tv Conflict Zone Deutsche Welle November 17, 2023 7:30am-8:01am CET
7:30 am
in 60 minutes on d w, we've got some hot tips for your package that zip code is parts affinities. check on some great cultural memorials to boot travel regarding the spots you may be thomas stadiums have to talk to many of stuff as these possibly was of us secretaries pay down to the length of the process is still alive as well. how much was on my guess this week is juliet to who speaks for you? an agency. so tom, over the 100 of that person now have been killed in the gaza. what we see in golf now right now is on 3 for the dentist on
7:31 am
a number of levels. so how long can the agency going to talk to me? how long an ordinary people suffer? the impact on the bottom, if you've chosen basic good last of medicine. how does the people of god this today? when they have no idea? so does he get too my welcome to come pick go to have you i for having me as him. thanks for having me. a week ago israel's, on bus of the to the un denied that there was any kind of humanitarian crisis in gaza. what would you say to him, the way before this war in gaza started on the 7th of october, that humanitarian situation in by god this, it has been very, very dire. i mean, only what of on wrong. we were providing sued assistance to 1200000 people,
7:32 am
but that was all over the were among the highest in the region. so where are the levels of unemployment and then java, let's not forget the ones on the blockade. so access in and out of the gaza strip was very, very difficult. and now where we are right now is a humanitarian situation was made pon pon was due to a very bright siege and a more because of the compartments. and those types of that have been going on for 5 weeks now. so i am going to tell you the situation was made far worse. we are witnessing humanitarian tragedy in gaza. maids far worse every day. this war goes on. how much face can you put in official statement inside of them is viable from us to what i do know our finance on the grounds, once we do have as under is nearly 800 pounds and people were forced to feed their
7:33 am
homes. they are now taking sunset in more than $150.00 on the facilities. this is more than 4 times what we have planned for under the worst case scenario. the situation in these chapters is absolutely absolutely terrible because they had over the 1000 and also because i'm wrong, does not have the supplies or the fuel to reach people in need. so their situation is that of them, they are on the bombardment and gaza at that point because a lot has been on the siege for 5 weeks. now. we do not have the ability to respond to this volume. this huge volume of humanitarian needs in the office today also because we are not getting the supplies that we need and we're not giving the fuel . well, i want to come on to that a little later. but can you believe the casualty figures coming from the i'm us
7:34 am
wrong authority in gaza? the fig on i'm thinking of is over 11000 people died in the war so far. can you believe these figures? i thought it was when we use the candidate, the figures among our teams, among the teams. we can confirm that 102 creeks of ours have been the case in this war. this has the highest number of un age where it, cuz advocating anywhere in the world since stopped us from and all the united nations. and when we apply the proportionality of this 100 into, to the 13000 colleagues that work with us. and when we look at the dock are coming from the goss, i'm going to see a house on apply a similar ratio. the numbers do time. we have so they, we have, do you normally around the world,
7:35 am
the united nations and entities around the world. we lowered the flag to half off indignation to the service. all these cliques that were the case. the only place we kept that un flag flying high once goes on. and it was a symbolic gesture on, on the side to show commitments to the people that we serve. especially those 800 pounds and people who came to our centers to seek protection and safety. under the very same slack the personnel working for on who were killed, they must have known the damages, the face from the risks they were running. what kind of people will put their lives on the line like that for other people? you see, i'm the house, 13000 employees working with us on the ground in think i was on the war started. we were present across the garza noise mid an area and southern areas. and
7:36 am
these were mainly teachers. the vast majority of our teams on the grounds of teachers who teach in columbus course, which we sadly have to close this, deprived more than 300000 boys in guns, in ga, the film education for the past 5 weeks. and we have to turn many on 5 squeezed into the shutters to take in people who sold protection on safety. on this the red flat. these were people who, where the, the click skin. i mean, they were mainly teachers, school principals, doctors, nurses, engineers, support staff, which is the backbone of auto patients. many one year olds, the families one day, most of them when k. you absolutely my most of that, my kids with the families. we have very sick stories,
7:37 am
one league of ours sent me once came in his own home with his wife and children, all the click of our city and who was a long time ecologist? she was cage with her daughter once she was out at home. one 3rd, all i'm pleased with kids where not the kids in the north, one 3rd of our creeks when kids were in 5 case in the many areas i'm in the southern areas where i was supposed to be say. but it is really said they weren't going to bump because no way to think they've been gone. no, i have not been north, was a city not limited area, not the south. and in fact, when we look up, the dos are more than 60 un facilities on their facilities. specifically, the vast majority of which i've sent this, what people are attempting 60, all those facilities have been hipped. more than 10 of those have been directly hibbs and 70 percent of the facilities that wedding
7:38 am
faxed in doing this morning and also on the on the facility 70 percent. where in the middle areas i'm in the southern areas 70 percent. do you reach a stage where you simply have to pull out because the danger to your stuff is so great. i ask because one of your colleagues said the other day, every day you think it is worst day. and then the next day comes and it's even worse. that was that your experience may absolutely right. that absolutely you mind not every day. it's not the only every day. i think every hour the situation gets worse and worse, the fluidity of this more is astonishing. things continued to change, things continue to move of the very, very fall face. people continue to leave their homes. there is force displacement happening in dogma. there is predictive punishment happening in the gossip on the
7:39 am
is committed to stay in gaza and to deliver it to the people who need that small. and we, we continue to do this, but we need many things for our to, to do this. we need supplies coming into goals on a regular basis. we need to expand the number of thoughts, the coming into lava. we need to expand that to meditate in patients, both in terms of the volume and the frequency on that particular ability, all documented patients. we also need fuel, it's really, really critical about gets fuel ports to meditate and purposes. we have not received fuel for the past 5 weeks. we have been needing to get shipments on fuel to dates. we have not received any fuel. if you wouldn't be needed for the faith of the cost for us to be able to go pick up the supplies that are coming from the board is for us to give to medicaid facilities. i wouldn't own include it for the
7:40 am
ones that pumps to work in. i'm a shut the we need fuel as we have not received. and if you will also have not received a lead to, oh, you will says the war began on the 7th of october for obvious reasons, as a particular focus on the flight of hospitals, in gauze of the red cross that they've reached, what they called the point of no return and that the lives of thousands of people were at risk. this is a daily, even hourly emergency isn't too oh, absolutely. to get what, what, what medicine you travel a little medicine is left to get what little fuel varies to get one little drinking water. there is a how long can this go wonderful before, before people get ill from now nutrition, but for those illnesses associated with lack of sanitation, how long before that happens?
7:41 am
extreme facilities including hospitals, but also you have facilities have not been fair. these facilities, civilian facilities, schools, hospitality, clinics, checks are un practices and compound. they are only with texas on the international humanitarian. no. and they have not been told who is of the war they have. they don't can, in the say, there's rarely say that's the reason the surrounding. i'll ship a hospital, which i think is the largest hospital in, in gaza at the moment. is because that show that that's a command and control sense of belonging to hum us underneath the hospital itself. do you know anything about that? are the ones we do? you know, she far husbands them is the largest medicaid facility and the largest of the thing in the office. and one of the only this listed in have institutions. it has been established in 1946. and in addition to it being this medicaid facility,
7:42 am
a very important and critical medical facility, somewhere beyond she false. but there has been hosting panels on thousands, according to the points that we get tens of thousands of people and it's courtyards in the, in the parking lot. so it's also being used as it shuts it. now we haven't been able to access, she fall within only one of the limit, medical supplies, basic medical supplies and medicines throughout the war. we were allowed the only one to do this. very urgent humanitarian, the money that we did with the with health organization. and this shows you the immense challenges that we are facing in terms of access not only from outside of dallas, out the big in supplies, but also we've gone to from the south into the north where there is cause
7:43 am
a city where it has been the beating part all the gaza strip for many, many decades. but that has been some evidence in the past. the thomas did hide weapons and tunnels on the hospitals hasn't. that's last year. your agency said it does identified what it called a mine made cavity underneath the grounds of a school and gaza. it protested to the hospital authorities and you sealed the cavity permanently and how does, how must respond to your discovery. so what i'm doing now, i'm pretty positive pin, is that we have inspection teams about go to our facilities in the, i'm everywhere in the region where only do our updates. um we do this inspection against the humanitarian principal and for new to the in fact the last inspection we have done was just before the war on the 30th of september and we do this every quarter. 30th of september,
7:44 am
we have completed the inspection on our facilities in the galveston november. so the thing see is right on the show. pictures of gums, suicide vests grenades, explosives, and what they said was the basement of run to see children's hospital. does that surprise you then given what you've just told me about the inspections you you conducted? i saw these reports came. i'm wondering why is not at all we in a position to confirm or deny these reports with is the hosp. the thing is not on the work facility. let me emphasize the civilian interest upset where ever they are in the world, not only in the gulf and civilian infrastructure that must never be used for military purposes. are you satisfied it is being used in gaza? i really do not know that out, and i really do not know that you've been another was those you've been in iraq.
7:45 am
you've been and you haven't what stands out about this one from your experiences you've had to date. i found most of my immunization services working on one of the most. they was in the recent history, i bought this, the water in the city, or where i was in i'm out of city are on the city of war for more than a decade. and i saw it was about i have seen the worst doing that work because i started working on the wooden city out in 2012 when the war had just started and i saw photos. and i was, i witnessed that a bit of things happening including children because i was waiting for your thoughts back and back then i worked in different little ones with other entities in be run. so i, i'm very familiar with the one of the city i was very familiar with what was due to lives of human beings. but let me ask you about that because because in your
7:46 am
experience, what happens to people who go through this kind of trauma, what, what can we expect to happen to the people of gaza? do they ever recover? what we see in golf now right now is i'm present that on a number of levels. this age is unprecedented. the level of damage to this is really an influx of including gm facilities is increasing benefit. the number of counseling piece is very, very fine, but hopefully that's what kids work for on the is very, very high. and in fact it's the highest f as soon as the wind deflector working towards the mid 19 forties. the challenge is that we are facing out the largest humanitarian providers in the unprecedented or a some pieces on the, on the, please. the shop. i'm the to me,
7:47 am
but this is closing to people, including our own peaks is huge. these are cars that are going to be very, very hard to he and there are many, many people in the state. why is it the living? the total amount of 1948 on as they are now living? that to law all said i'm so says i'm the father of the mothers due to this for displacement and that exemptions all the exit is or what's happening right now to the not in 1948, also known as the capacity for the winter is here. do you have any idea of what will happen to the hundreds of thousands of people who are now homeless and in the, in the longer term? are there any models that could suggest how long people might have to deal with this homelessness,
7:48 am
with these shortages with all the problems that affect that daily life? when graham i'm calling is going to make a tragic situation for people in dollars off 55 words. because once we have house on say recently is in the center is women and good sleeping inside the classrooms and them boys sleeping outside in the open. so we went there, it's going to get worse. and we are of course, worried about the diseases, the sped of diseases, the lack of heat, the flooding with the civil service breaking down. how is this going to be managed? and it's going to be even bigger of a cast phone we have right now. so this is why is absolutely critical, but there is a humanitarian ceasefire, which we've been quoting for 4 weeks on. and now it's not me. it's pulling on the
7:49 am
ears. it has to happen for the sake of civilians, wherever they are, including those in golf up. you just go back recently from an arab summit and the salad and capital re add report suggested that was sent to you and got and invective. but i suppose anger is cheap. who amongst the arab leaders promised any concrete help, a tool for the palestinians in gaza as well as the historic moments because it was the 1st time in the history of the agency and with almost 75 is all that we are invited on the level of our commission and john that is to be allowed to address that has of states most of the most the more and so for the house, it was important that we relay the message on behalf of the, to me in kind of demand wiped out in this war so that was one thing that we wanted
7:50 am
to really i'm in terms of the reception we got funding for the patients. so ma'am i'm from the hashemite kingdom of jordan and we got pledges from the e. we are still offset the same. if we are, as an agency, going to be able to pay salaries for the stop not this months, november, or not december, including those honestly heroes. but i working with the agency on the phone lines. you can think of a big, the head of your agency said the other day there was a feeling among thousands that they had been sacrificed abandoned by the outside world. how wide spread is that feeling among the people that you've met and you've talked to a very wide spread very wide spence among downward south. and it's also among the friends that we have and gaza. there is a feeling of abandonment and there's a feeling all, i'm not feeling
7:51 am
a point that there at the softening and the part of that is happening in golf. club is not important and box is changing, which is very, very good. i think more and more and more people around the world are understanding that civilians are going to pay in dollars on that they are going to collect this punishment. but so many people have been case including, according to the ports, more than 4000 children, which is according to save the children of the highest number of children case in any conflict since 2019. these children have nothing to do with this conflict or with this for a no time to the witnesses. want the children of golf on have witness palestinians that that you've met. talk to you about the atrocities that's how mos committed
7:52 am
against israel. oh yes. they have to, they say, what did they say about that? yes they have, i'm, i'm the secretary generally they do not have nations have them in the strongest terms the most. okay. that happens in is on the 7th of october julia to move. what when you take away from all of this, how do you, how do you process what you've seen? how hard is that for you? possibly for me. and so they sent me a nation to continue to be the voice of the list and indeed been involved on the civilians for our whole top in this war. and also to continue to work with. i would please with our teams on the ground floor, by the way i'm, it's not like the make, but i'm using, they are, am they of mine coming out of the darkness. so what goes on has become, it's my duty to continue to support them so that they continue to be able to
7:53 am
deliver to people who need them all so that we continue the largest, do an agency to support and deliver the people that we are committed to deliver to and these are the kind of thing and communities and all i'm as we're in this region, the part of your agency says that since october, the 7th, gaza has gone from open to prison to graveyard. if he's right, what kind of garza do you think will be less? okay, it does have to answer this question. why do you have an active conflict going? once we do know the destruction from footsteps that we seen of destruction, including around our own office, which was in gulf of city since we started working more than 70 years ago, by the way, is the plains looks like it's just been hit by an earthquake except we have to remind ourselves that this is all my need and it's going to take over
7:54 am
the years and years to the bins. but the concern right now is not for the phone. the huge concern right now is for the people on what they are going to, the displacement and the ongoing exit is and the force displacement of the collective punishment. that's really the biggest, biggest concern that the agency i work with. pass your director said a new generation of aggrieved palestinians. i like for you to come out of the bombing of gaza and are likely to continue the cycle of violence. do show that to you. why don't you know from how they conflict? so it is, the violence believes more violence and violence. we never, never, ever get boss anyway. groups on,
7:55 am
once we do know is the one violence continues, the more the work continues the far the we are from peace and stability in this region. this is exactly why we called for humanitarians expire. and why do you think it's falling on? this is also not the question to meet and it's not the question to me, you know, the region you talk to the class. i don't know. oh, i know is that the longer this goes on, the more we're using on our humanity is for the sake of humanity, it's a point of make or break for each and every one of us about our humanity really gave me only we just let it slip julia to my thanks very much for being a complex of
7:57 am
to the point. strong opinions, clear position. international perspective. turkey is a long standing member of nato president is becoming an increasingly difficult part . darn defending israel is fascist pricing. how much is, are the one's a that's a question on to the point of drawing to the point a,
7:58 am
a 30 minute d. w per 1st child pet 15 and her 2nd 1017. it's all too common in these teenage mothers need special assistance and find that at a non profit is it supports young mother is on their difficult task for relax, global 10. 19 minutes on d w. the you can draw the line between the spaces because i don't believe that spaces is i'm all really relevant criteria in any more than i believe that rice or sex is on frontier and. 2 should. 2 2 humans are
7:59 am
closer to a chimpanzee vanishing. pansy is even to a dog. but dr. series about our complex relationship with animals. watch now on youtube. d. w documentary 3 is the most powerful woman, little sister of the dictates, a mysterious strategic. who is, can you tell me to say she represents a mixture of expectation and disappointment? fear some strong, sometimes threatening. sometimes the charming disagree with the red prince's thoughts, november 25th on d, w. the,
8:00 am
the, the, this is the, the, the news coming to line from berlin. israel says it has discovered a total shock to el cheapo hospital in gaza. these really military says the young verified picture suggests from us militants were using the medical facility to command or operations. claim that's a must denies. also coming up, finding the information more social media platforms are shaping public opinion on the conflict. we have a report on the bible for hearts and minds in the war and godson and rich of type
14 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on