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tv   Dying Earth After The Hurricane  Al Jazeera  April 18, 2024 6:30am-7:01am AST

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is arrest and conviction is aimed at sign in saying, the free press. customs officials understand a goal have seized or record a $1000000.00 with a fake bank notes separately. office is carried out. a sizable drug bust is all part of a drive to 5 crime and corruption by sending goals, newly elected government. nicholas aka thoughts from deco one record seizure after the other. this is the latest by sending goals to police. these black notes are fake money worth $5000000000.00 say if i francs or the equivalent of about $8000000.00 found in the back of a car parked at the small guest house since then it goes southern region of cuz i'm on this video circulating or social media appears to show how the notes are transformed into counterfeit us dollars using powder and chemicals for manhattan, interested to have them foreigners. this code is days after one ton of cocaine worth. nearly $150000000.00 was found hidden in the back of
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a truck. both of these record seizures come from tip offs from whistle blowers, sending goals new government has made fighting corruption. a priority. a pledge made by its new young president bus. it would, you might find the young guys, it is not that big. i will promptly initiate a bold policy of economic and financial good governance by a relentless, the combat and corruption, not penal repression of the tax fraud and the elicit financial flows. protecting whistleblower is fighting against embezzlement and public funds and money laundering. my bet is and before the elections fall, you know probably minutes to spend. some code were sent to prison after they denounce state corruption in the criminal activities of previous government officials. the court saw their claims as defamation. fine sancho want to introduce a new law to protect whistle doors. okay. there is a culture fe. no one really wants to denounce illegal activities because it's not
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easy, given the reprisals. so to have a little that can protect whistle blows, of it can encourage others to break the silence and reveal crime scene and goals. new leadership is asking all of those who have stolen from the state to return the money or face justice. custom officials as well as government authorities who were once accused of being corrupt or ignoring crime, now appear eager to show they are doing their work for a senegalese public that wants to see an end to impunity. nicholas hawk alger 0. the car. well that's it for me down jordan, for now. you kind of co sign much more information and our website out to 0 dot com . there it is. and he's continues here on, i'll just say are off to dying. a spectrum tax of washing by the
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i go to goes to the polls on april the 21st to go to new plans to come back criminal games and find to be nice, cried. can president daniel nego, convinced ecuadorian to approve the constitutional performance to expand the lease and military power? follow the story one now to sierra the of the, the, that the good, the money down,
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the technician that i talked about. but they should have written it down because the i don't need it, but then the, the tech is over. i don't want to live in a condo additional. i'm assuming that the . ready the, the not at the for know the
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that is the houses all that had been counted by the went to didn't get the saw that the, we have enough cross the threshold into human, into slammed change. we knew this sort of a long times. they told us what was happening, but not all humans are equally response for people. but the image very very. they are not the ones who are causing the problem. the job would not go to the the, the
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really good now to see was in how many, very much as i should fill it in as i was i. so what did you say what to do? do you have in the
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water? i got my glasses here. mm. okay . let's just send them out the right elevation for, for this right out to, to good. yeah. wherever. just bought your best be. yeah. this and i think this is like perfect. so easy and a is one of the united states is largest greenhouse gas meeting states, the many people here to climate change. so in addition to being a place that's vulnerable to climate change, it's also an area that contributes to it.
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until the 1990s, united states was responsible for 40 percent of the pollution that was already in the atmosphere. and now china has overtaken the united states in total emissions, but per capita we, we still are bigger polluters. and a lot of water look out over here. you're seeing a lot of holes of water. a lot of this was land a 100 years ago. that's a lot of resistance. changes to the course of the mississippi river is climate change. an intense storm that, that a road in the area stand lucky because can you take of, you can see those canals and see those long straight lines. those are canals that were caught in the marsh. those are, yeah, those are canals that have been cut in the bars. for oil and gas exploration. the
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state is lost over nearly 5000 square kilometers worth of land over over the last 100 years. even under the more optimistic scenario, that will be well over a 1000 square kilometers worth of land over the next 50 years. so we're looking at a landscape that is going to remain risky and is going to probably become riskier as a place to live. the got you to see the cadillac
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i am from watkins parents, louisiana. been there all my life. it's a beautiful place to live, but it's a community that struggle and hold on to its roots because of sea level rise close by, you know, the climate change and different things. but mostly we're going out to see like to type tannic. it's really down. we going from you're looking at the whole town. i am the town. there's only one person living in it to me like most parents was rich. i'll say they were the richest state in the end of ash, because on guess we'll look at the consequences. we take a look at our environment. it's a battle because you constantly fighting the storm search from hurricane and it
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wouldn't be for that. i think everything would be good. i've been fighting hurricanes since hurricane betsy. that wasn't 65. i was then i had hurricane camille and 1969. her came on and 85. then i lost everything. 11 story, the just amazing power street just came up. we came all the way up to the window of the house. we looked like we were sitting in the middle of a river. katrina totally changed the geographics apartments parish for ever as far as people and just every single way of life. the
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patients from nursing, from hospitals, waiting for plains to take them. well, they simply don't know why the, i've never seen anything like this before. it's everyone's doing the best that they can. but thousands are still corrode. here at the cities, sports arena, the super done, the even countries like the united states with. for example, when i recon katrina hit new orleans in the united states, them you as a goal, not a single ritual middle class. the white americans lost their lives. the we're dealing with one of the largest relief efforts in our nation's history and
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the federal government role play or 1st priority of course, has the same life. more than 1200 for black people living in the 9th lot of new orleans lost their lights in the richest country in the world. when they saw the hurricane coming, they did not receive the poor people. the 680 in a wheelchair, the land on a floor by the way. and then there's this guy right here this year. but with more money always have more options when it comes to to everything. climate really and whether or not you can evacuate is an economic justice issue
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because you have to put gas in your tank to leave. you have to, you know, get a hotel room somewhere else. people with more money have more options to leave. when they give a mandatory evacuation, that's what it is. take what you need go because nobody wants to come save. you the it was totally devastated by katrina and it was a ground 0 to $10.00. i loved every genette. there's looking for coffins and tubes. i got a brand new able to drive to also do it. and then when he was in a boat, it was still devastation because they had just debris everywhere. tried drive and, and that's when you know you a good job. if you can get through that, the
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aster katrina, this cemetery was a man, had tuned all over. he didn't know who was who and i worked in here for months, trying to put people back in to see me at the store. when they come in they talk no mercy on not even a cemetery the the devastation, the dead power stuff. it's the katrina was monumental to its people and communities as far as just wiping out everything just picked you to very quiet. no electricity, nothing. just total silence. the
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we don't have a community anymore, discharge has to be packed, but i'll talk to you about that's all cost from the environmental changes that have occurred. it caused people to move and didn't want to come back and do to go to church and you know, i'm the only white woman in a church. that's crazy. even if you look at the rich countries which are now being impact about climate change, almost invariably the most vulnerable of people who are suffering now are poor people. in the us, for example, this one is which is comes in the world and the 25 percent of the population who live in substandard housing. but it's important to understand that's a,
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that's climate change is an issue that a shot through is any policy in multiple respects. and we see it in class terms. first and foremost, i guess most obviously we know that it's the richest that are overwhelming and responsible for, for accessing missions. and so there is a very big disparity amongst who causes the problem and who suffers the consequences they feel abandon, most of them. it's just not fit the depression sets in. you need help. some people need help. so we really have to have a very good place. the
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you know, wants to stay realized that our cost of land loss was really getting serious. it started pause and we start rebuilding some of those areas that last later they came up with a master plan. one of the projects in the master plan is to rebuild the coast by partially diverting the flow of the mississippi river. that one brings a lot of settlement engine landscape and it would bring a lot of fresh water into the landscape. settlement is how the land and fresh water carries nutrients. it can push salt water out to see if the plan is fully implemented. you're looking at several 100 square miles worth of land that that would have otherwise been this. and it will reduce fund risk over the
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life of the project. but every year, by several $1000000000.00, the we don't have a say. so in the states messed boy. but it's affecting the people of clackamas parish, and some of them don't like. a settlement is also can clogged up the gills of oysters and settlement can bury and moisture. the grandfather arrived here in 19 o. you heard about the hardworking oysters life in clackamas parish, louisiana. they came from a very poor country, he didn't have much money. in around 1920, he built him with champ where he got his 1st voice, 2 weeks back at the time, it was just a wild wilderness, basically no levies to protect your homes from the river. and stuff,
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but you didn't really need it back them because the land was low higher. the, this diversion is, is a bad deal. the basically opened the river 25 miles north of here. and just let the water uncontrollably flood into a crime for steam as to where there's balancing sea food moisture, strep crabs. we knew back in and we know it even more now. the devastating effect this is going to have the life just can't. the so healthy living oyster re creates
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a healthy living coves. util. off the oysters you kill off the coast. we all the canary in the mind. this one mass to massive beast is going to flow tremendous amounts of water. and it's going to take millions of gallons of water to move houses a settlement. and it's not going to work and the process is going to kill off all of us. that's a good sign. great. so that's what we're looking for. that's the future idea. you know, we gotta keep the water. right. everything's gotta stay right for that to try. but i'm at try. one of these people needs to be the, my son is a 4th generation, always the former. they don't have a future here. this thing becomes, comes to like the families in this business for
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a 120 years. approximately it's, it's all we've ever done. and it's all of everyone to do a planning on doing this for the rest of my life. now, i don't know, it's easy to say, oh, i'll just go to do something else. but there's not a lot of other opportunity here. the you realize how many people are employed outside the coast throughout the country on some of the sea food that we produce here in the barracks area base. that's going to be totally in isolated. we beg, please, let's come up with an ultimate plan. because this is going to destroy not only a livelihood, but our way of life on culture. mother nature always wins. so we always are at her mercy. and we just have to sit back, let it happen and try. yeah,
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the, there's no necessary contradiction between social object as i like the logical depth of the cat and must be accomplished at the same time, we have more than enough energy and resources to ensure good, less for all, several times over the i think the global system is broke and therefore a broken system does not solve itself. we're going to have to find new ways. we do not need fossil fuels anymore. it's people knowing what to do, behaving consciously do the right things. that will help us solve this problem. not by ignoring everybody else and looking after one. so there's
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a false expectation, particularly among rich people that they can survive everything. even rich people are going to be affected by the impacts of climate change and they're going to have to deal with it. so fish behaviors look, got us into this problem and selfish behavior will not get us out of this problem the, which hard because as a scientist, sites, studies sea level rise and i work at a place that's vulnerable to sea level rise and it's, it's hard for percentage to it doesn't sell, believes in a parishes lost to 4 percent of the population over the last 2 years. that means
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one in 25 people in several south louisiana parish has moved out of the account. the schools are closing and if you lose the, the student age population, you're losing the next generation people that are being born today or are going to spend most, if not all of their lines in a world that is warmer than the one that their grand parents grew up in the question that facing us is not yes, that will happen, but how many people will be impacted in how many people will suffer? the
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lot of people who owns and i used to have so many friends. i had so much fun cooking dinners, having people over we're going delta. i had plenty ducks, you know, but through the years, all that sort of general in a way as we lost environment from storms, we don't have a place to gather anymore. the whole environment's totally different. 2 2 2 2 the, you know, i consider myself, what do everybody thinks? i'm rich, but i'm not the that's the environment has is it's do everybody's life. it's not just my life. it's everybody's life around the world. the environment changes your life changes.
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that's a true fact. the around the world, it seems natural disasters and become a frequent part of life, from floods to droughts and fires is not like comedy here about extreme whether or destroying infrastructure and most importantly people's lives. the united nation says more natural disaster coming due to climate change. so is there a need to establish an international agency that specifically deals with such events and what that helps to level the playing field faster? so can we get out of the site to partners? man's the worst enemy. i'll say they go really the same, the fine, you know, to the end, i'm going to be very due to the
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devastation bundle. dish is usually in the top 5 countries as the most valuable country in the world. displacement. if you look at tucker city, it's on leave for the desperation, then leaving on a fringe of life and did the stock reality of climate change and a rapid lease thinking country. we have the problem to be the rest of the world and have it tomorrow. and they will have to learn from us, which is here is new series, dying us life, the full land. these are some of the 1st images from the aerial assessment of coal bleaching in the great barrier reef. bleaching occurs when moment ocean temperatures and pollution 1st call to expel the algae to get the color range of
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color. at extreme range wise, for an extended period of time means some structures have been severely damaged. scientists have declared 2024, a mass bleaching event. what's happening here on the great fire roof is also happening on rapes around the world. or the last 12 months warming sea surface temperatures have cause bleaching events in the northern hemisphere. and the linear conditions in the pacific have amplified the situation. for rainbows, just jody rama says ocean temperatures are increasing at a rate never seen before. and that's an open assigned to the biggest crow system in the world. we're seeing this back to back here upon year. the reef needs many years to recover from these heat waves, and it's just not getting it competent beyond well taken without hesitation for them died for power that finds out well.
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we live here, we make the rule, not them. they find an enemy and then they try and scrub the people with that and the people in power, investigate, explodes, this and questions they use them to be use of our around now to sierra, the widespread destruction and gods, or at least 20 people are killed as as really strikes destroy the kind of cindy in the homes in the north of the district. and it's really a talk in the southern city of ruffled the southern people until 3 children are among the
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jordan. this is obviously a red light from dell also coming up at the head of the us agencies, the palestinian refugees appeals to the security council for protection warning against israel f as to dismantle unwrapped plus the prison. so leave me a call.

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