tv Das literarische Quartett Deutsche Welle May 21, 2021 1:03pm-1:46pm CEST
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televi, if there was a mixed response i think it's good. the fire is good for humanitarian reasons. to civilians, to relax a little bit on both sides. i'm skeptical though that it will really be kept for a while. i think the fire won't last and 8 hours and they will start shooting gus rockets again. both hamas and israel, claiming victory and the conflicts, but both sides suffered in the violence. garz's hum, us controlled health ministry says at least $232.00 people, including more than $100.00 women and children were killed in the fighting. and at least 12 people, including children, were killed in israel, after rockets managed to evade the countries and don't defense system. us president joe biden said the seas file was a genuine opportunity for peace. he said, washington would now help replenish israel defense capabilities and help the
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palestinian authority with humanitarian aid and reconstruction and gaza. these hospitals have resulted in tragic dest, some so many civilians, including children. i sent my sincere condolences to all the families, israeli, and palestinian lost loved ones. my hope for a full recovery from the wound. but the scars of this conflict will take a long time to heal and what was destroyed in just a few days will most likely take years to rebuild the well israeli prime minister benyamin natania who has hailed the gods fences and exceptional success. speaking moments ago and just hours after the seas far took effect on yahoo! warned cancers limited time. us rooters again, any further rocket attacks following the sea far. and he's about to respond with quote, a new level of force against any expression of aggression against communities around
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garza and any other part of israel. and that's and yeah, you described some of the operational successes of the israel, the military against us infrastructure must be saudi, went home, i tried to attack us this time they encountered a wall, an impenetrable iron wall. how mass new said if they tried to enter our territory, a deadly rain of fire would fall upon them. so they tried to build terror tunnels to penetrate our territory so. but now they have discovered that they are blocked by that metal wall that we build to protect the lives of israelis, citizens while to hear how the sci fi is holding and how ordinary people in garza and israel feel about us. dw spoke earlier to our correspondent donna back as intel vive and journalist hasn't been lucia in god so far it is, it is holding gradually the streets back to normal.
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still, today's the weekend fridays when of the mean week and days and gaza. thousands of those who refuse to to go to schools and to their friends and families, houses return to their homes, especially from the border areas in the north, in gaza, thread and, and eastern bore some workers from the municipality are walking the street of paving and taking out the rubble of the road. so gradually, so far it is holding and, and life is going back. after 10 or 11 days of fighting and bombardment bullet stadiums already leave this in the parade to this partially from hammers, the celebrated because it was a victory according to them. for ordinary people, many of them they,
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they are released because as liberated because it's over and they survive this. this war sees fire so far has been holding no rockets have been launched into israel from the gaza strip. most people here in israel, welcome to seize fire with open hands, much like the people in gaza. they are also happy that this escalation of violence is over. however, we do hear some voices who express concern regarding the terms of the piece, the, the truth. they're not sure what is included like my colleagues here from guys. i said we also don't know, nothing was published here. officially. we do hear some critical voices of why include why the bodies of 2 soldiers that are being held in gaza as well as in israeli civilian who is believed to be alive there. why they were not in, in this truce. otherwise, most people are very happy about it. when i turn out to some other stories,
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making headlines this hour, dozens of anti military protesters have turned out for a brief marching the mars largest between young gun opponents of the february who have resorted to short shows of to find out for a group of fact and by vision to a local rights group says, security forces has killed more than 800 students across the street gets to demand stronger action or climate change. they called on the government to stop funding fossil fuels. and instead, invest in renewable energy. this week camera announced plans to spend up to 318000000 euros in new guns, fire power plant firefighters in the u. s. state of california say they've contained a wild far the threatened homes in santa barbara, west los angeles. the plays are opted near a television station and for the evacuation of several neighborhoods, there were no reports ventures. the central african republic has launched its
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covert 900 vaccination campaign. it's one of the last countries in the world to receive vaccines. the prime minister was the 1st person to get the job and health workers elderly and those with pre existing conditions will be put on the priority list. well to india and i were the devastating 2nd corona virus wave appears to be eating as the number of confirmed infections and deaths declines. but there is concern that many cases are not being reported, particularly from a search and vast rural areas. and these regions lack adequate testing and health care infrastructure and dw the mission as well visited a village near the city of mir wrote in tar protection, where there has been a spike in death caused by fever. it has been an exhausting month or so yet, your hon for we his son has been with zach by fever and trouble breathing.
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so hon. who needs a scattered for a living, finally arranged a car to take his son to the hospital in the city. has seen tested positive for the corona virus. 40 years later he was discharged. not because he was feeling better, but because they had already jacked up a bill of about 1500. your i have seen a d d b joe. on spite your of the day when he can find work or improve at all at the hospital, somehow it easy and oxygen cylinder at home with great difficulty, i had to borrow money from several people. we didn't have a ruby for your child to do anything. the family of turkey lives cramped together in close quarters. they have been lucky that no one knows for fear conceivably in and even luckier to get a diagnosis. many a falling stick in this village, which lies a 100 kilometers east of the national capital. but there is no testing that on
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a government health facilities in this village, small private clinic like this one are the only talk gap. and i feel that hundreds of complaints of people in the last month and one they do not have the provision to treat the court on about it. and ref, a patients to the city. but treatment that is expensive. and given the call a few, it is very difficult to even travel them. so nice. mom has a guard and good a for treatment for his father and siblings. he, even of these beds to contact, he lost all 3 of them last week. the doctors asked the family to arrange medicine, but they were sold count, defeat bottles in the oval band hospital, charged twice as much recounting the horrors of what he saw. modest skeptical about the number of deaths being reported in the state. i kept getting calls from the authorities for 3 days after my father's death, asking after his head. i told them he'd boss to be. i don't even know if that was
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counted into what i thought it. bodies came out of the hospital with my father date for my son. without diagnosis. fever that's on the right. jimmy han hopping a social worker describes what has been happening 1st. they haven't been, they feel better. many eventually die at home. this how someone died in that house to jo hon says there are 50 fresh graves in this cemetery alone. resident said k through the be worst started spiking after values were held here for local elections last month. and i got, your hon started making the list of debts in the village. the cause of death for most is feeble and breathless. almost none of these have been recorded at corona virus, that was a boy, though every day people are dying. nobody has been dest. you haven't been told anything about the vaccine. nobody here has gotten no doctor have visited for the
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last year. this village has been relatively untouched by the panoramic. now, are you drafted in identified the feel there are recorded cases, flag in open in the group of virus will continue to rec and inhabit. while some more, i'm joined now by our cars funded the misha jives val, who actually filed a report and namisha. we're seeing official numbers improving, but it seems india is cobra. 1900 crisis is shifted from urban areas to the countryside. what does that actually mean for the countries fight against covered that's good basically being that it may be only to celebrate the different. and when i said i didn't need it, or what to wonder how the record is key every day. and these are detected because these people have managed to access testing and during the worst of the foods,
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you know. but then the night it was a massive fight to get to die in india. however, on the other hand, you primary had sent us a lot of we for many villages or up and down. so there is no way to actually you can get it me the fight against a quarter, maybe a blind one in the fusion specially and not one of the live in the world. and yeah, the best way to go and i, st. and i believe. and that would be lacking in things that you don't even know if you have the wrong. i was just so plenty of challenges and how is the government actually responding to this crisis mission? but on the, on the display, it has been acknowledged that we didn't get prices and that the issue that needs to be attract private to them or himself has to be said, the village, as well as local instrumental doors in fighting the underwriter
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and pricing, missing information on the back clean as well as why this is really important. however, the law school has gained logistics and just wanting to look at this point, i see the happening. it is like, i think much like what people on the deed with the office. and this is something should happen to pay for an additional concern, however, is that these governments like the ones that are actually tracking non religious things that they're getting denied to the media instead of rushing them because they concerning. so you've mentioned to me of that of what's being done and what issues there are, but what more needs to be done? the mission the focused at this point is shifting to the back, the nation drive the government more than the state and federal level. the national level have emphasized that everybody's market back when the when,
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who said that meant july should be enough. there was a better but july, it's been a couple of months all guarantee anecdotally, we see that there are not enough fact probably online to even look at and many do not have access to online order to be a lot or a lot. but the one in addition, even when that on and off to you about this information on the vaccine that has a lot of hesitancy, many actually believe the back, the make one and good, which must be going back to the w correspondence myisha as well in daddy thank you for your reporting and thank you for your update meters from the g. 20 group of industrial and emerging countries are holding a health so much aimed at boosting access to corona, virus vaccines. now they're expected to rec, recommend voluntary licensing of vaccine peyton's to allow more companies to produce the jump. but some countries including south africa and india,
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want payden's to be suspended altogether. they are due for this would increase production and saved lives. and more than 100 countries, including the u. s. agree with germany has rejected the proposal saying it would hinder innovation. now, earlier we spoke to dr. so me as well enough and chief scientist up the world health organization and asked to ask if lifting vaccine. peyton's is the way to distribute the vaccine ferry to be at crisis point. and as you were pointing out, you know, we've had over one and a half 1000000000. those are the vaccines distributed around the world. and guess how much went to low income countries, 0.3 percent. that is a grotesque situation in append make. and so we have to do everything we can to get the vaccines to people to save lives. so the 1st thing is to share the vaccine. those, as many countries have actually got more than 2 or 3 times the number of
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a job, they need to vaccinate their own population. so even though they're vaccinating their own population, they might start sharing with callback so it can go to the rest of the world. the 2nd is that manufacturers must start doing more deals with other companies. so the big companies that have made successful vaccines might look for partners, particularly in the developing world to expand manufacturing. and this could be done through voluntary licensing and tech transfer. or ideally, we would like it to be done through the bullying mechanism. we have that thing called the corporate technology access buoy, which is exactly meant enough and demick to receive technology know how intellectual property and have a very fair and transparent way of distributing those licenses. and then finally the i p v vote, which of course will help because it will get rid of all the number of legal backings that might have to be one. you know, one country at the time it would, it will give me before the panoramic. but it has to be accompanied by tech and know
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how transfer well, i am now joined by d. w. brussels bureau chief, alexander fun. naaman, who's at the g? 20 summit in rome force? i alexandra now the w h. o chief scientist has urged producers to open their payton's can we expect some sort of compromise from today's meeting? well, public, it doesn't seem that we can expect any significant progress on that matter because the positions have not changed. and i've seen the draft declaration of from that to the g. 20 leaders are expected to sign off on. and this declaration doesn't even mention they waiver. instead, the focus there, as you mentioned, is the voluntary transfer of know how and technology we know that that's the european position, the position of the european union, that you are a peon commission. and that is the co host of this summit. there are saying we are open to discussions, but we would rather like to explore the existing
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w t o a rules such as for example, compulsory license. and that means that you can give away the license even if the producers are not on board in some origin. cases so that is something they are ready to discuss but not the waiver. and i think that that's really nothing that we are going to see a lot of progress on here. what when can we expect? or when can people expect to benefit from at the agreement, alexander so the european union is pledging to export more vaccines, additional $100000000.00 doses. and there are saying this is actually the key issue and we can expect that you 20 leaders to agree on lifting existing bands on the scene export exports. so that's important. and that could really could really change the situation on the ground immediately. the european union is also expected
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to pledge to boost manufacturing capacity in africa, and that's a long term goal. but also important because currents, the africa produces only one percent of the exceeds that the continents nice good. of course when you talk to people in favor of the waiver, if we just as we just heard they out telling you, well this is wonderful and we heard a lot of promises and pledges, but we really need action. and the best way would be to have this waiver, and that's definitely a discussion that is your thing. right? well d w alexander phone nominee in rome, thanks for that update right now to some of the other developments in the corona virus pandemic. japan has approve the use of the maternal and astrazeneca vaccines. it's the latest attempt to contain a k search 9 weeks before the olympics. aren't you to open in tokyo? thailand has detected its 1st domestically transmitted cases of the highly
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infectious, very and 1st found in india. it comes as the country fights its worst. i break to date. and argentina government is imposing another strict lockdown after a high number of new infections and deaths. in recent days to sports now and barn munich have long since fulfilled their dreams of a 9th straight title. now the action and tension of the final day of the bonus league season is at the other end of the table, 3 teams down the bottom are fighting to avoid relegation. on what promises to be a very stressful saturday afternoon. mind lupsi, goldman and wolf, big happy, wealthy and safely ensconced in the cycle of top in life. ready to play the final round of the bonus league and knowing that will be back next year and will be enjoying champion slick football with it. at the bottom end of the bonus league, relegation threatened clubs, and nervous hungry, agitated and motivated by the fear that one full step this weekend could mean they
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had gone from the league 17th place. cologne, who are in the automatic relegation spots i show in 18th, 15th place b. l a. failed our head of it, a bryan and have destiny in their own hands when it stood up and they are safe. thomas sharp is back in bremen, holding the reins where he won the pond as late as coach in 2004. the mood ahead of a meeting with mentioned glad back. far more tennis is more telephone, focus, money, them, and don't know that what's on is this is always the case. of course, when we are in a certain situation, the negative is clear and maybe the 1st element that comes into play. it's then to find what brings us forward and what gives us confirmation. and that is really our job down to all. but it's typical of the final day of the season brain and hoping for the best price for the worst and guaranteed of nothing other than a stressful saturday performers and funds are getting ready for this weekend eurovision song contest final event will take place and brought her dominant
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evidence in front of a live audience will all be tested for corona virus. among those competing is germany, the andric, who used social media to win himself a spot in the competition. i don't know just to stop in, i have available for another to them. you know that yes or seems to be just as colorful and multifaceted as your vision itself. the world's biggest music competition. yeah, sure, i'm going to win. easy, peevish music. but seriously, i don't have a clue a piece. of course, i'll try to win the 1st place, but i'll be ok even if i come in last because my dream is just participating. but i have this once in a lifetime experience and i am nothing here. he had trained to perform a musical. ringback in the basement of a hamburg church, he used the pandemic and do break to get creative. he came up with an idea for a music video and posted each step in the production process on the social media.
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well, i have an idea on how to create music video, and then we tend to get 18 book and watch machines for that music depth to host it up videos about said music video, us the following message. and i want to go to the vision. so take me, i realized the only way i can do it is just simply shot it out to the world. and i just screamed out, hey, i want to go to the se. hello. the. the daily posts had an effect as more and more people started following his social media channels, including the judges. for the german preliminary competition, they invited, he entered to the audition, and he impressed the jury, who chose him to be germany's candidate for 2021. this week, and i'll be back to you as a customer this, if you really stick with it and put all your energy into it, that along with what little bit of money you might have and then get and it will be worth it. and you'll make luthey stuff and come on, i'm it off to wish me growing up. in hamburg with 4 siblings in drake had a captive audience for the melodies. he crooned everywhere,
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his path was clear onto the stage and into the limelight. he can use it as the language. everyone understands, as that's really true, especially at the see or not everyone things in english and even if i didn't many other languages as well. and if you didn't hear them, you understand the songs or say, wow, i think that's cool and you guys feel good song has a curious message. it's about respect and acceptance and not answering hate with more hatred. i really don't care if you want to do it with me. don't you get angry when you read that? those words just don't have me when you're watching the w news. here's a reminder of our top story, palestinians in guns are celebrating a far as they'll hope will bring an end to some of the regions, worst conflict in years. young conditional deal between israel and thomas was
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broken by egypt and katara. here the 250 people were killed in the conflict and use life from berlin of next days to the point of middle east crisis watkins. stop the cycle of fibers. i'll be back again at the top of the next day for me and the rest of the team here. take care and see very soon. the news. the news news, news, news, news,
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news. the news news to the point. strong opinion, clear positions, international perspective. the past 10 days, i've seen the worst violence between israelis and palestinians in years, a deadly flare up between the israeli army and the militant group that has people the world over asking middle east crisis. what can stop the cycle assigned to the point dw,
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be in good shape. the metabolic motor body. liver is our main body audience that gets rid of many talk. the consumption of alcohol and fruit toast can certainly help clothing, fatty, liver, and throat. so how can you protect your liver? in 16 d, w. o. t, please listen carefully. don't know how to listen to the ago. i feel the magic, the discover the world around the
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subscribed to the w documentary on you to me. it's the worst violence between israelis and palestinians in years, a deadly flare up between the israeli army and the palestinian militant group, hamas that is also taking a toll and mixed air of jewish cities within israel. after a violent clashes at the alex, i'm off in jerusalem. the rocket fire from guys and began with us targeting tele and where the claims were military base is in southern and central israel. israel's military hit back with air strikes on hamas command centers as well as gods, is transport and medical systems. more than $220.00 palestinians,
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including children are dead tens of thousands this place. and at least 12 is really to have lost their lives. middle east crisis was can stop the cycle of violence. the news welcome to to the point. it's a pleasure to introduce our guests daniel dylan, burma works for the german daily the vote. and he says, the us failure as a credible peacemaker means that the best chance of mediation now lies in israel's growing diplomatic ties with some arab states. and great to have with us our chrome baker. he's a palestinian american and middle east expert. and he says it's only by entering the israeli occupation that he just and equitable solution can be achieved. and i was very glad to introduce my dw colleagues, johnny rosanna,
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who reports for us on the middle east and israel. she says the political weakness on both sides leadership has brought us to this unnecessary round, and it's only political change that can bring a long term solution. so welcome to our view and let me start by getting your sense of how grave the situation is. at the moment. china you've been reporting for a long time on and from the region. the current violence came after an extended period of com didn't come as a surprise to you and how would you see it compares with past conflicts between israel, israel and palestinians. well, if you asked these really military, they were completely surprised if you hear, you know, we were hearing their assessments at the beginning of the and in jerusalem they were not expecting homage to act right now. definitely not so fears fully and for such a long time. so either way, within israeli community of intelligence,
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that was quite a big surprise if you've asked people on the ground, you could have seen this bubbling for a while. this whole started would chester, all you know, we've seen the palestinians there that are there that meant in east jerusalem. exactly. in the past, the live in bear there officially. they're kind of in between, they're not really officially israeli citizens, but they are not really also officially citizens of the palestinian authority and they have been feeling while also many other arab israeli, living within israeli territories, feeling that they're being, you know, they have the injustice when it comes to policy about housing and rights concerning land is just becoming too hard to bear. and so this has been bubbling and simmering very slowly and that was also the month of ramadan, which always makes everything hypersensitive. so in a way, there were many signs, it was a chance, you know, where the people have to read them or not. i think it is a lot about where you stand politically as well. what are you hearing from family, in the region? what are they telling you about the situation on the ground?
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well, on one side, it's absolutely horrible. and i had a friend who was killed in the last week. and his 8 year old son, my sister's car got a bullet through the back of it. and she doesnt jerusalem and it's absolutely terrible what has happened. and you said something a point of relative calm. the problem. it wasn't relative calm for the palestinians . is israel continued to build the settlements and continued to oppress the palestinians and create facts on the grounds. all of this time it seems the world only wakes up when there's, when there's blood in the streets, which is one of the main problems. so but what is what is great is that they also said israel succeeded and uniting the palestinian people all over the world. that's something nobody has succeeded since got the earth out in the seventy's. we'll talk about the extent of that in
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a moment. but let me go to you and ask you, we keep hearing that as far is around the corner that the european peacemakers that you mentioned in your opening statement are upping the pressure on both sides. how long do you think this violence will continue and do you think there's a possibility it could set off a wider conference ration in the region as a whole and doesn't seem to me at the moment. that's why the conflagration is eminent. it's actually rather sensible to assume that they find that to cease fires and now are actually true because we know that both sides in this conflict know that they can't really makes central gains with military means. both had internal reasons to act the way they did to start with from off they wanted to show their strength and send a signal off of resolution and a palestinian power crisis,
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which came after the posting and president post on the elections again. and of course, benjamin tanya, who's fighting for his office also has reason to show himself a strong man. but both know that they can't change the situation substantially. so it's likely that we will see the violence and, and it's as likely that we will see the problem at the core of the smile and persist. anybody disagree with that before i go on? no, i mean, i think the most things he is right. but my one thing is that the violence of unfortunately this is just the latest outbreak of violence. but he's, i actually agree with daniel, is that the core reason that we have this violence is, will persist until we change that you are right on that. so i don't want to be careful in trying to hint that this was a deliberate act of nathan. yeah,
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we're trying to get things out of hand. i think that would be too cynical of a claim. i think it might have been maybe been a destruction he was distracted due to the political place where he's at. and i think he may have realized once the this is happening, then he can't stop it. that he might be able to leverage it. but i'd be very careful with hinting that he deliberately plan that you're already break into cars . and i just can i just stop as for one moment because i do want to take a closer look at the causes that i'd like to bring in a short film that we have. and i'd like to get shiny 1st of all, if you would. and it's a very tough question to give us a brief summary of what you see as the complex chain of immediate events that lead to this current outbreak. so we've seen for the way to keep in mind we will, we, will we talking a lot about leadership and, but what's happening on the ground is what we see online in social media and tick tock for example. you know, there was and there was quite
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a big thing. there was in our youth in jerusalem that was slapping north docs, men on the, on the train and that became super viral and picked up. and then in response, some youth in israel decided they need to, to, to respond to that. and so things have kind of gotten out of hand because what we're seeing on the level of the ground both independent within the passing. and these really is a lot of the, it's a lot of use going out me or being very much moved to emotion and to action on some of these key issues like jerusalem, which is a very emotional, a key topic. so that has been happening and then in a way the leadership is sort of kind of road that way or had to, if it comes to hamas or, or in israel, had to respond to that. and then the, i think the most detrimental act was when police forces stormed, they'll ox mosque during ramadan, on the 10th of may. and that, that, that ended up, you know, with how much feeling they need to respond. being the protectors of jerusalem,
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firing rockets at israel after setting an ultimate and that they knew would not be accepted. and that was the beginning of a downward spiral that just quickly got out of hand. so let's drill a little deeper and start with jerusalem. which of course has long been a powder keg. the city is wholly to both muslims and jews, access to religious sites, and unresolved disputes over territory. have spark conflicts that go back decades. recent tensions over in israeli settlement in east jerusalem shot, he mentioned that earlier, extra help set off the current congregation, the image shake, gerad neighborhood in east jerusalem. mona cord and 3 other palestinian families are faced with being expelled from their homes. whether or not this land belongs to us. in the 2nd we live here legally, and everything is documented, legally pushy pushing. they come here and occupy the place and they want to occupy
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what remains of the neighborhood with them. you still don't have jewish settlers claim. they're entitled to parts of this neighborhood and have taken the disputes to court. if you don't, the jews for almost 200 years, jews lives and jews own the land fins in nothing changed beside one thing that the navy cited the owner of the land of the property now housed indians are faced with yet another threat of expulsion. the are israel settlements the source of the ongoing conflicts a crumb since israel was founded in 1948 wars and israeli settlement construction
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have displaced 5000000 palestinians according to un estimates. the un commission for human rights has called forced removal of palestinian families. a potential war crime is really officials say it is a real estate dispute between private parties. how do you see what there's really just unfolding for real estate dispute? of course, it's not a real estate to dispute. israeli settlements are a byproduct of the really occupation, the longest military occupation that is in history, 54 years and we are going on and on and on. and that is the problem that we have to solve. and we in the west are enabling that and we have enabled that and that's what has to change shaney as a young law student in the eighty's, i wrote my 1st law review note on the status that you're already then both sides
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claiming it. of course, as they are capital israel declaring it would an exit. are we any closer to seeing this dispute result and we were back then? i'm not, i'm sure your paper is still intact and still valid till today as well. this is not going to resolve before there is we'll negotiation the make it to the core issues that divide palestinians and israelis. i mean, and this is nothing that we're seeing coming anytime soon in the current configuration of political forces. i mean, not only in israel where, where we've seen the deepest, hardest political crisis with last 2 years for election campaigns. but also within the palestinian side, we keep talking about palestinians in reach. remember there's a division, there's a very big, deep risk between what happens in garza led by hamas. and what we're seeing as the official internationally recognized the government of the palestinians in the west bank. and as long as there is not inner palestinian dialogue and some in a israeli solutions to their political problems, will never gonna move forward with solving the problems between the sides in,
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in getting legitimacy for real negotiation that really deals with a court issues. daniel president, trump took the step of moving the u. s. embassy from tel aviv to jerusalem. a clear gesture of support to netanyahu. would you say that that change the situation on the ground? and you know, i asked johnny at the very beginning whether the violence came as a surprise. the fact is, there was no uprising at that time. some people found that surprising. well, it might seem surprising. now, when we see what causes the violence at the moment at the causes of the current violence are far more from maryland this step. so united states which seem to mentors at that time. if we look back at that, i would say it definitely helped alienating the palestinians further from the
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united states government at that time. and it might make it harder for the biden administration to re approach the palestinians. on the other hand, on the other hand, we don't see a biden administration that is too eager to approach the problem at all. seems that they are other actually hoping to get rid of this problem as quickly as possible. so i think in the end a didn't make make much of the sense, but it's clear that part of the problem at hand here lies and washing that is not willing to act. and i want to come back to the role of outside mediators in just a moment. but we heard from our crime a moment ago that the current violence has united palestinians. as we know, there have been deep, deep divisions between mass and fatah. would you say that's true that there is a much more united palestinian a sense right now than before?
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far from it far from. and i disagree with crime and disrespect very strongly. what we see now are shows off unity. but these shows actually just try to hide away a division that becomes ever deeper and that has become deeper for internal reasons . the division has become deeper mainly because the current elector palestinian leadership and the palestinian national authority, which has been elected 15 years ago and hadn't have didn't have a reelection since then. again, pull re post toned the elections in the palestinian territory. it's really our response. please, you know, daniel, unfortunately that shows your lack of understanding of the palestinian people because the divisions have been externally and artificially implemented on the policy people due to all of the horrible circum.
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