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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  May 15, 2024 1:00am-2:00am AST

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the, the the hello, i'm on the inside. this is the news out live from joe, coming up in the next 16 minutes. close to half a 1000000 palestinians displace from rough us be is really all me continues this assault from the city in southern gauze at wimbledon. hall districts population has been sheltering outstanding and fi. just say they have loans, molded and says the attacks on is riley soldiers pushing into giovanni, especially because here imposed on the pacific on end of new caledonia to protest against a constitutional reform to allow move french citizens diverse in the territory. and
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u. s. president j bought in unveils deep terrorist on chinese influence, accusing beijing of not playing fast, and she take on trades the hello. welcome to the program. we begin in southern garza where the is riley ministry is pushing deep into east, and rafa it's assaults has forcibly displaced nearly half a 1000000 palestinians and the u. n. has wound again, but nowhere in gaza is safe. a full 150000 people have now fled roughly in the past week that 90000 more in one day the average number of palestinians being forced out of the city is rapidly increasing and they arrived to over crowded camps with inadequate food was so it was found the taishan. meanwhile, palestinian fights of se there's launched fuzzy 3 attacks on is riley forces in
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northern garza and is the highest figure in a single day this year. is ready forces re in to jamalia 3 days ago. and then now deep in the hoss of the city. meanwhile, the attacks on relenting elsewhere, at least for the palestinians were killed. bind is rarely as strike on the island. is there a refugee camp in central garza house? i'm a school we're talking to. so our cars begins on coverage, the, the is not celine off. the top of your locals can phone is him in another room? no says comfort dismissal one. they claim him a clever boy the as the sounds echo
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across the whole. to me. a reminder is a far as if this was the outside, this woman cries quietly. a mind can also be heard saying us and is ro. oh, to blame the i swear to god, my heart is in pain. she tells them now the palestinian men to the pro injures and relatives of the dead. listen to a man telling them to be prepared to meet the makeup is that he says is on every corner and every street. this has
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become an all too familiar scene across the gaza strip. the, this finds is ready for this week during some, several areas, including the slides for a few g come. a few weeks ago the they have returned with intense, foaming, under the guise of defeating some of the, the sauce. it's the civilians who suffered the nice the palestinians in the north, on the south, on being sped, either nearly half a 1000000 of them have been forced to be dropped off in just a matter of days. the another boat, the rock stopped in a sheet. this is full, as they say, he'll have his name, racing on the white cloth,
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the full being buried. so as is one of more than $35000.00 palestinians to think israel launched its rule and garza total height of al jazeera and all cordaris and central gaza. and went to the house is really forces boomed in the out and is there it's working? she can, as we saw a couple of palestinian children that were rescued from under the rubble, heartbreaking memories as palestinian mother, as a farewell, their children from under the rubber. not only that the rescue workers were having a very hard time as they were trying their best to pull more of bodies from under the rubble, the their beloved ones waiting for the rescue workers to help them hoping that anyone would be alive. the rescue workers were using their bare hands very basic
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equipments to rescue any policy and use that were trapped to of the families that have been killed in this house were recently evacuated from dropbox, as they thought that to say it was a safe space. after that is really forces ask them to evacuate to the central area . a lot of other palestinians. we're, we're, we're waiting and still waiting for any news about the people to drop. unfortunately, after 19 hours of pulling the robot and trying to rescue people from under the rubble of the rescue, workers said that it's getting dark and they had to leave the bombed house and they're going to return tomorrow in the morning. as there are still dozens of palestinians trapped under the rubble and their families are going to wait for them until they remove them and pull them from under the rubble to. let's get more on
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the sizing in northern gaza. more i saw the color which has been inside the jabante, a refugee camp, which has been on the fire i took into from the center, giovanni camp as really forces the station behind the schools 3. and there is a hit and run buttons a that's all taking place in that area between these, like the forces and the mills minutes, a resistance the. and this is the scene into very account the this is in the center, but it can, i connect the little foot board, the can see the cuts us foreign ministry says these fund negotiations between israel and how much to end the war in gauze. i have reached a stalemate,
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therefore we will not accept being, as i said, you've been abused by the, by the mediation process itself, or by those who are trying to positively or negatively affect their positions. what we will certainly commit to is the cause for the piece and we are continuing our role as the mediator i do out of seeing right now. it is to me that you as department, as they said this morning, we have reached what can be this. it describes as a state of me, but we are continuing to work together to try to bridge the gap between the 2 and additive when it comes to discomfort. let's see on as a car, as a professor i've gone politics had kept all universe day. he says, the breakdown of the faith 5 talks is not surprising. are now in dissolution, what we see is that these, right? and maybe they never wanted to negotiate the list of the terms that them indeed those wanted. and how much they know this is something that can do something they will shape. i mean, actually be having nothing to, to negotiate with that displacing it started because he's trying to keep saying
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that what they want to do is to lead me to tell us not to negotiate with them a. so what if rather a trying to do now or has been trying to do is to gain time in order to reorganize in order to gain support from the united states to justify the are the actions mainly improper, justify the movement of people in order to stop there the last face of the, the patient that supposedly is truly mean if the how much, unfortunately me, by the most, for the following this 7 months, that the, the red lines that the he keeps repeating are almost there. but he always regretted about saying that to because of this. okay, we have the red line, but okay, on the report that we're going to to, to show you, you're not doing anything wrong. a we chose that at the end of the day by the kind of do what she wants to do or who would be willing to do, which is the same. and example, finally stop,
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you kind of continue and i would stop supporting you, they kind of did that's, i mean the us has a little fat, easiest, and intentionally within the democratic party as well. it, we see a lot of support from the republic and of course, so we started, so i've been kind of before having that there was, you know, if the history will be inside the united states. so red lines as possible. and it's like if we stop entering and verify this kind of appraisal, no, no, an. i mean, not beagle pay time based on by that would be okay with that's. so that's what it, what it's complicated to understand the okay. and it never seems that it's not going to cross. that's the red line that you have. if i said, by the way, keep the operation in definitive to the, to the united states has condemned to an attack on an, a con void carried out by is riley protest as the group unloaded food items and destroy the urgent need needed supplies, preventing them from reaching gauntlet, the vehicles will crossing through. however, on in the occupied westbank heading towards casa,
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as well as restriction on food aid has caused funding across logic. parts of the strip. nor con reports, states through got to an smash royce, flour of the much needed food. these is right, these are determined to prevent this age from reaching hosting and engulfed the fiscal boy who was on its way from jordan to the proceed to strip through hep road in the occupied westbank where it was attacked. on monday human rights lewis appears to run the staff behind us, you can see the surplus, jewish, extreme, historical aids meant for garza. the armies had the police of left a is ready, police insist they're investigating. well, i'm on says they didn't nothing to prevent it. i still how the police and the, i mean this is to both of them, you know, whether they just allow them to enable the one on the ground. i never so that
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someone was arrested even i, when i was at the the sabotage didn't answer some of that. many of these ladies came back, incense, 3 of the a trucks on the floor of the light of day, expose the severity of the damage. the white house has condemned the attack on the trucks. it is a total outrage that there are people who are attacking and loading these convoys coming from jordan, going to a guy's a, to deliver humanitarian assistance. we are looking at the tools that we have to respond to this. but this is not the 1st time it's happened. is there any protests to be booking a to the priest? the goal is to of to come up with some coffee from them. last week purchases. he's brooks to block road in southern israel. do is being used to deliver aids to concept driven video, showed the truck off the truck,
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backed up to columbus, has people in garza a stopping the head of the u. n. well, to program says a full blown famine in northern garza. it's working it's way south. there. israel defense for rough or severely in 2 days from entering through the time of a southern crossing when the crossing is even not functioning for a day. this is having a significant impact on the response that we are able to provide to. so for 7 days now, without humanitarian eric aids coming in, it's a complete disaster here. a complete is off to the 8 blocks and destroyed by the scrupulous radius. is just a fraction of what's needed. the un said israel, it's responsible for what it calls an entirely man made starvation and concept nor come out to 0 to the noise of nations has identified at stuff number killed by
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an attack in eastern rasa. the indian national website for the u. s. department of safety and security in gaza. gabriel alexander has moved from you and headquarters in new york to you and is confirming the identity of their employee that was killed outside rafa early on monday. his name is wipe, how a new college you worked for the u. n department of safety and security for less than 2 months. he's from india 46 years old and a father of 2. and while the u. n is set up a fact finding mission to gather more details about the circumstances of his death . they've already been able to determine that it was israel, who is responsible. we are in discussion with israel to determine exactly how this incident happened and the nature of what happened. i don't think uh, i don't think at this stage we are in doubt about where the shots came from as much as what the circumstances were. where did they come from?
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oh we, we believe it came from a tank in the area. 109 d u n staff members have been killed since israel began it's war on guys a little over 7 months ago. here at un headquarters on tuesday, investigators reacted to the latest killing test to and this violation of international law, international lawyers, unacceptable and i should not be tolerated. a 2nd un staff member was wounded during the attack. it's a woman from jordan, she's in the hospital and expected to make a full recovery. they were in a marked un conroy at the time they came under attack gabriel's onto i would use it at united nations in new york. the to the us next year spaces met the ukranian president and his 1st trip to keep by
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seeing the american official since congress passed a $61000000000.00 a package on to be blinking. assured with all of them is it and see that more ministry support is on the way as you creating faces intensified russian attacks in khaki. we've done hold on reports, a desperate defense in ne, in ukraine, ukraine's military cities newly released video shows border guards trying to fight or for rushman cushion. near the town of both turns on friday, for the attacks have continued. so well the other for which i believe this was $1210.00 on tuesday, more of each residents told to get out, well, they still tying the russian to bounces into ukrainian territory here. coming under the cover of asteroid smell, its hillary refuge for now is ukraine,
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2nd biggest city, part of keith hall, keith to has been on the heavy, aerial bombardment for months. now, the residential building here is just been hit, ukraine's minister of internal affairs, legal claim, ankle was there at the seeing. the almost done you within that will ok go through the last few hours with several strikes on the city. that way, when the center of the city where a guy did ariel palm landed, ukraine's military intelligence chief says the situation in the northeast is nearing stabilization, but it hardly feels like it. the elderly men and women forced to run their lives. adding urgency to the training president's meeting with the us secretary of state in keith. first claim, gratitude for the release of to months of congressional gridlock of $61000000000.00 a us military aid. crucial package for all off uh, forces for all over those things. so much for this package, thanks to congress. thanks. prison by then. but soon it was on what was needed now
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on the battlefield to come about russia's lone range, ariel power is or defense. the biggest difference is for us, the biggest problem. and we need really, we need to day us to bed through us 40400 can region because they are the people on their attacks, civilians. and where is everybody? they are under russian shots on the front lines. ukrainian policies have been outnumbered outgoing, running show of munition. mr. blinking was in keith to signal that more help was coming. some of this already arrived, more of that will be arriving. and that's going to make a real difference against the ongoing russian aggression on the battlefield and were determined along with many other partners for you create to make sure that you succeed on the battlefield. in the short term succeeded being simply stabilizing, holding on more more troops, drafted and trained more military hardware arrives,
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trying to hold russia's new momentum. john holman, out, is it a part of key? here as president joe biden is a sharp play increasing terrace on inputs from china in an effort to protect american jobs ahead of the election in november. the charges will cover electric vehicles, batteries, and semi conductors unemployed to $18000000000.00 worth of chinese products. beijing has one, the decision will severely affects biological cooperation. whitehouse, corresponding kennedy. how could, how small from washington d. c. u. s. presidential by didn't came into office saying he wouldn't do. his predecessor, former president donald trump's trade policies. but on tuesday, 5 in double to even triple down on new terrorist to some chinese imports to the united states. when you make tactics like these and they're not competing.
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companies has cheated, the tariffs will be phased in over 3 years on every thing from steel, semiconductors, electric vehicles, and more affecting roughly 18000000000 and chinese imports to view west terrace. so the electric vehicle as will rise to 100 percent, some 25 percent steel and aluminum products will more than triple to 25 percent from 7.5 percent or less try to heavily subsidize. all these products pushing china is coming to produce far more than the rest of all can absorb, then don't pay the excess products out of the market and on fairly low prices. driving the other manufacturers around the world, out of business, the bad news ministration says the move will help american businesses compete. critics like for president trump say china floods the global market with excess imports. it's too little, too late. for the trump
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made punishing china over what he called unfair trade practices. cornerstone of his presidency, igniting a trade war. they jang is vowing to retaliate against the latest action by the bible ministration calls about data. sure. what we want to tell you is that china always opposes unilateral tariff increases that violate w t o rules. and we'll take all necessary measures to safeguard it's legitimate rights and interest with the presidential election months away. politics is that the root of this announcement, some of the biggest still an auto manufacturers are in the battleground, states of michigan and pennsylvania. president biden has promised to protect manufacturing jobs in those states with the hope of winning boats in november. kimberly help hat alpha 0, the white house lashing is kind of host of china eaves and more. and
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a former chief edison, the china auto review. he explains what impact the tax and lucky to have. frankly, there's not that many china made each of these currently exported into the u as in north america, for that matter. um, it, with maybe with a, with the inspection, uh, uh, exception of mexico, but, you know, besides volleyball post on some of these g, we owned eves are just not that many kind of a, he's being an expert in the us. so it's minimal at the for now, generally this does increase in terms of was expected from china. i think this was being discussed for several months now. and knowledge is we have a official announcement, but i think for, for china, the also the chinese e companies. what they're doing will be what i call, you know,
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preparing, persevering. uh, you know, that what think about partnerships. i'm just doing things behind the scenes and, and really i think for the us policies change when, when you know that there's especially given the current pleasure, the actual election year, you know, it could change next year. the i r a, it's from, you know, it gets to be elected. so i think is a dynamic environment that china will be watching closely as always, in the french territory of new caledonia, have imposed a coffee off to riots that would trigon by a proposed reform to a vase. and he was in the pacific island. police were deployed in the cap to noon. yeah, off to protest, to set fire to prop the french and pays on discussing a constitutional change that would allow people who lived in the territory for more
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than 10 years to vote in local elections latest from the indigenous population known as the cadillac. people say to move could we can that representation? the french prime minister has denounced his audit and saying it is not the solution . that's what it was all reset or what told you've done our pro rated today's the return of call you as an old by the minister of interiors for additional agenda. maurice quadrants. it'd be arriving in the next few hours, either on the high commission of the territory, as announced a few to hold the night. you do that's being to all corresponding wayne, hey, who joins us from to around get a new zealand. a. so wayne give split of context here. how do we get to this point as well? the 1st thing is the scenes that we've seen on the streets all the new color in the and capital new me, uh you, we have seen these play out many times over the past few decades, basically back in 1990 item. the code was signed with the aim,
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all giving you caledonia, great to autonomy from for us. remember that it is a french territory. since then. we've had 3 referendums a month or with the idea of possibly drawn from independence to new caledonia. but all 3 of those referendums rejected independence from the 3rd one, the final one which was held in december 2021 though was boy caught by the independence movement of the french president to manual macro and has been pretty clear they will not be another referendum on independence. so the reason these prototypes are happening right now is because the local elections are planned soon in new caledonia at the moment. the only people who converse in new caledonia and elections, the kind of population for people who haven't lived in new caledonia prior to 1998 when that a cold was signed, any want to win the french nationals after that periods cannot take part in the
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electronic process and the french government said that is crazy because you're eliminating a huge section of the population from the electoral process, even though they may have lived there for years. on the other hand, that cannot the independence movement. say, if this goes through the french parliamentary system, if it's approved, then it will for the marginalized voice. so wayne, what's likely to happen next. the willow lives on paris still really waiting to see if that is past in the lower house of parliament. the president has said he's in no rush to convene the house that will be needed to rather stand this bill if indeed it is passed as we expect through the lower house all pile limited. in the meantime, they are taking it very seriously. more police have been deployed some for squadrons of police from france to go to new caledonia to for the increased security on the streets. the, uh, as you say, there was a coup, few in place tuesday night,
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local time. that's now come to an end. it didn't really hold, we saw some gatherings of independence protest as some bias. let's as well around the capital me at. so it will be a very change day. i have a new caledonia as we wait to see what they decide in paris. okay, thank you for that wayne. how you that for us into around us? still ahead on the algae 09000000 people display since the dawn. just some of the record numbers around the wells cannot go back and get assigned parliament in georgia off the learning policy. it helps a controversial law against foreign influence. the other one is much better in sydney, the writing that was there is on its way to new zealand. and the sheriff in west
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australia has it been a bit poky, on fact widespread. in fact, they haven't not attempted back in paris, which maintains each run of above $25.00 degrees to a record breaking blanks and it will carry on for the next few days as well. most of the comments is looking fine, it is increasing the clad in northern new south wales and that in brisbin and beyond occasional shout, it seemed likely that would have been a wet day on wednesday for particularly particularly for the north on the easy to say. so stay despite what it looks like is an improvement happening. visa, eastern is an easier there's a potential here attempted circulation which these very big showers which might defect sort of way. see, they've been to our competitor possibly to the east of that. java looks much dry, have to say, and they went with this nice spreading into thailand. come body allows in vietnam, this is tom here, when you should see big chance i'm, you know, seeing them they extended trusted to you now. but most of the rest of the southern charm is that dry surprisingly. and then this a strange break of fairly heavy ready for the korean peninsula and probably japan,
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which tennessee will to install me sometime during this day. the, the latest news was so intense that this is all that is left. people are taking through debris and twisted metal to find anyone left alive in depth reports the entire gossip population of 2300000 people do not have enough. crisis escalating and detailed coverage as well as prime minister relies on foreign ministers to stay in power. they want the raft results to go ahead, define them, and then you know, who could be out of office as universities across the u. s. mobilize for palestine, an unprecedented track down intensifies. they're putting a target on my back. they're saying, here's your person,
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go get her fault lines investigates the mechanisms of suppression and the implications for academic freedom. universities who embrace diversity when it's for palestinian right? you're suspended your investigated your shut down the palestine exception. when it does either the washing out, is there a line to thoughts of the story? is this our now the $90000.00 people, a slave rough and southern garza in a single day, the total force lee fight as well as renewed offensive in the past week. now stands at $450000.00 view and says there is no was safe for them to go.
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all the city and fighters say that we launched 33 attacks on is riley false, is the highest number in a single day. since the silence of the resources are now deep in the house of giovanni assessing in northern costa thor, seasoned the french territory of new caledonia, having tires a few officer writes that would trigger it by proposed reform. inviting news, french and peas are discussing, allowing recent assessments and the territory effects in the record number of people weld wide were displaced in 2023. that's according to the internal displacement. monitoring center is rosette shows nearly 76000000 people were forced from that homes last year. most were displaced by conflicts and finance . others by natural disasters, almost ha, 4 in sub saharan africa. you know, as a nation says the conflict in see don high school was the world's was displacement
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crisis. by the end of last year moving 9000000 people have been forced to flee. and israel's will and gaza has forcibly displaced 1700000 people in 3 months between october and december. and 4700000 people in tech in syria are still in temporary shelters. often the devastating of quakes last february out is there a table. morgan has more on those who had to flee the fighting ensued on this displacements camp is the latest open and so dense, eastern city of port sedan. it's home to some of the thousands who fled fighting between the sudanese army and the power military rapids support forces in the capital hot to him and elsewhere around the country. including full z, i belong who fled from her home in northern part of tomb. shortly after the start of the conflicts lost here us for life, a lot of me just see if we fled in june. we left and decided to stay in mid any
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b r a stuff attacked our home and cut a room. i was with my son and we were in my father's house, and it was just my sister's one of my sisters is married to me. i mean, is the year long conflict here has created the world's largest displacements crisis . according to the un, 9000000 people have been displaced. many have been repeatedly uprooted as fighting expanded across the country. the why didn't give me give you to reflect when the fighting started and went to 0. we brought our children here and decided to stay. we saved in just a year for 7 months. then as a somebody who could be 8 organization state more than half of the down to 47000000 people are in need of aid. with 5000000 facing famine. those displays are the ones most affected, but slicing has hindered access to them. we really have an issue with access. uh, we need better access uh across the lines to being able to move uh from here in
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ports it on across the country across uh the, the front line. so of the conflict. yeah. but we also need to have access uh from the regional countries uh, from size to don, from chad. so access is the main issue, but of course we also need more resources and we need flexible resources so that we can take oppertunity as they arise. there's no indication the confidence here incident is close to an end, which means more people who will be displaced. those here say, while they're able to receive aid, would they really want is to return to their homes and the lives they left behind. he'd been more than all to 0. jeremy can 9 died, is the president of refugees international. he worked in the obama administration on humanitarian issues. he joined just now live from washington dc. thank you for your time today. i think it's fair to say that this report is a dining verdict, some governments around the wells failure when it comes to conflict resolution on
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peace making around the world. what do you think is going wrong? well then that's certainly true. conflicts are just carrying on longer and longer with very little risen. ready asian, you know, we see that with syria, we see that now with sudan within the report, we just heard and combined with that, i think it's important to emphasize what the official so just a moment ago that the resources are simply not materializing to keep pace with the growing needs so total human is hurrying funding. decreased by $10000000000.00 from 2022 to 2023, even as the total displacement globally rose. and so of course that leaves new crises, likes it in really strapped for resources. and that puts all sorts of strain on the people who are newly displaced. and increasingly we've seen welfare countries raising the drawbridge against displaced people. even though in some cases they
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themselves have play deposit and closing the displacement. what needs to be done and to address this i think it's really important to underscore that as big as these numbers are and 75000000 people is a lot of internally displaced people. and it's a significant increase from 5 years ago about a 50 percent increase over the last 5 years. and, and even larger increase over the last 15 years. you know, so these are big numbers, but they're not inherently on manageable numbers. and what we see in a lot of western countries, you can see this and for example, some of the really hateful rhetoric from people likes while a brain from it and the former home secretary of the u. k. they will use these large numbers as an excuse to be more restrictive to try and be more punitive and more harsh towards migrants. now we know that that kind of policy doesn't determine like ration. but of course, it also fails to it. reckon with the fact that this is
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a manageable problem. after world war 2 in europe and europe alone, there were 40 to 60000000 people displaced in a much smaller global population in a much for world. so surely in today's world, we can manage the displacement of 75000000 people are looking at the gaza war. i mean, we've seen humanitarian aid and the access to it. and the people who are displaced in suffering been used as a political negotiating to what sort of precedent does that set, do you think the future goes? well, there is a huge concern right now that the commitment to going. ready in the worms around to manager and access around international humanitarian law is really eroding when governments that condemn behaviors that russia the rest of carries out of ukraine and, and so they absolutely condemn those behaviors. are kind of tolerating or much more
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muted in their criticism of a, of some of the conduct we see from these really government in the gaza strip. that, you know, the way that works to the large world is, is, if you measuring commitments in humanitarian norms and humanitarian law are purely situation. and if they are purely situational, then we really lose them. and, and that's a huge long term concern because your commitments, like the protection of civilian can civilians commitments like the protection and facilitation of humanitarian aid work. these are some of the things that alleviate displacement crises. and so when you lose those, the displacement numbers will only rise. and jeremy, when looking in sub saharan african countries, many of them dealing with displacement from conflicts, but also displacement from natural disasters. many at the same time, these people are more often than not, not even going to be recognized. we know,
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we know, for example, the term climate refugee itself has no legal meaning. so right. how, how should this be addressed or? well, we don't really have to global tools that we need right now for people who are displaced in their homes by climate. now the good news here is that most people who are climate displaced tend to initially stay displaced within their own country and generally wants to stay there. the problem emerges when they can't do that. so if, for example, in somalia, we've seen a huge wave of organization as people flee out of rural areas where they can no longer make a livelihood due to climate change. so they go into urban areas, they try to make a livelihood there, but they get very little support to do. so very little donor funding and, and frankly, the humanitarian system is not well suited to meet the needs of people, you know, who are, who are not going to classically displaced. and so if they don't get the support they need,
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then that raises the likelihood that they will try to. ready move elsewhere to, to leave their country and we don't have a good system that we don't have a good way to manage that kind of migration in an orderly way nor to support people who. ready who, you know, might be inclined to stay or wouldn't be inclined to stay in their countries if they can't get the support to do so. so there's a lot of potential to, to target climate financing more intentionally at displacement. really interesting to get your perspective, jeremy, call 9 dyke, the president of refugees international speaking to a staff in washington dc. thank you. now, police in georgia, have dispatched demonstrations outside of the parliament in tbilisi on to politicians approved a foreign interference. no new legislation was pos despite weeks of mass protests, ministry just fit. it could be used to cub defense, stand in the way of georgia joining the european union to be treatment vanco
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reports from tbilisi. as it was a battle they had little of, of when the demonstrators gathered up upon demand for the final vote on the so called for an agents bill, police push them back from the entrance. students from colleges and universities skipped classes to be here. you have these hello is accepted we, we can't even use the certification. so why, why the hell we need it because of the election that's had all of the very close. i see the things that without these kinds of measures. so it isn't possible for them to read and the remaining power while protest is, john said outside the ruling, georgia, dream policy was always likely to win developed. as with the allies, they have more than half the seats in palm,
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the marks they said the bill was important for transparency of engine goes and the media. now all those groups and companies receiving 20 percent on more of the funding from a broad, we'll have to register as agents of 4 and into it. after several fights among and peas, the law was passed. anger built up outside as the results were now for fee on both of the parliament protest is reading out the names of the m p 's who voted for the law process of uh, who have been standing here all day. well, quite angry. obviously have the result of this, the boat and they, uh, came out here in front of the front of the building. they will gather at the back and most of the day. and then they started buzzing through the battery periods, which were locating the front gate off solomon until the riot police broke through those guys. they wrapped up those closest to the gates, threatened things to guess and cleared the st. in, in our method, within an hour,
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crowds with back with them, europe and politicians. that's despite the you wanting to lose adoption food and george's ambitions to join the block to. and the united states also announced that could be consequences. the us has about $390000000.00 in assistance. all that has to be under review. if we are now regarded as an adversary and not a part. as night fell, protest estate, determined to keep coming back to meet them at the didn't go out to 0 spinning saying, hey, controversial politician from the fall right old tentative for gemini policy has been found guilty of deliberately using a nazi slogan as
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a riley. you own hook was charged with using symbols of terrorist organizations. he claim not to have been aware of the phrase had been used by the nazis dominant, came reports from the german fits. if have a few weeks, piet and hook it has been dividing his time between the campaign trail and the courtroom arguing for votes in the street and acquittal. in this trial, prosecutors said his use of the phrase, everything for germany to a crowd as if de supporters was illegal, effectively repeating the slogan of idols, hitler, the stormtroopers or s, uh, the, the, the effect of the court found for the speech and the phrase used by the accused was a punishment offence under section 86, a of a criminal code can be seen as confirming our position. come on, hook is defense. had argued that since of a public figure that use the phrase before without facing prosecution. why couldn't he? but the judges said it was the context of the comments that message and found him
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guilty. although hook it is lead to of the if day in just one state, one on the list police. he is the potties real driving force nationally. i think he already took over the part a long time ago or so. and you could see that that the 2 chair person um are very care really looking into how they come in on things actually. and in relation to, to what they flew, and some of the representatives actually said the past few months have been difficult for the eye of day. in january, a wave of public protest followed reports. the prominent members had secretly discussed forcibly the pulsing michael and super come german citizen. on monday, a court ruled the security services can continue treating the if day as a suspected extremist policy full of which has heard the policy in the opinion. polls in january,
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around one in full vote is said they supported it. now few of and one in 6 do previously come on. thing leads in 3 based in german states or elections are being held in september. i have seen a road it so far as this cold has now delivered its verdict on. yeah. and the voters in he states won't get to deliver this until september. going to k houses, era. hello. the renowned canadian with alice monroe has died at the age of 19 to hailed as a mazda in contemporary short story. writing, monroe was awarded the nobel prize for an extra and 2013 books. explore the themes of the human condition in creating aging relationships. she was diagnosed with dementia and recent news and passed away late on monday as her cat. a on target that's speak now to tara mcguire. she's a riser from vancouver in canada. good. good if you to join us,
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so let's speak about us been right. she made him up in writing short stories, which is new to us, be hard to do what, what is it that made has so successful? and i think that she just wrote about everyday life in a way that made us all feel seen when i woke up this morning and saw on my instagram, which is full of writers from the eastern time zone. and everyone was writing tributes to how alex monroe had affected their lives. i went to my book shelf and i'm like pulling up all of these books just so many of them. and so the way that she wrote the short story is just better than anybody else. she was a master of the form. it's very, very difficult. i think with writing the more words you have, the easier it is. and she gave herself those constraints. and her writing was crystal clear. it was almost unemotional, so vivid and sharp. and there,
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nobody could match her. i'm can you, can you tell us a little bit about her background and have pos to becoming a rice. so i read somewhere that she had to come over and become a lack of self confidence at the beginning of her career. and yes, i think she was always a very humble person. she received a scholarship to western university in ontario and stays there for 2 years. and then then she met a fellow student there where they moved out here to british columbia. and eventually together they opened monroe as books in victoria, which is still a very popular bookstore in victoria. she wrote, well being married, she wrote well having 3 young children. she wrote about small town life and about what it's like to be a woman. she wrote about the complexities of, of simple lives, straight about sex in a way that really hadn't been covered before. and, you know,
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i remember reading her books as a teenager then as an adult, as a mother myself and now as a, as writer. and she just saw us, she saw our lives, she wrote about women and girls and in a way that made our lives seem valuable and important and real, those the inner lives of women. and i mean, you are arise as he says, i mean, how does she inspire with jenny as well? i think for one thing, she made it possible each sheet. she did win the nobel prize for literature, but she was the 1st canadian woman to win that prize. uh, the 1st woman actually at all. and so, you know, she was able to prioritize her writing while being a mother while trying to get by and i think that's what was so inspirational for me . and you know, i started off with the love of reading books and it didn't really occur to me until later in my life to try and write them. and i think seeing someone like alice
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monroe just right, so prolifically all the way through her life, while keeping up with all of the demands of her private life. it was hugely inspirational. and i know so many other canadian writers have been calling out the tributes today, many of them saying that without alice monroe, they wouldn't be writers at all. she, she made it seem possible. um, in terms of her work, how, how do you think she's going to be remembered? well, this year body of her work is pretty extraordinary. a number of her short stories have been adopted into films. sarah poly famously directed in 2007 away from her, which was adopted from one of her short stories. her work is timeless. it can be read at any age and interpreted at any time with the different lens. and i think that she will just be remembered as a truly gifted writer who,
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who saw the lives of girls and women, and wrote them very clearly with beautiful pros and it just made us seem like we were worth it. oh, thank you so much for speaking to us, tara, from that a mcguire, ricer from cubic canada. thank you very much. i. it's still a head on al jazeera. i'm barney below and what are the guys? philippine tourism is crown jewels for the islands original inhabitants. the people are fighting to keep ownership of a small piece of land. the
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the
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the students at harvard university of agreed and the 3 week old encampment that was in protest against israel. osborne garza, the decision came off to university official, was agreed to discuss the questions about his investments and to quickly process petitions for the reinstatement of suspended students. the global movement has been cooling on universities to divest from israel. donald trump is full. the lawyer and michael cohen has been back in quotes, giving evidence in the former us presidents house money trial. kevin told the court that trump ordered him to pay an adult film actress stormy daniels moving $100000.00. he says it was an exchange for his silence on the ledge. sexual
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encounter with the former president. trump is accused of both the following business reco. it's to cover up that payments. heat an ice food charges, christian slimy reports from new york. well, 2 days on the sand, from michael cohen, 2 days of testimony today started with the prosecution, getting into the details of the case, attempting to show that not only to donald trump know about the payments made to an adult film star to buy her silence about an alleged affair, trump knew that michael cohen was being reimbursed for those states those payments and improperly documenting them as legal fees. cohen testified that trump had ordered him to quote, take care of it when stormy daniels, that address threatened to come forward with the story of the alleged affair. and that he was also told by trump to talk to his chief financial officer alan white, silver, to get reimbursed for the payments that he himself made to stormy daniels in the
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prosecute and presented a series of emails and invoices even check signed by trump, allegedly, to reimburse calling for those payments. the defense will continue the process in the nation of michael cohen when the trial is on thursday, and they've left to open. the possibility that donald trump himself could be called to the stand, to testify as well as if the anti try been a popular philippine resort town. say they've been forced alphabet line by developers and government had given the audience original inhabitants the prophecy . but it now says it is best suited to tourism on the native report as a warm welcome from the out the children put on the crown jewel of philippine tourism. but it's a scene, most visitors don't get to see because the islands original settlers have lived in small pieces of land, away from the crowds. now,
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tribe builders say they're on the brink of losing what little they have. one of the 6 lots they occupy has been penstock after their homes were demolished by developer in march. something i. e, i even just the faint noise scares me into thinking it might be their security guards again coming to evict test um in the private company to took the property says it did. so after the government canceled the state granted land titles in 2018, then president would be good to turn to awarded for our guys indigenous at the people would certificates of land ownership or close placing the properties under the agrarian reform program. but now those titles have been rebuilt because the government has ruled, the land is unsuitable for agriculture. the countries, greer, and reformed. secretary says the decision was based on tests done by soil experts. the once all the clause then has no leg to stand on the top of any legal basis at all. the only ones that are suitable for agriculture are
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those that can be covered by the grid and farm. but the of these have been able to grow foods, and now that they put into work, they say they're not going anywhere in the system. you know, any of us. i mean, they fooled us, they gave us land or need to take it back. so why should we move to whether telling us to relocate, we don't trust the government. it's been a years long struggle to find a permanent settlement at a time of a tourism boom. and one that they believe has cost to life. in 2013 text or contests, a young at the leader was shot to death. but instead of letting fear take over, they said they must honor his memory, but continuing to fight for their right to their ancestral land. barney, below al jazeera, what guy, the philippines. okay, and that's it for me for this news, how you can find lots more on our website out of their adult calm down jordan
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coming up next with more news of how the sinews, who are expelled from their nuns in the neck of 1948 still don't have the rights of return today is that the land was extorted and settlements were built. 20 houses 0 worlds, goes back with young, good old palestinians to re discover their ancestral homes. why doesn't my grand parents stay here? why aren't i here? return to palestine on al jazeera, foster, a 10 year journey, in which it has become the most important translation award from. i'm into the 100 rubric language world wide shaped come out of old for translation, and international understanding of dumps is the opening of the nomination period. for the year 2024 starting march 1st to may. 30 fast nominations are made on the award official website w w w dot h t a dot q a forward slash
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e m the . ringback the okay, foundation is deleted over $300000000.00. will suffice. emboldened $75.00 countries around the world, 100 percent of sec, thoughts and emergency donation spends on projects. and we ensure beneficiaries come 1st over $300.00 on luis heavens, have gone through the roof, the crossing in recent months out most of these bless and be blessed. and we all
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turning your donations into direct delivery in the shortest possible time donates with comfort does the plus the half a 1000000 palestinians are displaced as these really ami continues as a sofa on the rough or by more than half of gauze, this population has been sheltering the other one down and doing this is andrea or a life though, also coming up follow some insight to say they've loans molding sachi attacks on his ready soldiers pushing into giovanni as such a yes, president joe biden. i'm very.

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