tv Chinas Spying Eyes Al Jazeera June 28, 2019 1:32am-2:01am +03
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but he can distinguish. anywhere. who most prefer to hunt on our chances of seeing one are very slim so we're doing the next best thing sitting a camera. on the t.v. used to monitor their activity. when i wanted one of the last of the men to look and it was clear that. they come over here one way or. both could. go with various terms. should grow into most curious that another cut has been here we're going to leave this camera top for a few days and see whether we get lucky. it may be hard to actually see but for crease their return. and predators have been systematically persecuted for decades and decades so their numbers get precariously
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love every ecosystem has what's called their apex species here in patagonia its promise and if you take out the very top predator everything cascades down from that. comes out of order even though it's early here and the park in terms of rebalancing we can see some big changes where there are water systems and grasslands are definitely coming back the number of bullets in the park and the numbers of what not goes in the park fox says but the success comes when all of those species are truly back in a system that's functioning without human intervention. helping to clean air and water large expanses of forest and also naturally sequester carbon a crucial way to meet again climate change. this bridge generating
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forest also play host to a tree too so rare it's almost mythic and its rehabilitation could be the parts biggest challenge. to wildlife rangers have promised to help me find it. again. but they're nearly in an area backed up by a factor but then again i want to run over arthur did i don't know part of it when will it get any when i am one and i will not you and i thought. that neil trucks will move here you seem to limit 3 other decks radio frequencies to meet in from callers on the beer. may not turn on you well thought in your yard implement. there were no.
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perfect and they were. not. yeah i think i have 30. yeah. what if they were. and how did that destruction and poaching have brought the sometimes called the stealth and the and dear to the brink of extinction. there are fewer than 2000 left in the wide just one percent of their original population look them in chile and argentina. and . honest i love it i like it in. the i mean when you say to. their left you. make a hairy man turn a. reform on a little boy. in
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the. test. who really custom may. now open a can or cannot come. out of they're going to. keep. going to one of the very beginning and. the nearly invites me back to his family home to meet his wife. their family comes from a long line of cultures ranching people found the cross but they are going here who are often fiercely proud of their way of life. many go in the nearby community of
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cochrane conservation as a threat to both their livelihoods and their culture. the neon worked on the old ranch a shepherd for 6 years before taking a job conserving wool in the park to replace that. we. really made money off you know. just sort of think. that. you can live with. one. of. the fellas 31 of us has said but. for. those who still ranching also complain that must leave the park to peel their lives
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took. 16 people working on the ranch when it was closed then employed at the park 8 of them a spark wardens like the near. by 2018 the park employ more than 90 people during high season meanwhile tourism has created sustainable sources of income for local populations this was truly an emblematic ranch so just the image this region shifts when the land use shifts and that was really hard on people which i completely understand i would hate to have this area be 100 percent tourism the culture would fracture the structure of society would begin to fall apart and that's what i'm interested in i'm interested in working ranches alongside conservation areas so there's dignity and health on both sides.
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but when chris and doug started buying land local grievances were just the beginning. some chileans said it was a us. and grab a plot to control the country's weather or even establish a psion estate. duncans or so infuriated conservatives when they joined the popular campaign to stop a giant dam project near the park. but their high profile role in the room and in which thousands took to the street forcing the government to reject the project one of the many admirers across chile. one way there is when they hope to contribute to local communities while also convincing them of the benefits of conservation through a free program. leading a school group from the nearby said laments of going. on a 2 day trip. to the roof rather than me but the basic idea but i also take. a look at why that. is about going to
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despite living in the countryside for some of this is their 1st time counting in the world. we're. here. on monday. one on the phone with here. in new york. i'm meeting up with the chick. coming a trap. we have heard that a bomb has been spotted with the carcass of a when i go and go to check it out. and to get in get in to get a bill if. it came at a time i perform better you'll get a little medicaid. which are not a little light on whatever. he. definitely and i think a lot of and i sure don't and i'm.
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sure he said i'm not a kid but. there they will get what i want to reset all of us had. it's only a year just to get in a so that. you know. i don't have to. where no point in time or favor and then south you know it's early passer. by. no luck this time but they're silly on the team have used camera traps to look you meant over 35 must now rescinding the park with ballance returning the donkeys foundation fees ready to do what they have always done with their parks unaided to the state in a 28000 signing ceremony with them prissy and michelle bestially priest handed over these and i know they're parked worth
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a combined 1000000 acres it was billed as the biggest donation of private land to a stately in history. the chilean government also contributed $9000000.00 acres of their own. farms 5 new national parks and expand 3 others an area 3 times bigger than yellowstone and yosemite combined. the route of parts a scenic road 1700 miles long connecting 17 parks across chile boosting the economies of the communities on route. right now below just another 2 days facilities are closing down until the handover process is complete so the whole team there are saying goodbye to one another and it's not like he'll be back next year. yet it's sad. less than 4 years after dog died in
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a kayaking accident seeing their dream finally become a reality discipline in a moment. here years. the day that doug died he was on a kayaking trip with our best friends and they got caught out and a severe westerly wind they were getting pushed farther and farther out into the center of the lake and so they decided to abandon the kayak and swim to shore. and it was just too much. it was in the water for over 2 hours and they got in this helicopter to hospital and clerical and somehow the word spread so fast . had either died or was in trouble and as we drove to the hospital people were. taking their hard hats
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off and opening up. the 1st thing i really thought. koll. it was extraordinary anyway we got to. and he died 20 minutes before so. soon after dogs there she list national congress voted to make him an honorary citizen it was an official recognition both of the top u.s. contribution to the country's not to run unopposed much the public come to brace them what a life. here's a guy who had no limitations. you know you're so easily stopped by things that are difficult or seemingly impossible. with some plans to many people you know. i hope we leave behind
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a legacy of if you don't establish some sort of value system that award space between human and non-human. we'll never get where we need to go. i'm using my final evening in the park to take a proper hike the only way to truly appreciate this particular place. i feel so new york into the towns to be said one of the few remaining great wilderness of the word experience has shown me just preciousness ecosystems are and how easily they can be used for human activity whether that's also giving me hope to see that these grass roots of forest have been revived to welcome back the amazing creatures that once called the home.
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selfless act human bravery 10000 precious pieces of literature rescued from being bounced to ashes in a besieged sorry. their wild mates the both men women and men who risked everything to save their it's inherited. the love of books on al-jazeera. the sisters opportunity to understand the very the french way where their beef happens we don't believe. in the year 1271 and do
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a gun tally and set out on an extraordinary journey carrying letters from the pope for the great coup because marco polo traveled through war torn legions following dangerous votes from the holy land and beyond today chasing the shadow. professor shallowest top of china's ventures with such an questions of how to relationship between east and west has changed. moscow post on al-jazeera. 2 suicide attacks into needy is capital kill a police officer and wounded several others. hello i'm a fiend an issue with a live from doha also coming out. walking into
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a storm donald trump serves up another trade route as g 20 leaders arrive in japan . here there is an armored vehicle it's completely destroyed by the fighting we're inside the libyan city of gary on the one back from the forces of warlords. by government troops. and we report from honduras where there are almost daily protests over its collapsing health and education systems. 2 suicide bomb attacks in the tunisian capital within half an hour have killed a police officer and wounded several other people the interior minister is calling for calm and says the attackers have yet to be identified there's an emergency meeting in parliament right now well earlier an armed group attacked a t.v.
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station in the town of south of tunis no one was injured then in daylight the 1st suicide bombing targeted a police patrol vehicle in central china s close to the french embassy around the same time a 2nd bomb went off near the police headquarters in al kut johny district. the trinity has been under say to measure c. for the past 4 years since thousands of the for what killed in a series of attacks that were claimed by eisel 3 gunmen stormed the bardo museum in tunis killing 22 people that was in march 20153 months later 38 people were killed in an attack on a beach resort in serious last october a woman blew herself up in central tunis killing herself and wounding 9 people 2 months later i saw claimed responsibility for an attack on a security patrol in kasserine close to the algerian border well i've been speaking
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to the political analysts use a sharif who explains how tunis inza feeling after this latest violence well know the situation is. not a lot of. you can. only use themselves are not very. well to the one that you mentioned. that they left. the best way but others are into the. little interest. when i took ill it's not very sense of shock mainly because the wave of attacks. especially the ones you mentioned. this is happening fast since then there was the situation that.
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well those attacks happened at a time in tunisia as president is in the hospital. office says he's in a severe health crisis president said see his 92 was taken to a military hospital in tunis earlier this year he announced he wouldn't contest november's presidential election he won the country's 1st free election in 24. now 20 of the world's most powerful leaders are in japan ahead of water likely to be tense talks at the g. 20 summit u.s. president donald trump's already in broad in a trade war with china and as he left washington he said it was quite ripe for even more diplomatic editor dame's bay's president trump arriving in japan for the g 20 summit among a packed agenda there's likely to be considerable discussion about 2 countries with nuclear programs that trump has treated very differently tension is rising with iran which had agreed to
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a deal with the international community in 2015 to give up its pursuit of nuclear weapons until the u.s. pulled out of that deal after attacks on tankers in the gulf and the shooting down of a u.s. drone that washington blames on terror on president trump continues to talk tough i'm not sure that their leaders care for their people if they do they'll make a deal if they don't just think it about themselves and their selfish and this stupid if that's what they're doing meanwhile compare that with the case of another long time us with actually has nuclear weapons and hasn't agreed to give any of them up president trump continues to talk positively about north korea and kim jong un despite the failure of a summit in hanoi earlier this year the most recent visit at a pyongyang chinese president xi could he help the u.s. restart diplomacy. this is the 20th anniversary of the g.
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20 these summits were started so that leaders could come together to talk about the state of the global economy the big issue there is president trump's trade wars particularly with china. a former head of war planning at the pentagon who now heads the think tank the east west institute says it's possible that the chinese may offer help with north korea as leverage in those difficult trade negotiations as we've been talking specifically about economics here for a while the trade wars back and forth between the 2 countries and now this is an opportunity for g.-d. come in and say i've worked this other issue like you asked me to and now i would like you to help me a little bit with this can you back off just a little bit the g. 20 leaders control 80 percent of the world's economy all the meetings here will be important but the most attention will be on 2 meetings when president trump sits down once again with russian president putin and his face to face encounter with
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president xi james ways al-jazeera asako and white house correspondent kimberly how kit was at the airport as president touched down. fishley. white house. president. touches down. the indian prime minister criticizing the very high tariffs put on u.s. goods lashing out at chinese leaders. alike. trade agreements in defense of. this. comes to a 60 year old defense pact with the host nation to serve uncertainty also at the same
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time. the truck so often frayed on the international stage. president tom special envoy for iran is warning of consequences if tehran breaches nuclear restrictions brian hoke is in europe for talks on the tensions in the cove he says european leaders to impose sanctions on iran the iranian foreign minister dismissed president trump's claim that a war with iran would be short lived mohammed zarif said sanctions and an alternative to war they are war the french president. says he hopes to convince president trump to drop some of the sanctions on iran in order to stimulate the possibility of talks more from our correspondents in the iranian capital. it rain officials say they are close to surpassing the 300 kilograms of enrich uranium at
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the level of 3.67 percent which is what they're allowed under the nuclear agreement of 2050 now for the 60 day period which the iranian president hassan rouhani said on the 8th the iranians said they will store the excess amount in the country that is the iranians part of scaling back their agreement under the nuclear agreement they say that because the european signatories have not upheld their end of the deal the iranians are doing this for this period of time which runs out on july 7th to see what the europeans will come back with of course the deputy foreign minister abbas our she is in vienna there will be a series of meetings on friday between the deputy foreign ministers from the european signatories of the nuclear agreement and the rains are adamant that the future of this deal is important not only for iran and its economic future but also for the security of the entire region. nato defense ministers meeting in brussels have also been talking about the tensions in the gulf the u.s.
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defense secretary marcus but is there saying that war with iran is wanted by the americans won't tolerate any further incidents like the tanker attacks the nato secretary general yen sultan berg said the alliance is worried about iran's actions jonah hall has been following that meeting in brussels. acting secretary of defense mark s. but i think broadly speaking successful here at nato in convincing allies that the iran question is a global one in need of a global diplomatic solution as opposed to simply a problem involving the u.s. and iran successful also in setting out the parameters of the u.s. approach aimed at bringing iran back to the negotiating table by squeezing it economically and winning i think broad support among the allies for that approach this was what jens stoltenberg nato secretary general had to say all allies share concerns sir when it comes to iran. these the ballistic activities in
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the region their support for different groups there their missile program of a program of iran and also their announcement that they will now start to enrich uranium again well stoltenberg went on to say that he particularly was impressed with the u.s. core message that it does not want to go to war with iran that he does want direct talks with iran without preconditions and he said nato would support moves to deescalate to decrease tensions over the issue and avoid them spiraling out of control but they were war words of caution from secretary of defense esper i think aimed particularly at iran we do not seek armed conflict with iran but we are ready to defend u.s. forces and interests in the region no one should mistake restraint for weakness. and there were words of caution for the united states from within the nato alliance
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from france in particular reportedly joining the closed door session on iran france already in opposition to the u.s. unilateral move to withdraw from the iran nuclear deal france cautioning the united states here not to involve nato militarily in any mission involving iran the u.s. supreme court has put on hold the trump administration's plan to add a citizenship question to next year's census have to call hayne has more from washington. this decision is a huge setback for the trump administration now this all has to do with the u.s. census under the constitution the federal government has to basically counted people every 10 years and those numbers have a huge impact they determine how many members of congress each state gets and more importantly how much federal money the states get.
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