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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  November 6, 2018 9:00pm-10:00pm +03

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it seems a crime to look away. from a distance the tundra looks like a muted patchwork. only when you've done tours the ground to check if the berries have ripe and if the mushrooms have come up after rain can you see the spongy cosmos it contains. in the rivers salmon move powerful leaf like together. and in the times between night and day when even the salmon seem to still we were taken by the raw force of a landscape stripped of that summer an astrologer. by name in some era. of qatar and after american. and my mom's side of the family is made of boston. i'm an online journalist for al-jazeera. my mom's village has one of the last subsistence salmon cultures worlds but their way of life could disappear.
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for an hour persists and i feel really grateful to be a part of it. if people ask i usually same from qatar or the middle east. my dad says that when he was growing up the lifestyle in qatar was very simple and sometimes i wish i could have seen what that world looked like. the peace of life a slow everybody knew everybody. and there's just one place to get your vegetables and fish down at the coastline. oil and gas completely transformed the country. and even my lifetime the city has dramatically changed. there's this glittering skyline that developed almost overnight and so we have all this wealth now. people are usually shocked when i tell them my mom is from alaska my dad is
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from qatar and they always always ask how they met but the story is pretty boring really they just met in the university and at the time they still had to see if they can make things worse this is not fun. coming to town half and the first time i was excited to come and see the country because. you know it's just someplace new and different fuels come to. if someone isn't something i want to adopt a situation where you think this is going to be home for you know i'm i think i'm almost the thought of wants to learn. about different cultures number of indians to come that all new dalton away from moscow all the way through the fault of the war the never been here and just lived on promises here taking the woman both of them i love what they do promise the parents of the proudest of britain had a back of
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a tree yes the. picking of the fruit first so i think i was probably. pretty nervous about what he would think those are going to experience see them go there or to him what can gravel on the way you can see this huge like cross shaped runway and then you're looking all around the country to be like what what's here or where is it because i mean he was like from a urban situation and stuff and i just thought man he's probably going to think that he's coming to absolutely nowhere you know but. it all worked out in the end he adapted to village life easily. but he's the sort of all of you have to do it yourself you have to go cut your own food you have to build your own children and i think the all tools of all of them isn't for me i know what part so it's coulter. coulter called turn to do you want your kids to know
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their cultural houses are doing a good positive things and of course as parents we want the best hope of both we just wanted you to be able to experience everything things that you didn't have a chance to experience here i mean formal education obviously the girls went to school here and then through the family you learned all the traditions you know even ramadan and all the you know all the family celebrations whereas yes in alaska you have got like twenty one hours of daylight you were free to roam around and do things that you wanted to do. more american here and that more air in the u.s. . i think that's just. the nature of being half of one thing half of the others yes or no outside of thing.
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more. since i was born we've tried to fly back each year to help my grandma with the salmon run i just remember being so excited to go to where as an adult i forget how much i miss it until i'm there the only way to get to the village is on a ninety day or plane flying forty five minutes out from anchorage which is the nearest city. i mean good family. the community that my grandmother lives in is actually two villages one is called
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and one is called the hill and the hill in is at the mouth of the river that feeds into lake. lake is part of this broader water system that produces forty six percent of the world's sockeye salmon. salmon return to the place that they're hatched so they're hatched they go out into the ocean and stay there for a few years and then fight their way back to lay their own eggs. we probably should come to the back door can we just walk through oh yes because i want to see. my grandma around about a breakfast here for at least twenty years pretty much the same as you remember at your member when your kids planted all those trees they got so big you couldn't see them make hardly and they said they're so scared of this of like run. yeah
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isn't this the room where we found the jews. yes. miss america here down here the memories here are so wonderful. going to stay here in this place was so formative for me even though i only came here during the summers this is where i sort of envision a lot of my childhood. you've got to explore it you've got to make mistakes you get independence. i come back here in the summer right this is a summer home for me. but when this is a home home for people there's just such a fundamental attachment to the land. for many including my family fishing and hunting is vital to survival here. i think it's hard for people to envision places that do do this out of necessity so it's
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not just a cultural thing or a traditional thing people need to do this because finding out. groceries their supplies is so expensive. people need salmon and other wild foods to have enough protein for the. well there are people out. so in smokehouse that's going. and i help with any very cutting and cutting right. i don't want you to get i don't think you would have another. as a kid i really love the heart of the salmon on the heart comes out it's often still beating so i would take the higher end run around to nearby fishermen and show them the persistence of the it's incredible the current is going against the bears are trying to get fishermen props and that's and then you find. it on the fish
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table it's wriggling you kill it and his heart is still beating. so how has processing forced change versus when you're growing up or before you even have. to walk in the late sixty's where we just saw the first before fuses and put them in like a customer yeah we. only ever used of us through the loop you're going to require the same thing i know but i think. where to put it is going to. tell you. there's a service companionship around the fish table. men aren't typically around because they commercial fish serve work other seasonal jobs in the summer it's mainly women who it's the i really love talking or gossiping joking making fun of each other. you know i've never done it because. it's just really fun you feel really supported
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. you know you do it i think we say doing this because there are so many things that you do to the fish. to god. but. as a kid i would help empty the got bucket and hang fish up to dry and canned salmon but now i work at the fish table. even when the weather's bad and your hands are freezing and your back is tired there's nothing more satisfying than doing fish. it's been really cool going to all the different fish tables. and everyone's quite
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particular and maybe a little sneaky about the way they do it but it's because i think everyone thinks they do their fish the right way. when you have a camera full of water and these heavy chairs it really move and then they start they don't see the custard crooked. that they did better or even fishline if you leave it on here it won't see them. remember that remember you used to do this i remember your mom always taking pancho we travel with cans back home yeah just because it's. there is no matter where you come from. i mean it's just a different life for me four six eight ten twelve fourteen sixteen eighteen ok. time to care and just the knowledge you need to have takes
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a lifetime to acquire so when you're talking to another it's just like opening up an encyclopedia but to call it really good so don't get caught or what are these are these are just small prints not i use birch to stroke. the kind early in the spring and let it so don't be so strong or might have a rock on the floor want to hear how do you start it so that it's smoking and not a fire i still haven't learned this art i was teaching you how to play. which was rough for the time you know. you just feel like such a so they so good. i would die very short about. someone asked me answer. this is blowflies see the eggs too only got a knife to take yeah so i just
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smash them yeah and then smash i think just a couple more. songs of the show all the other day and they kept the fins on because they said that the weight of. top official of the eskimos and the ins do things differently. and of course see as sandy and think we know better but. it's just. the way things are. these two villages are sort of at the interface of two different tribes one is you pick people in the other the you know full. well at least and then you know. what percentage of new him is native. you got to say at least ninety i guess is maybe ninety yeah but at least because there's just you know maybe.
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ten people here that might not be and what is the population of. about one hundred eighty and right now. we're just kind of having some problems with jobs but we have a lot of our people here in new healing working and they're working peple right now . is this proposed copper gold and molybdenum mind that would if approved to be located less than twenty miles away from million. it's really valuable they could generate between three hundred and five hundred billion u.s. dollars over its lifetime and provide jobs for the community. but it could also pose serious threats to the ecosystem. if it's pollutants got into the surrounding area they could possibly ruin the salmon run in a way of life that has been around for millennia. to try if we have a contract with pavel they're doing the studies here this summer it's providing
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jobs for people at shark term that might end next week might end in august so it's just like everybody wants to work because this is the only place to make the money right now when they're not here it's pretty bleak they want them to be around want right now the pride trail fish is important to our culture fish it's important for us to you know provide for our family but we still have to work what other way are we going to survive. you know we can't pick up our families and move to an h.r. or wherever the jobs are and we don't want to. put up people. to support sufficiently. so you think coming up for fifteen years of a fifteen year idea keep coming up. it's all here to full work around it so
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many places to go and different style efficient every place. he's got it all got. down on him already. got a thirty three. we haven't laughed so funny how fishing can be so important to so many people but the way that it's important and so radically different. there might be people who come up here every single summer for twenty five years not really know a local name. of the place besides a huge part of their life. your story gets things very green to talk to me oh you're welcome how long have you been in the sports fishing and hunting industry and new you started in the mid eighties and i've been doing that pretty much sense for years on that was the best kept
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secret there was only a handful of lodges in the area well the word finally got out couldn't be kept secret lodges have gotten so exclusive with the flying. very personalized high end foods and everything a fishing trip at a premier lodge in this area today the nine thousand dollars for a week might have been you know of three or four thousand dollars in the mid eighty's they want the big money people and they get it what's the relationship between. in the local community you know i think historically there was a lot of animosity between locals and that are struggling to make ends meet and then these high and rich lodge owners that come in for four months make a bunch of money. but it's gotten a lot better over the years to try to hire more locals and involve the community
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more and i've seen it what is the argument that lodge owner will give for not hiring locals because it seems like that would be cheaper than flying an entire stuff in to stop the bloodshed every season i don't know if i'm know it absolutely makes nothing but i mean they could they can go catch fish for themselves and hunt never thing but it's a whole different thing being a guide for paying guest local natives they were raised to survive to be a sport fishing somebody that you brought in you know what they're doing every minute of the day they're not out drinking or getting in trouble the local person that works here might crashes around and break his ankle and can't come to work tomorrow somebody is paying at the lodge isn't going to do that.
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so since abuse is quite foreign to me having grown up in qatar where drinking is not part of the culture. but it is a familiar story having gone back to alaska year after year and has definitely affected my family here. i think it's one of those things that can be quite baffling if you don't look at the bigger picture. when there's no job to look forward to is you know. we haven't really heard so much about that drugs but we've heard they haven't you know they're here everybody that i know that's work and they have a reason to get up a you know it's making them feel better they're doing something and not just staying home watching t.v. or you know not doing anything that's also the scary thing is having no law enforcement is here yes but do you do if you need it to i mean well we have would call we have an eight hundred number and he does respond he comes in from my sala
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so many hours away and that's like the next flight the next morning. but we had to respond to a couple homes and we don't go by ourselves. of work for the social service department. that's called the indian child welfare act . some helping our tribal enroll members that are. having trouble with substance abuse something i don't have a cheaper or so they call us for everything that happens like of somebody who's junk and i'm driving they call us a somebody who's. feiten they call us i mean it doesn't happen that often but when
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it does you know where they call us first. and majority of the time it's just my sister and i that run off to the hospice what is it like working on this issue which can be a sensitive and sort of a small community it's very hard time related to everybody here it's like one of the worst jobs in the village because they blame you first because you're the first one to respond. doesn't necessarily need to be at numbers but how. widespread is the issue in terms of substance abuse in this community. for alcohol abuse that's pretty i like when i was younger i every time i came back oh you know it's time to have a shot a shot i've been to over for about six years now and that's
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a whole different world for me. just that people are sent out of their communities for treatment like that must also be difficult right like i said this is a very small community that's come a makes them feel ashamed of themselves that they had to leave that mandy. thank you. hate violence revenge an increasingly alienated generation is finding new outlets to vent it sang. in a new series al-jazeera takes an unflinching know at the end of radicalized organizations to young people revealing their things and the often brutal consequences for those drawn into their extreme ideologies radicalized youth coming
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on al-jazeera. start right with tensions between islamic separatists and pro russian national. culture in the crossfire one man has a vision for the next generation empowering. to seek a better way. with this stance peaceful mores on al-jazeera. the lights are on. and there's nowhere to hide isn't the easiest way to solve this to allow u.n. observers who you invited into the country earlier this year to finish their job i haven't said it's a right wing conspiracy or anybody's conspiracy straight talking debate do you think we're going to see some kind of sea change in the u.s. relationship with saudi arabia we have an obligation there is that journalistic integrity and then in this case it was betrayed totally up from its own al-jazeera
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. to cope with driving in kabul you need nerves of steel and a strong heart the afghan capital has some of the most challenging driving conditions anywhere even though women are allowed to drive by law many men say culturally it is wrong that they are not is that me again there are lots of men here verby abuse you they block your car motorcyclists right alongside shouting bad things no one helps us when the taliban were in control women were forbidden to drive but outside of the main cities it is rare even now. see a woman behind the wheel society is changing albeit slowly but the women drivers of afghanistan there is a long road ahead before they are fully accepted. this is al jazeera i'm tired you know with a check on your world headlines polls are now open in what's been one of the most
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divisive and expensive election campaigns in recent history americans are voting in the crucial midterm elections right now all hundred all four hundred thirty five seats are up for election in the house of representatives along with a third of the senate and dozens of state governorships both parties see the vote as a referendum on trump's presidency. well china is alleged abuse against its weaker muslim minority has been under the spotlight in geneva the un human rights council is conducting its periodic review of the chinese government's human rights record beijing has been accused of mass the tension and discrimination of weaker muslims in the region but the chinese representative in geneva defended his government's records. cheny the chinese government protect its citizens freedom of religious belief and ministers religious affairs in accordance with the law and fosters an active and healthy religious relation the particular rights of ethnic minorities in accordance with the law all fifty five ethnic minority groups are represented at
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the national people's congress and the chinese people's political consultative conference turkey's foreign minister says authorities have more evidence regarding the killing of they haven't yet shared with the public his comments come after turkish media reports stuff that the saudi consulate in istanbul tried to tamper with security cameras to help cover up the murder the emir of qatar has told investors his country's economy has become stronger despite the blockade imposed on it by four arab countries shift i mean but how much he says exports grew by eighteen percent last year but he expressed regret over the continued dispute in the g.c.c. saudi arabia u.a.e. and egypt imposed the blockade on cats are in june last year accusing it of supporting terrorism a charge doha has strongly denied or more than two hundred graves containing the remains of thousands of victims have been discovered in areas formally controlled by eisel in iraq the u.n. says it found the sites in the north west of the country the smallest grave
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contained eight bodies one of the largest is believed to be south of muso which i'm a contain hundreds if not thousands those are the headlines on al jazeera it's back to al-jazeera correspondent next then it's the news hour at the top of the hour see you then by. it's.
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so very going to iron man which is the liam and helen and dalton electric car it was started by a few of the residents here and now power's three villages surrounding it also provide some of the only steady jobs in the area. during the winter in alaska it can be so cold that not having heating can be really dangerous having some form of electricity is really important and so sudden going to make it up that's been quite a few years just been up here that's the thing just work keeps getting in the way that darn work and i go you are making a living. it really sucks. but until you get the paycheck a lot of people look at a hydroelectric plant and think all that super cool you're getting free electricity going over the falls how nice they don't see how hard of work it is sometimes to keep it going you know. they don't see that two o'clock in the morning when the
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turban shuts down earth one goes down they both go down and to keep from burning diesel fuel we saddle up and head up there and figure it out. how much does all of this plant save every year. if we were on full diesel power we'd be burning about a quarter of a million gallons a year so from two hundred fifty thousand to three thousand to four thousand gallons yeah in a year. amazing how many people those like to call up employ one two three four or a little. small but mighty. so this is the intake. all the water comes through here how big is the tube i want to say it's like four feet people came up here biologists to make sure that wasn't harming any of the bottom like the fish of course i think there should be a lot more news in the world because we have a lot of water and instead of using whatever nuclear power and diesel and coal and
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all that stuff which is you know very polluting as you know it would be nice to use stuff like this. i'm pretty proud. i like my job like that it's hydro it's our earth friendly. most natives we take care of the earth take care where we're from take care of the fish in the water. being able to do that and help my people. i'm very proud to be able to work here. there's a lot of people here that were born and raised here and don't want to leave you know i've lived in hawaii i lived in the states i've lived in anchorage. why would you want to live anywhere else. now.
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there are parts about native culture that i don't really know about yet but i also don't think that's an uncommon thing and i'm trying to learn more every summer and here's my sewing room this is my happy place in the winter time my mom didn't have a hand sewing this is what she used to do. is this what is the calfskin this is the part that would be the hardest because she used to use are some nail and her teeth. how do you harden the other like this is so you don't can them so much that they get soft.
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they're pretty who are discussed bugs most women around here i feel like it's not just like a big thing or done a nothing or it's yeah i think all of the people pretty much everyone in alaska were seven so i've always wanted to coast parker doesn't know if. all. everyone that want to spec even half the herbs your mom's from here you can wear too and if you have a sweater like a loose wetter you could bring it to me and i can make one really there who want to pick up some fabric ok. where to go up i was actually born and raised a question river. my mom used to save salted eggs for fishing because our ice in the winter when i. did dog started barking we had it my dad had
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a dog. it was like to clock in the morning you know i was so scared my teeth dirty chattering me mom she just has to bear down the beach was eating my mom's arm self to the eggs my dad god is ready for and he killed her bear and then when i was twelve we moved over here. the cuffs will be kind of loose it might tap. here it just. chipped in pretty pink they're. so beautiful. thank you. erica. and so slighted here. and i should have to stand before you leave the front not only nick you know it's.
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my gramma grew up with her native language until she was about six but then she lost it and there aren't many native speakers left here the village is now fighting to get back its language and dance but there's still a lot of pain i think when it comes to what was lost. when you hear someone speaking a language that's dying it just feels so beautiful because it's so rare. church names and he's made your name i asked.
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and you just speak you pick. you're still speak you pick yes you do you speak at work. my grandkids see i born with it and i never forget my last week. and when i went to school i did no one in the assured. they knew she needed word and then what happened were. ok every time you from a native mind native language they teach you you say stand me right by her just to speak my own language. it was not to be for language is only english here we did leave a note in your good news is. i get
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tired of standing beside a teacher in a corner one day just saying and i'm not going to try to ever you may need me for language again and i never did i even i could standing by teaching anymore. and some kids take it by a yardstick just to you sure are native language yes you're laughing but it seems. barfing but it seems quite sad. i never see your kind made you stand so i didn't see that when i was growing up father through he said it to us. devils who are you know no good for
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church russian orthodox. before they started. when would they do it or when they got or. you know like like car no you know just like that if you don't know what tape. we're going to watch tape that i'm over the hall here we are doing very little under. two people pay a little to what people are. coming in. are you know are you in there yes i mean very. well yes. people are not here anymore do. you see sheen now dears
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hardly no people in gay have been. that. was. one. of washy lot of young people stay or come back even if it is difficult because this is their home and there's just a different priority here.
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that. the past year been for the last one and. you know much as one can. said that she knew. my job when she started walking ten months her alone for free plane think of their own area already i think i remember one summer time. there were a couple school this. last year before. resigning . because those proved. too
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stressful. we just couldn't do more. appalled. i think i don't know. i mean my jobs permanently is just only four hours and the rest. of it all find. full time job parenting i think you ever will. and as. i don't really like to see really. too many people. only smiles we. are. i got pregnant with her and had her. like limited to what i can do. and. like goes out to harm eats and provides for. small family. gets
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would so howard to feel if this person is gone. probably sad because its owner grew up and my. i don't know it just. home. where's the harm done. by the.
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kids here are encouraged to go away to college but their families also hope that they come back home. and if you go to college there's a chance that your classroom will be larger than your entire village that you grew up in which can be really difficult you know for long. so says he's working at public. helicopter. so after you graduate oh you're ok you think you are after you graduate. i fired to go to college and all right now i want to. wildlife biology if you want to try something new why don't you go to a boarding school like a disco or in a city like in a city i kind of like well ok good. or don't you like being in the city i don't know it's just too busy for me and i'm always like well in the quiet. you can't really do this and.
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you know i do have a sense of belonging in terms of people. but i'm sort of an vs people who feel like they're and and i believe without question belong to a place someone told me that you moved away. yeah we went to alabama. i wasn't i didn't like it there's
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a big village yeah but how many. about seven hundred people. what did you miss most from here. the wider the wider clearer that's really pretty here are you working right now now i think there's a new job so our only for. and i'm my guests. it's everybody got a job back there think of the long tired because some of my family members work there i don't want to go up against them as soon that mine up but that god my. son what it did. and just scared to attack. our so much just.
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i'd rather have no trap and kill. i'm going to pub a mine tomorrow. i'm nervous. and just want to make sure the community has questions directly to the mind. i just hope we all have a clear understanding of. what might be in store for us. good or bad. i think we're going to go over on this side right yeah.
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but that's what i was going to be today but i will hit up to the part of our made up a look at our stuff and pretty much every every critic around at the last is. pretty beautiful and i tell it as a day i suspect one of the arguments to last to becoming a beta psychic if i was howard but to. date we are sixty five million acres. be able to support itself economically have a talent for a lab how do we need to have an economy. that's a state that's balanced with step with the environment around. here what type of salt or a. truck along on the top of the other hill or you're out here well it's got
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a buyer area i think people are going to. come to pebble. can you talk about what's under under our feet yep under our feet there is a world class discovery of copper gold a lived in the silver rhenium and palladium many other states they have access to rail or power or road we have none of that here yet the product from where you acquire it to to the place where you can transport it to market is a big deal talking about portage room yeah so one bridge crossing over upper to lara that then extends down to the north shore of elite on the lake will have a ferry terminal will be able to load the concentrated minerals onto icebreaking ferry transport across the lake to be along to it will have one crossing there but yeah it will go kind of around till fertile are because tonic is the spawning area percent and it just happens to have more potential sockeye productivity then. the
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other two drainage is also for us is how do we get sufficient energy brought in so that we can run our facilities on our case for what had about one hundred eighty mile natural gas pipeline that wall that provide the power for a power plant here can generate electricity to support all of our our infrastructure out here it's a great challenge to ask people to. look around them and identify the minerals that they use so i to use the prop of the i phone fifty two different minerals that i followed at a couple stop are. the frustrating part of the tour it's like where all the fault. you know there's a real problem. in the mines and. the mining is.
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a symptom of some problem with the way we approach the land the way that we consume things. mike talks a lot about. being an economic necessity but i also think this erna can hike necessity living off the land it's a necessity of here. we have fundamental issues with a relationship to the planet there's been lots of instances that i've seen where indigenous communities just have a better model. just because they might be a smaller number of people it doesn't make it a less valid way of life. i do really care about this place and my family is from here about the end of the day i am also another person that comes here during the summer and leaves. so feel i can take the not really sure what i can but.
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see there the eggs are kind of loose so when we start cooking and we just cool this stuff off. i make my grandma happy when i come back i help her affairs so that makes me feel like i belong in that way. males. that are so sassy and just not. all right. but really what is really good for her. will she pick the covers oh i go oh my gosh that's beautiful why don't i feel like i'm going to cry. it's so pretty you know wall well look at the hats. and i'm biased but this is the produce cost but.
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because you're. going to try to. love a. graduate you how much oil you. you can do we can trade for our brick here and you said you had fabric over to this place called the soup which is like a traditional market and they have a bunch of. different fabrics their stuff so yeah yeah you can prepare it for our brick experiment i mean we have a fun project to do back in doha. but. i feel like if you give yourself permission to care about a place you also need to give yourself permission to belong to a place and i have a hard time doing that. but i also know what it's like to be repeatedly drawn to somewhere to love a community and
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a people and to want to honor their way of life. and maybe i can draw others into this place to want. a journey of personal discovery about how the soviet rule has shaped the present day georgia if you people who shoot your past you will never have a future in government buildings and then monuments they seem to inspire indoors all wisdom in your own people they are small algis there is time an aversion to me it's a examines the cultural influences of the soviet union al-jazeera correspondent the soviet scar.
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by the skyline of invasion home. or off the coast of the italian riviera. and there were some very heavy rains in parts of south america at the moment we look at the satellite picture we can see these clouds here and they've been giving us some very heavy downpours and now we're seeing them crop up a bit further towards the south as well say for the northern parts of argentina through parts of paraguay and into bolivia as well this is the region where there's the greatest risk of seeing some very heavy thunderstorms over the next few days who could give us a problem with some flooding to the south of all of that it's fine for someone as always we're up twenty two degrees and force in santiago were a lot higher than that where up but rather a sticky thirty two now across the central america is this generally fine settled weather for many of us here including cuba and jamaica female showers for the lesser antilles here and further west we can expect to see
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a few more downpours through parts of panama and into costa rica to the north of all of that is fine and dry the temperatures have got a little bit higher now a new mexico city which should be up to twenty four degrees which is seventy five in faran height now for north america here we've seen plenty of cloud in the east this gave us a very heavy downpours as it would its way across us and is being followed by yet another weather system here that's still going to be with us during the remainder of the day still giving some shop showers a more persistent rain further north as well quite widespread here eleven in. the winter sponsored by count on riis.
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you're watching the news hour live from the headquarter is. coming up in the next sixty minutes sources tell al jazeera the american cia director has now seen all evidence and relation to the murder of jon. americans go to the polls voting in one of the most divisive u.s. midterm elections a year exiled activists urged the international community to stop china's discrimination of ethnic muslim. national governing body rolled in the wake of a six of the war in the program. hello turkish sources have told al jazeera the director of the cia has seen all the evidence related to the murder of. in the saudi consulate in istanbul on october
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the second the us president donald trump sent to turkey last month turkey's president has said the saudi journalist was killed on orders from the highest level of the. is following developments from turkey is joining us live from istanbul tell us a little bit more about this latest information. according to the turkish sources they say that hospital the cia director was shown crucial element strong evidence showing that the killing of. words for on orders from people of the highest levels of the sandy government they also say that with this sandy general present chief prosecutor sir with all knowledge of was here he was constantly asked about whether he can share some information about the
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whereabouts of the remains of the amount of these and so words i absolutely have no idea system that at the same time the saudi arabia was willing to pay the blood money which is a sort of compensation for the family. and also for the his fiancee had these are. his and the also saying that there were three teams involved in the killing of jamal house to see a surveillance team that came prior and then the death squads and the cleanup squad that came later with only one game one target which was basically to try to destroy any evidence related to the killing of them out of the today for example the daily somebody was more information about what happened of the consulate they can see behind me and they were saying that after the killing of the cia sandy member of the death squad was trying to tamper with
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a turkish government security camera outside the consulate but the other turkish authorities managed to get access to the food is retrieve it and i think it was crucially it was that one that shows. entering into the building. during. it's quite interesting that over the last three days we're seeing a constant streaming of leaks to the local media with the a i think which is basically to put more pressure on the saudi government today also the turkish. foreign minister. said that his country is still with retains some extremely crucial information that the public is not aware about and it seems that this is something they would like she used as a political leverage against saudi arabia particular when it comes to two crucial things who gave the order to kill. the remains of those remains
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a crucial for the investigators here in turkey to be able to finalize the investigation but also to issue an official indictments and they know that in the absence of body remains it would be extremely difficult for them to pin point the responsibilities and also issue a final list of the people that should be prosecuted in the case ok i have some of the updates from more frank you let's not cross over to get the view from there that's where he is joining us from so this is pretty significant news sources have told our zero that the director of the cia has now seen all the evidence when it comes to murder how much is this now turning the heat up on saudi arabia. well it would seem that the turks are maybe putting the final twist in the knife so to speak as to how they're trying to wrap up this case which has gone on for over
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a month now this latest brief that was given to our jazeera comes on the eve of president traveling to france where he will be meeting with the u.s. presidents donald trump the fact that the turkish authorities felt it appropriate to time this briefing saying that they have indeed informed gene housefull the head of the cia or all the evidence with regards to this adding to its that they have also briefed all of their main european counterparts and allies with regards to the details of this prior to the meeting that is scheduled to take place in france would appear to be a sign that the turks want to wrap this up one of the international community to actually move forward.

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