hamas health officials say more than 10,500 people have been killed since the conflict began in gaza nearly half of them children. israel has repeatedly warned palestinians to head south to greater safety, despite also bombarding that region. israel says 50,000 people left gaza city today as israeli troops tighten their grip on the area. the israeli army released video showing a long line of people on foot, many of them waving white flags, some holding their hands in the air. the us secretary of state has outlined what should happen when the fighting stops. antony blinken said gaza and the west bank should both be governed by the palestinian authority. he told a meeting of g 7 foreign ministers that there should be no israeli occupation of gaza. the deputy leader of lebanon s hezbollah group, which is backed by iran, has praised last month s attack by hamas which sparked the fighting. hezbollah s deputy chief told the bbc the killings were an act of resistance. more on that
sense of the need for this global un meeting to step up and to have those voices influencing the big emitters. i don t know how much of the opening ceremony you have listened to but the italian prime minister, it was pretty restrained but you sensed his frustration that there was not a more concrete set of words coming out of the g20 which was held in rome of course, he was the host. we heard the prime minister of barbados talk about how unjust it was and how immoral it was that wealthier nations have not come forward with the money that they promised to help poorer countries transition to a green infrastructure, to protect themselves against the impact of climate change, and it was so much emotion in their speeches especially sir david attenborough. do you feel that there is a new moral imperative that there is a new moral imperative that these political leaders are listening to, may be more than they have done before? 0r
product, the total value of goods and services produced. 75% of global trade, 60% of the worlds population, and most importantly for the summit, they produce collectively about 80% of global greenhouse gas emissions. among them you have the big emitters, india, china, saudi arabia, australia, and they are all under pressure to be more ambitious in their carbon reduction targets. some of them have not brought in new targets, some of them have brought in new targets that are too soft, too low, to an ambitious and unless they can be corralled into going further and faster in their carbon and greenhouse gas emission targets, then that goal of the 1.5 cap on global warming will not be achievable. recently, the united
reduction targets on greenhouse gas reduction targets on greenhouse gas reduction targets. countries like china and india and saudi arabia and australia, big emitters, are not really producing these new ambitious carbon reduction targets in order to meet that aim of 1.5 cap on global warming and so the other ones who will be under a lot of pressure no to move forward in rome and in glasgow in the days ahead. the president of the cop26 conference is called the summit make or break for glasgow and that is a real desire for a sense of momentum to be built to be able to take to glasgow where you are so we will find out later today whether the words here and for that the ambitions have been met with real action. with real action. mark, thank you very much- with real action. mark, thank you very much. turning with real action. mark, thank you very much. turning fine - with real action. mark, thank you very much. turning fine words i with real action. mark, thank you | very much. turning