MEDI1TV Afrique : MEDI1 SOIR 20:00 - 10/09/2024
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00:00The training continues on Mediain TV Africa, thank you for joining us for this round of
00:20news, here are the headlines.
00:22Humor is the official assessment of the next day of floods in the southeast of Morocco,
00:28while research continues, a new weather alert of level of orange vigilance will continue
00:33until Thursday, the details in a few moments.
00:38The day after the Israeli strikes in Gaza, which cost the lives of at least 40 people
00:43yesterday in the humanitarian zone of Al-Mawazi, the condemnations follow from the part of
00:48international opinion.
00:49It is a decisive Tuesday for the presidential election in the United States, Donald Trump
00:56and Kamala Harris face each other tonight in Pennsylvania in a decisive debate for
01:00a scrutiny of November 5 next.
01:02We meet again right away for the development.
01:09Welcome ladies and gentlemen, humor is the official assessment of the next day of floods
01:14in the south of Morocco, but according to our special envoy on site, Abdelmoula Boukhriss,
01:20the victims of more would have been discovered by the rescue services, which would have passed
01:26the figure to 20 dead.
01:28According to the Ministry of the Interior, research is underway in the province of Tata.
01:33Heavy rains accompanied by rains and floods were recorded last weekend in the Orayouma.
01:40An exceptional phenomenon due to the rise of an extremely unstable tropical air mass
01:45according to the General Direction of Meteorology.
01:5152 road sections out of the 57 damaged by these floods were reopened yesterday
01:58to traffic.
01:59Announcement made by the Ministry of Equipment and Water, which remains mobilized to reopen
02:04as soon as possible the remaining roads, including National Road 10 between Bouarfa and Boanane
02:10and National Road 12 between Foumzig and Zagora.
02:14And know, ladies and gentlemen, that new stormy downpours accompanied by hail and gusts
02:23of wind are expected today in the kingdom.
02:25A meteorological alert of orange vigilance that will continue until Thursday.
02:30It concerns for today the provinces of El Edahab and Naoussarde.
02:34On the map, the same phenomenon will also concern the provinces of Figuig, Gerada,
02:41Oujdarangad, Taourirt, Boulmane, Midelt and Rachidia.
02:48Let us now take the direction of the CAIR with the send-off of the work of the 162nd session
02:54of the Arab League Council.
02:55Morocco is represented by a delegation led by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Nasser Bourita.
03:01A delegation that includes, in particular, the ambassador of Morocco to Egypt and his
03:06permanent representatives with the Arab States League.
03:09The session of the Arab League Council will focus on a number of political, economic and social issues,
03:16as well as on the evolution of current Arab and international issues,
03:21in this case on the issue of Palestine.
03:27The work of the 52nd meeting of the Executive Committee of the Parliamentary Union of the
03:32Member States of the ECI has now opened in Rabat, at the headquarters of the House of Representatives.
03:39The opening session was marked by the speeches of the presidents of the House of Representatives
03:44and the councillors.
03:46Rachid Talbi Alami, president of the House of Representatives,
03:50stated that the initiatives of His Majesty King Mohammed VI illustrate the unwavering commitment
03:56of Morocco in favor of the Palestinian cause and legitimate rights to the Palestinian people
04:01and to independence, but also to the establishment of its independent state.
04:05Rachid Talbi Alami, we will listen to him.
04:12During this meeting, it is necessary to recall the actions taken by the Beytmal Al-Quds Al-Sharif Agency,
04:21a member of the Al-Quds Committee, chaired by His Majesty King Mohammed VI.
04:27These are concrete projects that support the resistance of the inhabitants of the Holy City
04:36in the face of colonization and occupation.
04:38Under the very high instructions of His Majesty King Mohammed VI,
04:45Morocco was the first country to carry out humanitarian aid by land to the population of Gaza.
04:55Direction Geneva, where the 57th Ordinary Session of the Council of Human Rights of the United Nations
05:02is being held, a session under Moroccan presidency.
05:05The send-off of these works was given yesterday by Ambassador Omar Zinebar,
05:09a permanent representative of Morocco at the United Nations Office in Geneva
05:14and president of the Council of Human Rights.
05:17During these five weeks, more than 80 reports presented by the Secretariat of the United Nations
05:23and the High Commission of the United Nations will be examined by human rights experts.
05:31In Gaza, on Monday night, the Israeli army hit the humanitarian zone of al-Mawazi in Khan Younes.
05:38Dozens of people were killed and several injured were also noted.
05:43Shaima Fikri gives us the point.
05:46After 12 months, the Israeli massacre on Palestinian territory has no end.
05:54Without warning beforehand, the Israeli army launched a strike on al-Mawazi on Monday night,
06:00a coastal sector of 46 square kilometers in southern Gaza.
06:04However, the Israeli army had designated al-Mawazi as a humanitarian zone
06:09where Palestinians are supposed to regroup,
06:12called to evacuate the sectors targeted by Israeli bombings.
06:21Al-Mawazi is an area that the occupation considers safe.
06:25Unfortunately, it is only propaganda.
06:27This area is not safe at all.
06:29It was exposed to a large massacre last night,
06:32during which dozens of our Palestinians were killed, including women and children.
06:36It was exposed to a large massacre last night,
06:39during which dozens of our Palestinians were killed, including women and children.
06:42This is the area of al-Mawazi in Khan Younes.
06:44They told us several times that the area of al-Mawazi in Khan Younes was safe,
06:48but in this area they committed several horrible crimes.
06:52Now this massacre is committed against women, children and elderly people.
06:56If they tell us that this area is safe, why are they committing massacres against us?
07:00We left our homes for a safe area, so to speak,
07:03in order to come back after the end of the operations.
07:06We are currently living in an unsafe area,
07:09and every day we live frightening moments with our children.
07:15After settling in al-Mawazi,
07:17according to the orders of the Israeli army,
07:20the Palestinian families saw the missiles falling on their heads.
07:24According to the spokesman for civil defense,
07:27entire families disappeared in the sand, in deep craters.
07:31While the Israeli army indicated that it had carried out a precision strike
07:34against Hamas personnel,
07:36the movement in question retorted by stating that
07:39Israel's allegations of the presence of Hamas in al-Mawazi
07:42are a shameful lie.
07:45This is not the first Israeli operation on al-Mawazi.
07:49In July, more than 90 Palestinians perished
07:52following Israeli strikes.
07:55And the condemnations follow
07:58after this Israeli strike on a humanitarian area.
08:01Turkey has today denounced a war crime,
08:04while London considers the deaths caused by this strike shocking.
08:08A firm condemnation on the part of the UN emissaries
08:11for the peace process in the Middle East.
08:14For Torbensland, civilians should never be used
08:17as human shields,
08:20in reference to the declaration of the Israeli army
08:24that claimed to have targeted a Hamas command center.
08:31In Gaza, tens of thousands of children
08:34are deprived of school.
08:37According to the UNICEF,
08:40at least 45,000 6-year-old children
08:43are deprived of this elementary right in the Palestinian enclave.
08:46More details with our correspondent Valérie Ferrand.
08:49We can say that in the Gaza Strip
08:52there is a double crime.
08:55When we talk about the right to education,
08:58there is a double crime against this right.
09:01Both against the institutions themselves,
09:04which have all been devastated,
09:07including universities.
09:10And why is it a first crime?
09:13Simply because they have been transformed
09:16by the Israeli army,
09:19who have taken refuge in these schools
09:22and who have been bombed for months.
09:25It is another crime, of course,
09:28directly against the right to education
09:31of these children.
09:34And since you are talking about the youngest,
09:37those in elementary school,
09:40it is first of all a child
09:43who may have been injured
09:46or become disabled.
09:49On the other hand,
09:52there are many children of this age
09:55who no longer have parents,
09:58mothers, fathers
10:01and sometimes no family at all.
10:04It is in these conditions
10:07that we must understand
10:10that there is a lot of pressure
10:13from teachers to teach the children.
10:16The problem is that these children
10:19are psychologically totally traumatized,
10:22that the bombings continue,
10:25that they also have many diseases,
10:28especially skin diseases
10:31because of the sanitary conditions
10:34that are totally indescribable.
10:37There are many children of this age,
10:40between 5, 6, 7, 8 years old,
10:43who have the responsibility
10:46to go get water for their families.
10:49We see them all in the streets
10:52with small buckets
10:55and different instruments
10:58to be able to get a little water.
11:01We have created a kind of generation
11:04where there is very little electricity
11:07in Palestine.
11:10It is also an extremely important place
11:13for the families of refugees
11:16since 1948,
11:19which means that in the Gaza Strip
11:22at least 70% of the families
11:25give absolute priority to education.
11:28Why? For a very simple reason.
11:32During the first massive expulsion
11:35carried out by Israel,
11:38all that was left was education.
11:41So in the minds of many Palestinians,
11:44the only thing we can't lose,
11:47the only thing we can't take back
11:50is their right to education.
11:53This Tuesday, José Borrell,
11:56head of European diplomacy,
11:59said that the Gaza Strip
12:02would be transformed into a new Gaza Strip.
12:05In recent weeks, Israel has multiplied
12:08the deadly military operations in South Jordan,
12:11where violence has been raging
12:14since the beginning of this conflict.
12:17At least 662 Palestinians
12:20have been killed by Israeli soldiers
12:23or colonels, according to data
12:26from Israeli officials.
12:32Meanwhile, the United States,
12:35the United Kingdom, France and Germany
12:38announced today that they would take
12:41new sanctions against Iran,
12:44including air transport,
12:47accusing Tehran of delivering
12:50ballistic missiles to Russia
12:53The United States and its allies
12:56also said that they would take
12:59new sanctions against Tehran
13:02and the national airline Iron Air.
13:05In a statement published shortly after,
13:08London, Paris and Berlin also said
13:11that Iran had carried out
13:14its missile transfers.
13:17Iran, on the other hand,
13:21Politics leads us to the United States
13:24where Donald Trump and Kamala Harris
13:27will face each other tonight
13:30during a decisive debate in Pennsylvania,
13:33one of the determining states
13:36in view of the scrutiny of November 5th.
13:39Shaima Fikri tells us more.
13:42Two totally different styles oppose each other.
13:45One is a former prosecutor known for his firmness.
13:48The other is a former TV presenter.
13:51Kamala Harris and Donald Trump
13:54will face each other this Tuesday
13:57during a highly anticipated debate.
14:00The former Republican president
14:03and the American vice president
14:06will meet for the very first time
14:09at the beginning of their 21-hour local debate
14:12on the ABC channel.
14:16I'm curious to hear what the two candidates have to say.
14:19I haven't decided yet who I'm going to vote for,
14:22but I still want to hear what all the parties have to say.
14:27I'm glad the debate is taking place in Philadelphia.
14:30This is where I live and work,
14:33so I love this city so much.
14:36The polls are split 50-50.
14:39This debate is very tight and the two candidates are very strong.
14:43I can't wait to hear Harris' point of view
14:46on the creation of more peace.
14:49While the former Republican president
14:52has multiplied public appearances,
14:55his rival has spent most of the last three days
14:58in Pennsylvania with his preparation team.
15:01Pennsylvania, with its 19 electoral college votes,
15:04and its tendency to switch from one side to the other,
15:07is one of the most coveted swing states.
15:10Polls give the Democrats an advantage,
15:13who have completely re-mobilized their party
15:16but still have to make themselves known to a large part of the population,
15:19including the Republicans,
15:22whose electoral base does not seem to be started
15:25by their judicial enemies or their decisive statements.
15:28The suspense remains at its peak.
15:35For Calvin Darke, an American political analyst,
15:38what is at stake in this presidential debate
15:41is more important for Democratic candidate Kamala Harris.
15:44Let's listen to her.
15:47I think it's more important for Kamala Harris, the vice president,
15:50because all American voters know Donald Trump.
15:53Maybe he's their candidate, maybe not.
15:56But with Kamala Harris,
15:59I think all Americans know his name,
16:02but who is Kamala Harris?
16:05A lot of Americans don't know her background.
16:08She was a senator before the vice president.
16:11She was Attorney General for the state of California.
16:14So, this debate is the time
16:17to really see the differences between the two candidates,
16:20but also for Kamala Harris to introduce herself
16:23in front of Americans,
16:26to really answer the question,
16:29who is Kamala Harris and why
16:32she is the best choice for the White House,
16:35according to the Democratic Party.
16:38On the main topics that the two candidates
16:41must address during this debate,
16:44let's listen to the analysis of Zakaria Aboudab,
16:47professor of international relations and political science
16:50at the University of Morocco.
16:53The question of inflation, the economic balance, insecurity.
16:56There are also questions in terms of international politics,
17:00especially in relation to China,
17:03in relation to the attitude of NATO,
17:06because Trump is one of its favorite subjects
17:09in relation to transatlantic relations.
17:12The question also in relation to the Middle East
17:15is a very timid assessment,
17:18let's say flamboyant,
17:21in relation to the involvement of the US administration
17:24to solve what has been going on since October 7th until today,
17:28so in the end it will be hot, as they say.
17:31All subjects are valid, you know,
17:34but there are subjects that are prioritized.
17:37The most important American voters are interested
17:40in the question of purchasing power,
17:43and there are questions that are rather pragmatic and operational.
17:46And today, tonight, following the debate,
17:49perhaps the day after tomorrow, we will be able to have elements
17:52to know better what are really the subjects
17:55that attract the attention of the Americans
17:58in a period that is quite delicate,
18:01the conjuncture is delicate.
18:04After several months of silence,
18:07a low voice, the former Prime Minister resurfaced
18:10on the Senegalese political scene.
18:13In a meeting, the former presidential candidate
18:16last March announced the creation of his political party,
18:19thus marking his break with the Benobo Kouyakar coalition
18:22and former President Macky Sall,
18:25the aftermath of this meeting with Regis Moukila and Chair Daoua.
18:28He had not made a public statement since March 25th.
18:31It was on this date that Amadouba had recognized his defeat
18:34against Dio Diomay Sanko.
18:43More than six months later, the unfortunate candidate
18:46at the last Senegalese presidential election
18:49decided to go to the offensive.
18:52Amadouba decided to lay the foundations
18:55for the creation of his future political party.
18:58This new party, believe me,
19:01will not be one more.
19:04It will be based on listening, dialogue,
19:07action and responsibility.
19:10We want to create a framework
19:13where every Senegalese
19:17can express himself freely,
19:20contribute to the debate
19:23and actively participate in the construction
19:26of our common future.
19:29Member of the Benobo Kouyakar coalition,
19:32the opponent announced his break with the APR,
19:35Macky Sall's party, a political formation
19:38weakened by internal divergences and massive departures.
19:41It is important to recognize
19:44that despite the efforts made by some,
19:47internal divergences in our camp
19:50have slowed down our common ambitions.
19:53We must learn from this experience
19:56to build something stronger,
19:59more sincere
20:02and more solid.
20:05It is my responsibility
20:08before any decision
20:11to dialogue with all those who supported me.
20:14The creation of this new party
20:17brings a new configuration on the Senegalese political scene,
20:20which makes Amadouba the leader of the opposition.
20:23He is 63 years old,
20:26he is the same age as Macky Sall,
20:29so he still has a political future.
20:32Given the rank he currently occupies,
20:35it is said that he is the leader of the opposition.
20:39Alliances are already being mentioned for Amadouba,
20:42those for a large coalition of the opposition
20:45in view of the next legislative elections in Senegal.
20:51The school press is considered a key step
20:54in the development of future generations.
20:57The education sector is the subject of growing attention
21:00from the government, which is striving
21:03with school institutions to provide a learning environment
21:07for the development of children from an early age.
21:10Maroua Ben Halima and Youssef Ormou
21:13tell us about it in this story of Cheyma Fikri.
21:17Life resumes in school institutions.
21:20The emphasis is placed on a rigorous organization
21:23and a learning environment
21:26with the aim of improving the quality of education
21:29from the early stages
21:32in order to have educated and responsible generations.
21:37The launch of this school year
21:40took place in a progressive way.
21:43Today, 80 to 90% of students have regained their classes.
21:50A colossal effort in the education sector
21:53has been provided nationally in a general way,
21:56but also at the level of the regional board of Rabat.
21:59The educational offer has been expanded
22:02in public institutions.
22:05Now, only 2% of students are registered in Rabat,
22:08while public education is at 61%
22:11and private education is estimated at 37%.
22:14Pre-school education in Morocco
22:17has undergone considerable development in recent years
22:20because of the significant increase
22:23in the number of school-aged children.
22:26The number of students enrolled for the school year
22:29has reached more than 980,000 children,
22:33compared to last year.
22:38This stage is crucial for the child.
22:41It helps him to integrate.
22:44The fact that he stays at home
22:47does not allow him to develop a number of skills.
22:50This sensitive period must therefore be taken into account
22:53by the parents.
22:56The Ministry of Education
22:59is working on the generalization of pre-school education
23:02in rural areas.
23:05It also aims to improve teaching programs
23:08to adapt them to the needs of children.
23:11This is part of a global vision
23:14aimed at developing the education sector in the Kingdom.
23:17Let's take a little tour in space
23:20with the take-off of Polaris Dand,
23:23which has been reported in the last two weeks,
23:26due to bad weather conditions.
23:29But a billionaire, a pilot and two employees of SpaceX
23:32took off from Florida today
23:35aboard the Falcon 9 rocket
23:38for a five-day mission
23:41that must mark a new stage in space commercial exploration.
23:44This is the first private space launch in history,
23:47of which Elon Musk's company
23:50on the billionaire's social network is delighted.
23:57And this concludes this newscast.
24:03This news is brought to you by MediaTV Africa.