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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  October 9, 2024 2:02am-2:31am CEST

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vision for any laying down of arms the last month. these really military said that it was shifting its focus from gaza to 11 on from the board against from off to the battle against has bull up. but the fighting a guns and never stopped. the mos run helped him industry and gaza says that the death toll there since the war began. one year ago has now reached $42000.00. i bring the car from berlin. this is the day, the no disabilities. we civilians, we don't have weapons or anything. we were in a hurry and suddenly were still looking for the explosions. but sure, the people, the patients, we were displaced by the foaming wherever we went to. they were mess because we would need one place struck by tragedy. i don't need to arrive. it's not the place where a new building on the fold. it did not want a solution for the war to stop. we've had enough enough mass occurs. there are
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massacres. every day also coming up, israel has promised to retaliate for the garage of missiles it wrong fired last week, but what form will that retaliation take a wrong? there are some loss or has lost. so what would i do? i would hurt their new facilities would be something you could look at, but the easiest target of all the 5 refineries would you all review is what you're going to be b, as in the united states and to all of you around the world. welcome. we begin today with a renewed call from the human secretary general for a ceasefire in lebanon and gone to antonio gutierrez today. describe the middle east as a powdered k gets he laid bare the suffering and leashed and gaza. after a year of hor saying, quote, every air strike every missile launch, every rock and fired pushes peas further out of reach. think of us following,
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they will receive federal tax but protected by high moslems 7 october. gas is become ground 0 to a level of human suffering. that is hard to the fact the situation in the queue part, the west bank is boiling gold. and now we live in on a decks, including on civilians are still happening. the entire region. conclusion is clears, there is something fundamentally wrong in the way these war is being conduct. the human secretary general also used his speech in new york to highlight the flight of around one point. 9000000 displays palestinians inside garza who have been repeatedly ordered to evacuate, claiming there is no where left is safe for them to go. w is telling you, kramer has the story. now of one such family forced to flee, multiple is really bombardments. and this is where the to move of family can
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home, but only for now days is one of thousands of tents near the beach and send to a gaza. there were forced to leave the re is home in northern garza last october. i must admit, attends from gaza approved to the attack. so then is there any communities is where every time you did with an air offensive and play to a ground invasion of these, how, how spend up to saddam and the grandchildren has been on the move for the past 12 months? like tens of thousands of other postings in gaza. we were displaced by the foaming wherever we went. they were mess because we would leave one place struck by tragedy need to arrive. it's another place where a new bombing on a folded every place, we fled to became another scene of devastation. to con, pay myself. they sold shelter and several schools in northern garza then flipped south to central garza to talk of 200 units and back to the center. then lung,
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the almost 90 percent of calls us 2 point. 2000000 people for security displaced by board of the family is now dispersed across garza. as he says she never expected to end up living and attend. they have no income and depend on age and charity. the children no longer have schooling and help as much as they can learn more about them. now instead of carrying school bags, they carry water really with when i see my children or other children do this a lot, but i feel the pain deeply we. i do love that are membership form. a few of a strikes is a constant. both have lost 2 family members and such attacks of these says she goes to assistant and is tried, you know, stuck tobar laws when we're little push on at midnight. we were screaming and was not knowing who had died or who had survived between the flemish and the customer's caused by mooning. they told us we couldn't say good bye to our loved ones. because
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the bodies were in such a terrible state took with us to turn that as well as i saw 5 luggage, i never got to say good bye to my sister who her children in the home. yeah, we buried them all about about 11 children is counting a 5 women over the men gun in the shop with a loss of my sister and her family has affected me. deep county, south carolina's the show me comes over sharing. she'll get that she's special ed, the a paul latisha associate fee. do you guys talk to the apple sent them? how about the same uh i lost my brother and his daughters when their tent was bombed, near the unreal warehouses such as who but now to model protege i am they were all killed. the son was injured by shrapnel, the so the yeah. the yeah, i mean it said the front the whole you for that event i buried my brother in rafa. and on the same day sled with my family, him
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a little bit the shot of these fuse. you may never be allowed to return to a home in northern garza, the war has not only distort best areas of the territories, but has also effectively divided it into north and south. the return of displaced people to the north is part of the seas for negotiations, which have sofa failed to return to shuttle. if possible. i have a boy and 2 girls in the nose and i just want to hug them. and if the most important thing is to hold my children again, i won't get her last long. if nobody else, i'm afraid i will die before i get to embrace my son and daughters while i'm working, i miss them so much to be filled with me. i can't breathe, i don't know if it makes me feel sick because i'm far away from them. i know, i don't know how not going. i know it is a simple grace. but why scholars, i was no stranger to. we're in the post. this is the longest,
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it's people have endured such unremitting biden's death and destruction with no and insight on doing it all by dr. tanya hodge was on. she's a pediatric intensive care and humanitarian physician doctor. it's good to have you with this you worked earlier, we were talking earlier before we went on the year that you worked earlier this year in the hospital, in gaza. can you describe for our viewers what conditions were like there for you? yeah, certainly so, so i was based at a hot in a hospital in the middle area of garza, in an area called dated, but the name of the hospital is up to the hospital. it may be familiar to you because it has been targeted multiple times by is really forces including yesterday, when the area of the compound was bombed and some tens outside of areas, the compound was also bombed. and this has been ever recurring theme over the
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course of the last 12 months of health care being a very clear targets of, of this kim, military campaign. everything from hospitals to clinics, to countless ambulances that have been a bonds by israeli forces. and then there are over 500, i believe the last confirmed count was 595 palestinian health care workers that have been killed in the past year. and over 300 that has been detained in is really presence by is really forces. these are their health care workers, many of them my colleagues, i have been going to gaza for over 10 years now to teach as part as a group of physicians and surgeons from oxford university and hospitals in that region. i. and many of our previous students, many of the colleagues that we became close to over the last 10 years that have
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become like our colleagues, that in our home, countries to us are amongst those who've been killed, who been abducted for bed, detains. and who for those who have been fortunate enough to be and have been released, who's been reporting a terrific torture physical sexual and psychological torture inside is really prisons and they're released because they have no crime. so their, their health without charge. and so that's, i guess, that's the conditions from health care workers standpoint, you know, every single the induce other or these other health care workers. you're talking about a hey our yeah. and every health care worker i know has lost somebody, a family member, a close friends, colleagues, everybody, children, you know, it has, we have college set of lost their children, their parents or siblings. and then many of our colleagues that actually been killed. and so that's the condition for health care workers. they've been working
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for 12 month straight every single day. and then i want it describes your viewers what they're seeing in their working conditions. when i was there every few hours, we get a mass casualty coming into the emergency department. i'm a pediatric intensive care physician, which by definition means by normally respond to level one trauma. and i've been doing to monitor in work for a long time. nothing can prepare you for garza, it's it's massacre after massacre, entire families coming in, you know, a father bare foot covered and so it screening the names of his children only to find out that none of them were retrieved a life from the rubble a child and one of the children i cared for a house of his face and neck blown. you can see that, you know, the very vital structures in his neck are actually visible. fortunately, they weren't damage. so he survived. but calling the names of his family and he didn't have the heart to tell him that both his parents and all of
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a siblings had been killed. and the little girl in the bed next to him that we were substituting at the same time, he did not recognize because the majority of her body had been burned with actually his sister. i can hear in your voice how this is taking a toll on you, and i want to ask you many times over the past year. we've heard warnings from you in agencies that medical facilities in gauze over close to collapse, running out supplies. the if you are still open the, was it or still, i mean, how did they manage to keep going? i mean, what, what does the struggle to keep going? what does it do to, to them as a physician and, and as a human being or do i, i used to call it resilience. i don't like calling it that anymore. i don't like saying that palestinians are special and they, they, there, there's a special breed of human being that can was damaged because nobody should have to withstand us. nobody should have to survive and continue to work under these
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conditions. they are unbelievable conditions and frankly it's a stain on the collective humanity of every single person who has been silent or complicit in this over the last 12 months of recurring warnings that gaza is a graveyard for children. that garza is the most dangerous place in the world to be a child. these are warnings that were given by organizations like unit stuff and saved the children. you know, 678910 months ago. and, and what have they been met with? they've been met with countries like the us, like germany, like the u. k. continuing to fund this when you have the international court of justice saying that this is legally possible genocide. yeah. so the conditions are, or, or catastrophic. and i, i wish there was a synonym for that word that would convey even more horrific, of desperation with that is where we are. let me, let me ask you this cuz you know, the, the, the point of genocide it is
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a point of contention. it is up before the world court an a case that was brought before it. and so that is still outstanding. but let me ask you, you know, we as journalists, we can't get into gaza to do independent reporting. we, we hear that medical facilities and other areas that have been targeted in gaza were targeted because of mos militants have embedded themselves with civilians. i mean, you've been going there for 10 years. i mean, what have you experienced is that something you can confirm or is that something you, you've heard and what did you heard it? and so, so i have never seen military activity in or around any hospital i have worked in either in the last 10 years or some soft over. i actually have never seen military activity with my own eyes except for the the air strikes that were being in the air strikes that we've seen. well, while i was in gauze in march, i did see from a distance and i heard the constant air strikes. i have never personally seen any
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other military activity. so no, i cannot confirm or deny whether there were militants around any particular hospital. i can tell you, in my experience, i have never seen it. i can also tell you that to justify the targeting of essentially almost every single hospital in gaza, all the universities, schools you and refugees, orphanages, rehabilitation centers, both in the last week. both of those have been targeted or finished and a rehabilitation center decrease to monitor in a distribution sites residential building after residential building that contain no fighters. i'm telling you this because we were casualties in the emergency department. they were women and children. you don't document an elderly and so so what i can say, because i can see the line across the bottom of the screen right now that your viewers are saying. so the last 142 people killed him, garza over the past here. that is a vast underestimate and as, as, as
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u. n. agencies as international independent organizations as health care organizations. when you have know, journalists on the grounds and the, the international response. political and media response is to cast out on the voices of the few people, independent voices that are allowed in. that's problematic. and we're gonna have to reckon with that. i know that you would with join in the call for a ceasefire. you know, as well as i do that a ceasefire is, is not on the horizon a let me ask you, we're running out of time here. but to just how, how do you feel about that? the fact that a ceasefire is not inside in all honesty like i'm, i'm someone who has a, you know, dwindling faith in humanity and it's, it's, i have struggled the past month. i struggled at the past months actually because
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i'm watching the world's reacting ways there. so contrary to the principles of what i thought we were shared principles of humanity, particularly countries that have committed atrocities in the past, no better, you know, and, and, and it's, it's really hard for me to watch them. we'll pay lip service to things like a ceasefire. and then continue to arm this carnage, which is essentially what many countries are doing or continuing to do. you've had the majority of countries on this plant vote for a cease fire in the united nations from day one. and then you have a handful of countries that have continued lean kit continuously consciously obstructed the process. and then you have negotiators, people who are working towards the ceasefire. now i've been assassinated so, so i don't know what to tell you. i'm not a politician. i do want to see you to enter this because i'm a physician and the principles of medicine, say, prevention is,
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is so much better than cure. we know that i'm not particularly in a case like this. we're really health care workers can do very little. the children that i worked very hard to keep alive when i was there in march, are either dead. it will or injured me or at risk of all of those things and they're all not. they're all malnourished to some extent. and i don't know where they're living, they were discharged from the hospital into a russian roulette of a 1000 ways that could be kills. whether it's starve ation the hydration disease, another bombing another strike. so for me to walk this process be pro long's, i don't know how these people up struct who obstruct options for a solution. i don't know how they sleep at night, so the own. gotcha. it's, it's really sweeping for people who spent their entire premier learning how to preserve human lives. doctor we, unfortunately we're out of time,
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but we know it's not easy for you and we appreciate you taking the time to spike that, um, share your thoughts with this doctor. tania hodge hassan, and you're certainly doing very important work and we applaud you for your work to help innocent human beings. thank israel says it's preparing to retaliate for a missile strike launched against it last week by iran. israel's armed forces have until now mostly concentrated their fire on her moss and gaza and hezbollah, in loving on. both malicious are controlled by iran, and it seems to begins to run itself would mark a significant escalation of the conflict in the region. the skies over tel aviv israel's iron dough missile defense system shooting down some of the approximately $200.00 rockets and ron aimed at the country. israel have responded to a smaller attack earlier this year and a relatively measured way,
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an air strike on an or rainy an air defense battery. now the pressure is on to deal tear on a painful blow. that's going to start a run, made a big mistake tonight and we'll pay for it. the regime in the round does not understand our determination to defend ourselves. all our determination to retaliate against our random is been. analysts say the most likely response is to launch airstrikes. on their runs oil facilities and infrastructure is real, has missiles capable of striking deep into a, ronnie, and territory and oil facilities, including its main export terminal, cock island as well as major refineries are soft targets above ground and out in the open. this could hit the rainy an economy hard, but also drive up oil prices worldwide, something the u. s. which is israel's main back or does not want a month before a presidential election. is real,
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can also hit military airports and bases as well as ammunition depos. any attack using fighter bombers or missiles would have to deal with around the air defenses, but it's not clear how effective they would be. the riskiest and most drastic step is real could take would be to strike it runs nuclear program . but a military attack would be complicated, the sites are spread out and some are deep underground. israel's fighter bombers and missiles can't carry big enough farms to easily penetrate that far. any of these attacks risk escalating hostilities into an all out war with unpredictable consequences? that's what's rattling the international community. the us once above all, to avoid getting dragged into our regional war. that might also draw in our runs back. are russia for seeing a d. me is in iran analyst at the washington institute for near east policy. it's
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good to have you with this, i want to ask you what, what kind it is rarely retaliation against the wrong. do you expect and when as well, it all depends on, on how israel real design is operation it's. it's a very obvious it a complex and just targeting of duties in points that object is that he's real. has he do hands on political and military considerations? i think it has taken quite a more than you probably take a little more until he's ready to make sure his dad dees a targeting is consistent with military strategy. read their uh, concentration of the guaranteed ethics and an operational visibility. and good, good kind of considering the type of platforms and we're going to study choose to using just operation. i think then dave data data able to watch kind of
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a tar tonya state in which was me asking, is it wrong or is real decides to attack a wrong way of facilities because that has it has been a big fear. what impact do you think that's going to have on iran and the rest of the world as well? it is around the size to go after runs with interest reduction, and then she would decide whether they want to go after and you know, golf stream target like production units which are wide spreading and it was a strong area for example, for rafter real 12 point select was a pumping stations in orlando pool pipeline to fools and terminal har, calling on the beach or key to the wrong or the export. but you also have other alternatives to explore to his or the is where he wants to really humphrey wrong. or the, or who do i still have to go after those to alternative terminals, including just just outside the district apartments, as well as israel,
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and really degrades around ability to export his oregon rama. choose to retaliate by going ask for the uh, ordering solutions in the gulf has days like us on the radio sport or to choose to the conference shipping in a straight to one or to the worst case scenario. closer sort of one more thing cuz they have promised in the past that they can not explore terrible. they really prevent any on the country to explore their liter. maybe is around bumps going to down a stream and he to find a race on cell phones or pointers or very close to the shore. and the person involved a certain hormones fairly easy to strike and, and, but again, you don't have 28 to one year is into adult gas because we can, you know, gas compensate for those refineries that you'll not have that disrupt to you expect that these red one 1st thing, what about the nuclear on operations in iran us president biden has specifically said that he does not want any attacks on your bronze nuclear facilities. i'm
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wondering how much influence do you think the united states has right now on israel's decisions when it comes to attacking your rock as well. i think i just rather face just the fiercest now of position from the united states side administration. if they want to go after a new start, so i said, because you want to declare sites are, are what is spread, just this person or onto your through on some of the most important ones are deeply buried, liking for adult life, but he's really much choose to opt to pick and choose some of those mix your sites like that. then you want to react work in a rock, for example, or some of those are production sites in the times or to ride or, and they gave you didn't give you. i think obviously they are on and all of the fuel cycles and other projects. but dave and not be able to get to, to complete these talk through us ability to enrich on uranium or,
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or to grow to webmaster your program if you meet. in fact, you might actually fuzzy me to do me with the washington institute as far as the we appreciate your time and your analysis tonight. thank you. of the day continues online. you'll find this on the x also known as twitter and on youtube, that dw news you can follow me on. so for me, the brent golf debates and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we'll see you then everybody, the
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trip here as much as i did about you. what your opinion feel free to write your thoughts and the comments the what does work mean to you? is it something you enjoy and a source of satisfaction in your life? or is it more of a necessary evil or a way to earn money and pay the bills? and of course, help pay for all sorts of other things too. when it comes to, gen z are often accused of placing a priority on funding leisure activities rather than work. so is that actually true? let's check it out. on this edition has made also coming up. why many companies likes to bring were.

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