asked 15 months ago. right? but i'm out in january just before the ceasefire. the u. n. had already stated the efforts to supply aid in gaza were, quote, a breaking point. you mentioned there before, the 1900000 people are internally displaced. 80 percent of them are living and make shift shelters. and you said about the difficulties of getting just shelters inside of gaza at the moment. what are you hearing from your teams on the ground in terms of the most important needs that are not being met? well, here's the sort of mca villiad and challenges that we face has to manage, sharing organizations when it comes to actually getting aid. and we don't have that
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much say over which trucks and which items really get priority. so what we haven't seen throughout the ceasefire up until now is that yes, you know, think fully quite a few food items have been getting in and the markets right now. you know, if your child right now wants a bar of talk, like you can find that on the market that's not need meeting the current of the population, the most pressing needs right now. our shelter items. so that's tons stops tarp, stops these, you know, pre constructed units that were meant to be a part of the deal. and then also access to clean water. you have, you know, a huge population shift that took place once again. once the notes are in port or was opened with hundreds of thousands of people moving from, you know, central gaza up to cause a city to the northern most parts. people also wanting to move back further south into delphi, but there is no pre existing infrastructure left there anymore that can actually
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deliver clean water and sanitation. and so as organizations you try to establish that in these areas. but it's extraordinarily difficult when what's coming in is not sufficient. the other huge pressing item, for example, is fuel fuel is still in very, very short supply. there's also a great need for hygiene kits for medicine, for machinery, for all of the you know, some i still standing some i functional medical facilities, not to mention the need to try to been field clinics. and a lot of these areas that have been entirely decimated, so outside right now, outside of, you know, sued everything else is a huge priority. mm hm. and on the medical situation, dr. obviously to more than 100000 people have been injured in gauze as a result of the war. that's one and 20 people in the strip. the world health organization has said the 22000 of them have life altering injuries that require
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rehabilitation. you posted about this on social media and you actually wrote for the wounded a war is never a thing of the past. can you tell us about that? but also remind us of just the conditions of the medical infrastructure today and how long it would take to rebuild it to a level that is actually suitable to the needs of the people. so just to kind of look at the, the pediatric population of the world. we knew from the american literature, the age on the china needs between 8 and 12 surgery. by the time they reached the old age, we know that a child with a lower level prosthetic needs a new process is every 6 months of the sheet or magnitude of what is facing the thought of semi analysis. in order to treat these to minimize the residual disability that will be left by spins to ensure that the states children grow,
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they are being present because the bundle tried to grow, grow much faster than the parts of the money. and so these are based on the amount of a single, a field cost. they have no money as a building or need we needed to rebuild the search to 6 surface pretty certain the 6 hospitals that they have destroyed. and so neither are the ones that's coming out in the know 1st the, that is necessary. there's only around 50 kids that are coming out of the day. so there's around $470.00, that's come out since the sci fi i have, but also the, the, the, the 0 number means most of it is not a single part. but why the region, the about us in your house can deal with the
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a. so we need to increase the capacity of, say something with us and, and basically, and dr. uh they, they might actually increase rise. these needs might actually increase as r o was just saying, because there's so many issues with, for example, water distribution and sanitation. things can get significantly worse if these are not addressed 1st and fast. absolutely, i mean the, the, the demick saw him such as disease r as a result of all the combination of instruction also lived in the fire when people sold the destruction of the water and sewage trees, the denial of access to between drinking water. and so, unless that is, that is the kind of machinery that uses this, and this continues to be installed on the city. if you are a little bit and you end up with that as such as disease,
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the chances of new don is higher with a miser infectious disease. and that's for the because the bodies please under the same just the i'd certainly at that we're watching now. let's try out this, does this a valid attrition, wounding on time, and certainly staying the lives of the file to the children and the younger and i to read i'm, it's a kind of side of a generous on this is the final part of the agendas. and again, it is just such a dramatic picture, an em, honda, you mentioned this before. the international community in the us present donald trump had an offer to make. let's take a look. but we'll take over the gaza strip and we will do a job with a to, we'll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous, unexploded bombs and other weapons on the side,
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the level of the side and get rid of the destroyed buildings level it add, create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area. i do see a long term ownership position. i see it bringing great stability to that part of the middle east and may be the entire middle east. um, honda, this proposal to take over this trip has generated a headlines but not meaningful solutions for the problems facing the people in gauze are quite the opposite. what kind of message do you think this ends as well as trump's message is for israel to go. busy ahead or with that set? yes, i don't. that's what they really want to do is to like i said, a make life uninhabitable. make, make the gaza strip habitable in life. impossible. and uh, you know, trumps comments. are your 21st century of classic, you know,
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europe in imperialism and colonialism and subtler colonialism. we're just going to take it. it's ours. uh, are you going to use as are you going to buy it? he said, no, no, what would be buy it. there's nobody to buy it from, we're just going to take it is get, we have the forest, we have the violence, we have the economic and political capital, we can do anything we want and, and though these comments were condemned, it's like i said, the serious a policy actions need to be taken by the international community as so crossing as that message was. this is the reaction on the ground to trumps, where it's take a look. you will not access any time for just a moment or, and then the phone down. because this is of a loan and to be room is this to the most you know, the, you mean by, i mean i got nothing. i was free. like last give this
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nation on how to send out a bunch of or if it actually is why the loved him, he can this with the list together but that to the well upon huh. ready ready ready ready ready so you can name, can i have the manual fund, that's what i'm moving in from to dr. obviously to, uh, we've talked about this before, but i wanted your take on what these words, these reactions, but also the scenes of people clearing up and, and trying to rebuild the little that has left of their lives. what does that tell you about the resilience of people across gauze? what is one that your sensors be this really? why is your being such a nurse or american writer of the subs, there's can never understand is the or gunning relationship between the indigenous
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population there. uh this has always been the case the palestinians have said that stood stones. busy and patch stood in their line, they had to be satisfied in their resistance to a project that is being following for 75 the uh to raise them from their bottom of the project to say the pot, a sign in the sign between the river and the seat, 50 percent of the nation is part of city an hour and us this find the many masters of the genocide and they expose some more like trouble is incapable of understanding the relationship. the processing is, uh, was there, a lot of students have 3 minutes or long before after many months lots of they were continued to rebuild their left. busy what we've seen when i'm going to styles,
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but a scene is returned to the north and well, we will see what the board there especially oh, this is a way to the return was about us. thing is we're part of the stuff outside. and god's last agent is the sort of the policy means will return to their country. they are committed to remaining. it is not a sign that we doesn't tell us. the most important thing is regards to what trauma says. this should be a warning to the rest of the world just. ready to bind to normalize the genocide as a to knowledge in circles from page to is trying to normalize that has been cleansed in a way that it is essentially you're getting hello. when you know the words juwan stokes smiles to the can get the balance. it stops working
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or budgeting does raise mount or any other. you your team leaders, justice and the question right where to next we're to from here. how much more difficult can things become for palestinians. and of course we're talking about gaza, but there's also attacks that have intensified across the west bank. i wanted to get a sense from each one of you, a final thoughts here in terms of where we're heading and what you guys hope you will happen. we have a very short time, so i just wanted a sentence or 2 from each one of you. all right? you go 1st, what do you think is going to happen next? where do you see this deal going? and what you hope will happen is because i want to be wrong, but unless we really see air of states come together and solidify
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a position that basically calls this trump idea this, you know, desire to empty out god's uh, something that is entirely unacceptable. it's very hard to see how the us and these really don't actually fulfill this early ups or plan that they have. the other thing that's also important to keep in mind though, is that for so many in gaza right now, all of the set we're talking about, it's their life and for exams you're in, all of the rhetoric is just a certain level of unbearable psychological torture on top of everything else that they are having to face. absolutely mahonnan your take and i have no doubt in the palestinian peoples, steadfastness and perseverance and insistence display on their land and resist. the is really subtler colonial in plans and american imperial plans in palestine and beyond. what i would like to see and i would like the world to prove is that it can
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match the palestinian peoples commitment to uh, do you call the isaiah sion and human rights and, and the air of states absolutely have to step forward and take the lead on this and others can and should as well upset it before. and i said, i'll say it again and i'll continue to say it. there is only one way to end the structure of these randy genocide ones and for all. and that is to economically and politically and legally isolate these really states. there was only answer to economic, political, and legal pressure. and economic being the key one, it community get it, communities and states around the world have to get together and place that kind of pressure on israel. otherwise, it's going to be a victory for us. imperialism is really set in a colonialism and it will be replicated beyond palestine. everybody has something to fight for here, not just the palestinians. dr. obviously the final word from you where to from here,
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the people will continue to resist. they will continue to be steadfast in their life and wireless sense or colonial sinus and will continue. it's tends to erase that. not a said i didn't solve as part of what i said to the power of states or people to for once, realize that this, this is allowed to boss, is this genocide that the ratio or the ethnic cleansing is allowed to pass, etc. that would be the heaviest, splintered, comprise in 1948, the expulsion of thought of scenes last 2 decades. all columns of revolutions of over scroll eh, monarchies, and stage and disrupted the region as
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a result of the captain. this makes a sense of the sponsor and kind of see this genocide, it's much bigger than the 1940, but this genocide was kind of eyes on the destabilizing. the effect of this genocide will be played out in the region for decades to come on, the less they are the people's side to this. i think lindsay, then they will also be the products dr. obviously to our annual honda. thank you so much for joining us. here on the stream today, and thank you all for tuning in. do keep the conversation going online, use the hash tag or to handle a g stream, and we will look into your questions and feedback. take care. and i'll see you some the, the field documenting the traditions of panama, as coolant,
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people disappeared for generations. emerging, 5 decades later it reveals a culture eroded by change, vaguely recalled by its descent an epic tale unraveling the power of capturing a moment in time. indeed, tantalizing at uh the last film of panama, a witness documentary on out just the latest news as it breaks the spot, the ceasefire agreement to an agencies one that without sustains international supports, that humanitarian catastrophe. here were only deepest with details coverage. nearly 10000 palestinians remain in prison fires. real said potentially. thousands more disappeared from garza from the house of the story, the entire city of the tunnel and doesn't have any 3 tional. health specific people have to get out of the city. a pod came in to be used. it could be interm head
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for 4 years, which is pretty much an electrical terms. now, i didn't say that that would be for 40 years facing realities. what does donald trump's re election mean pretty tough. it is most important that we focus on how to work with president trump thought provoking on self. and your wife is dealing with the climate crisis is a crisis of crisis good times. but so it's not just one price is up via the story on talk to how does era, the mood and untold stories from asia and the pacific on the sun rises really into the, the history was written, the age of it came,
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theory is here, the be students and it totally the timeless journey. the you're watching, the news, our life from a headquarters and del himes heading obligate that coming up in the next 60 minutes . the kremlin says president trump and puts in could meet as early as this month to discuss the war. and ukraine says it's willing to release all remaining is really captives and gaza at once. with the aim of reaching a permanent truce, fighting intensifies in the democratic republic of congo, doctor say they're treating thousands of patients with gunshot wounds. plus jessica
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washington as an electric vehicle for 3 into a long time.

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