tv Meet the Syrians Al Jazeera March 11, 2020 11:00pm-12:01am +03
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holding to account as we examine the u.s. its role in the war on al-jazeera. we have that for a man to be our system and that 19 can be characterized as a pandemic the world health organization declares the corona virus outbreak a pandemic citing concern over its spread and severity of. governments commit billions to shore up their economies and markets tumble as the financial impact of the virus grows. the more detail of this is al jazeera live from london also coming up. a new york court sentences harvey weinstein to 23 years in prison 2 weeks after being
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convicted of rape and sexual assault. at a teenage boy is killed when israeli forces try to break up palestinian protesters . over the coronavirus crisis has been declared a pandemic making the declaration well health organization officials said the number of cases globally is just going to increase 118000 people have now been infected in 114 countries is the number of cases outside china increased 13 fold in the past 2 weeks charlie angela begins our coverage. this is daily life under lockdown in italy people employing patient protection and distance all good measures that countries should practice according to the world health organization but not enough as a declared covert 19 is now a pandemic. has been seeing this outbreak around the clock
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and we're deeply concerned by the alarming level of spread and severity and by the island i mean the level is in action. we have that for mad the our system and that 19 can be characterized as a pandemic what started in china has now spread to more than $100.00 countries and 90 percent of cases a spread over just 4 nations iran is one of them where more than 300 people have died south korea is another where efforts to stop the spread of the virus have so far failed it seems the world has missed the window of containment in italy the government is not ruling out further restrictions beyond the nationwide quarantine to slow the spread of the disease this is a crisis not just for the country's creaking health system but also its economy and
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italy's prime minister just happy kaante announced more efforts to prop it up a been a deliberate we decided to allocate the exceptional amount of $28300000000.00 as we are aware of the difficulties the country is facing in this emergency. there is fear too in france is the number of cases creep up children still in school are encouraged to wash their hands by the health minister himself but the virus has already reached the heart of the government the culture minister is infected and 5 others are being tested president avoided shaking hands as he prepares to move the country to phase 3 of its response closing more schools and risk transport across the continent classrooms are emptying spain france and germany have shut schools in their most affected regions while italy greece romania and ukraine have sent home their entire student populations as germany confirmed its death from the virus the government's message was that people must make sacrifices to their social lives to
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protect the elderly wanting covert 19 test health care systems across europe soon the most of you will start. when the virus is out that the population has no immunity and author b. exists and 60 to 70 percent of the population will be infected as long as this situation continues to exist in the u.k. a health minister has tested positive and is self isolating despite being in contact with her last week prime minister boris johnson says he does not need to be tested his message it's business as usual and to help the annual budget promised $39000000000.00 to ward off a coronavirus recession. the w.h.o. says countries still have the power to change the course of this pandemic but what is inevitable is that cases will continue to climb. with declaration of pandemic has hit the stock markets christian salumi joins me live from new york so markets have just closed how it's ended up there.
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yeah well it's been a brutal day on wall street the markets have been down all day and they closed in what's known as bear market territory that signals an and to what has been an 11 year upward trend or bull market for stocks and it's a significant step to cross basically a bear market is a drop of more than 20 percent from the market highs of just a couple weeks ago we had new highs in the stock markets here but the jones industrial dropped more than $1400.00 points today bringing it into that bear market territory this is just 2 days after a correction or a drop of 10 percent so now 20 percent from the high point for the market. this is obviously a concern for investors they've been watching the spread of the corona virus seeing
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its impact on everyday life starting to unfold people staying home from work trips being canceled schools being closed and they're worried about the economic impact bear market is not always a sign of a recession it's not automatic that a recession would come in a bear market but that's the concern that is weighing on investors after the an announcement that this was now being and considered a pandemic and that. more pain could be coming that investors financial institutions have been lowering their forecast for global growth goldman sachs in particular said that it was lowering its forecast for economic growth all of that combining to weigh down the markets showing their concern that we haven't seen the worst of the impact from this virus yet and i mean it's there have been measures from some central banks and policies made what why is that not satisfying
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the investors what do they want to see going forward. well the united states is the big question here what will the u.s. response be on tuesday the markets recovered somewhat after president trump suggested that there would be a stimulus plan to help businesses weather the storm but the details of that have not been forthcoming at this hour in fact we know that president is needing with financial c.e.o.'s and he's promised to make some sort of a statement or announcement later clearly this is a concern the market is something that the president watches very closely and he has always touted the strong performance of the economy as one of his major accomplishments so this is a very worrying concern but so far no concrete plan from the administration some ideas have been floated and that seems to be that the the the the issue other parts of the world may have their plans but this is the biggest economy in the
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world and it's worry in terms of where things are going the virus itself hasn't been contained yet but there's concerns that there's not enough test kits so amid all those questions we see this volatility christianson we thank you very much indeed committee how could has more from the white house says there's a battle in the way on how to deal with coronavirus. there have been a lot of meetings taking place here in the white house as part of the coronavirus task force it's not clear they have accomplished anything in fact just the opposite of tweet from the u.s. president one of them says someone needs to tell the democrats in congress that provirus doesn't care what party you're in we all need to protect all americans i think what he's alluding to is the fight in the battle that's going on between the white house and congress over just how much money to allocate in terms of helping local communities to sort of counter the spread of coronaviruses in
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a majority of u.s. states now and we are hearing from top public health officials like anthony found part of the coronavirus task force that things will get worse and that this is 10 times more lethal than the seasonal flu what the message is coming from health officials is that americans need to be prepared but when they look to their government they're getting very murky messages now we're hearing here on the white house campus that the vice president has been meeting with hospital officials we also understand the president getting under way with a meeting involving wall street executives the they discuss how to help ordinary americans in terms of the economy but again not any sort of concrete message coming out of this white house many hoping that will change when there is a current virus briefing in the coming hours. italian government is considering taking tough and measures to try to contain it outbreak as $827.00 people are now known to have died earlier we spoke to a chinese deputy health minister who said if he had still made appropriate
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preparations when we have the outbreaks either we had a lot of flare ups in the north and you know somebody was seeing ok that is the new china and it's spreading all over the viruses that that's not true because we know that probably the part of entry of this virus was not evil but maybe with germany i mean we would see these but see there are photographs of these all over in europe and now even in the united states you know with new cases though we know patient 0 saw nobody will trap how devices are out there i mean this is a worldwide problem so 2 things mean mainly 2 things to do 1st meeting closing things and the other thing be prepared with your ass people in i.c.u. with bats and machine and medical doctors and nurses and whatever be ready with these because d.s. will stop the wave and on the other and we treat the patients even mild disease we know these i mean it's a disease that in 8085 percent of the cases very mild but there is
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a 1015 percent that may require a very different. parkers are needed to reach has now declared it a pandemic what does that mean practically. well a epidemic 1st of all basically means a virus that can be contained one that since particular region or a particular country a pandemic is a virus in short that can be contained than anywhere in the world is now potentially exposed to it those distinctions matter because it affects the kind of way in which countries deal with the problem in an epidemic the focus is on containment as was suggested so if people are coming in from countries where there are very high numbers of coronavirus cases being detected those people may be asked to self isolate in a pandemic situation and the implication now is that people are contract in the virus within communities without actually having to have gone to a place like china or italy and in this kind of situation the focus now shifts to
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delaying the spread of the virus and that's an important distinction to make the w.h.o. now saying that all countries in the around the world need to respond aggressively and to be wary about the prospects of under diagnosis and what to me mention italy there what are the lessons been learned from the way the epidemic has ordinar pandemic has spread initially so quickly we're all looking at italy what we're looking at particularly here in europe is essentially the future given the cases in germany and france and spain are going up very very rapidly indeed the house of course beamed some incredibly tight measures introduced 60000000 people put on lockdown the toughest measures since the 2nd world war in that country but there has been have been some glimmers of hope it was a case in northern italy where levon villages were asked to lock down there haven't in the past couple of days been any indication of any rise or any new cases so the suggestion there is that is that containment does work so rolling out similar kind
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of person processes and procedures in other countries in europe is definitely likely to be the best way to go need pocket thank you very much. still to come on. convicted of a lockerbie bombing is allowed an appeal bad 8 years entrées death costs. money and outlaw. never had a will anger outside australia's rice court or the pope's treasurer fights his child sexual assault convictions. still the turn of queensland to get the wettest weather in australia but it's likely to get worse because developing in the carl sees a circulation sun some of that may well end up as a tropical site or not the right time of the year it's not extraordinary for that
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to happen but if you look at the colors here where you see oranges and it's really heavy rain now he's already seen something like $300.00 millimeters in 24 hours in some parts of this coast so expect more of the same same time a little circulation just off west australia is also a tropical low that will probably fall apart bring it to rain to the coast as it dissolves whereas this one might develop more so on those the 2 wet areas with the exception of what's more wintry coming through tasmania the temperatures right about $23.00 mark in hobart but it will be wet and windy this is for both thursday and friday in contrast the weather when these are this way out through japan that we've got a couple of days off for the next book comes through so a sunny day recall when sapporo are not bad in tokyo 15 with lighter winds but developing back for china as the next tranche of rain now this the last one went out for japan this one i think will stay in southern china go out through taiwan and out into the open ocean its heavy rains early in the year but it's still there
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. a nation where corruption is endemic now embroiled in a battle to hold the power to account. has this radical transformation. to me that she was shedding light on the romanians pressing for change and their unconventional methods to eliminate corruption remain people. on i'll just see. the as. her.
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motto top stories here on the world health organization has declared the corona virus outbreak to be a kind demick that crosses it spreading globally not just an epidemic of smaller localized outbreaks officials said it wouldn't change the response but criticized alarming levels of inaction by governments. italy has announced just on the $30000000000.00 of spending to fight the coronavirus the outbreak there is the largest outside china britain's finance minister has pledged more than $13000000000.00 in measures to support the country's economy. surge a new cases in south korea has reversed 4 consecutive days of decline the discovery on wednesday of a large cluster of infections has dashed hopes that the country had its outbreak under control it's quite hard to report. despite ongoing disinfection efforts throughout south korea there's been a reverse in the downward trend of corona virus cases the largest cluster yet
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discovered in the capital seoul at least 90 workers at a call center tested positive they worked in a building near a transportation hub in the southwest of the city home to 10000000 koreans. and so city officials are conducting an investigation that also taking measures such as south korean teen and diagnostic checks on those who are in close contact with the infected and in australia the prime minister announcing that italy joins china south korea and iran on its travel ban list australians and foreigners with residency visas returning from italy will face a 14 day self quarantine italy itself has effectively put itself into lockdown with travel now and this largely causes that loop we already had the enhanced screening measures that are in place. and a remarkable rescue in southeast china after being buried for 69 hours a man pulled from the rubble of a hotel for
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a virus patients in coron team the hotel in the city of change oh collapsed on saturday killing at least 26 people the 24 year old survivor is in a stable condition in hospital scott hodler al-jazeera. former hollywood producer harvey weinstein has been sentenced to 23 years in prison for rape and sexual assault one scene was convicted of the offenses by a new york court last month allegations helped spark the global need to movement and more than $100.00 women have now accused the 67 year old of sexual misconduct dating back several decades weinstein has consistently denied any wrongdoing and his lawyer says he will appeal. the sentence that was just handed down by this court was a see that number was a noxious there are murderers who will get out of court faster than harvey weinstein will that number spoke to the pressure movements in the public that number did not speak to the additives that came out at trial that number did not
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speak to the testimony that we heard that number did not speak nor did it speak to justice particularly heinous in washington d.c. she says activist of the sentence is a victory for the me too movement. after the election of donald trump we saw the largest march in the history of this country throughout the country and through the world it was the woman's march well then the next stage in this movement many people believe was when the new yorker and the new york times published expose ase their investigative reporting to harvey weinstein there were very famous people who gave their name and said he sexually assaulted me they had dozens of allegations it also detailed the links you went to over decades to intimidate these women need a heart to hurt them and their family members their parents hiring and it's just by firm to befriend the women to dig up dirt on them so this the news was shot it was earth shattering really because we saw people take to twitter and actresses
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say if you've been assaulted if you've been harassed retreat with me too it lit up social media it created a movement and there were a lot of questions how would this movement end well we're seeing now one possibility he's probably going to die in prison harvey weinstein sends that we weinstein sentenced to 23 years who is facing between 5 at the low end which is what his lawyers wanted to $29.00 he probably didn't buy himself any favors from the judge when he said that he was confused that this was wrong and you thought it was all consensual and he said thousands of men are losing their due process i'm worried about this country of course harvey weinstein had due process he had a really really expensive last law firm representing him and he went to trial and he was convicted so a lot of people on social media especially the people who named him claiming this as a hands down victory for them today. a 15 year old palestinian boy has been shot and
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killed by israeli forces after the tried to forcibly forcibly break up a protest near the city of nablus demonstrators had been trying to fend off illegal settlers who were eyeing the area as a future outpost in the abraham reports from the occupied west bank. made wasn't even born when the fight over his village of starting. the 15 year old was killed defending his home. this video appears to show him being shot at the head by israeli forces with this is save a teenager was killed from close range. 0 another protester remains in a critical condition dozens of others were injured in the confrontation. as i'm covered in the blood of a young man who was shot twice in the head i don't know if he's alive or not palestinian protesters gathered a jumble of army and mountain near the city of nablus early on wednesday protesters say israeli settlers are trying to seize control and build another illegal outpost
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israeli media reported that right wing israeli archaeologists were planning to tour the area but the israeli army refused them permission 1st is say is really is used different ways to lay claim to the land and organizing tours is one of them they say the fight over judgment about me it's back to the late 19 eighties. illegal israeli settlements are usually built on health lot and it 890 meters general about him is one of the highest in the area closed in years see it's another way of projecting power and control over palestinian surrounded us. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has repeatedly promised to annex parts of the occupied west bank palestinians say the only way to fight israeli expansion plans is by protesting them in the ground. 0 the occupied west bank.
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israel's president has urged the country's opposing political leaders to form a unity government to avoid a further election by mr benjamin netanyahu is center right bloc failed to win a majority in last week's vote the 3rd in less than a year his main rival benny gantz also has no clear path to majority despite her support of a left wing alliance and the joint arab list president reagan rivlin has until next week to pick a candidate to form a government former libyan intelligence officer. was found guilty of mass murder in 2001 for his involvement in the bombing of pan am flight 103 over the town of lockerbie in scotland or 259 people on board the flight from london to new york died as well as 11 people on the ground now a scottish review commission has referred the case to the high court that the barber report abdel baset almagro his family have long pushed to prove his innocence now 8 years after his death and more than 30 years after the lockerbie
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tragedy i got a chance. the scottish criminal cases review commission has decided the conviction can be referred to the high court for appeal for the 3rd time we had identified 6 graves for referring the case to the appeal court and the commission has gone on to deliver a damning indictment of the process and they believe that a miscarriage of justice may have occurred by reason of an unreasonable verdict and the grounds of non-disclosure pan am flight $103.00 was blown up over the scottish town of lockerbie in december 1908 it was on route from london to new york a most of the 270 victims were american the us relatives were satisfied when in 2001 former libyan intelligence officer to tell the girl he was jailed for life for the attack he always said he was innocent and some scottish victims' families have campaigned for years to clear him and find out who was involved on wednesday jim swire whose daughter was killed gave
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a written reaction read out by his lawyer for me this case is about 2 families mine and abdel baset behind their name are seen to lie the needs of $25.00 other families in applying for a further appeal 31 years after the event itself we need the truth. he 1st appeal his conviction in 2002 but this was refused by scotland's high court the next year as the west started to rebuild trade ties with libya then leader moammar gadhafi accepted his country's responsibility for the bombing he paid compensation to the victims' families but all along some believed there was stronger evidence iran was behind the bombing months after $290.00 died when a u.s. warship brought down an iranian passenger plane. in 2009 he dropped his appeal and was allowed to fly home on compassionate grounds he had terminal cancer he died in 2012 mcgraw his family have always described to us the 271st lockerbie victim
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they say his last words were about fighting for justice now that fight has been given a new lease of life nadine barber al jazeera. australia's highest court is hearing a final appeal from the disgraced roman catholic cardinal over his sex abuse conviction the 78 year old former archbishop of melbourne george pell is serving a 6 year jail sentence for masting to quiet him in the 1990 s. they click age reports from canberra the final step in a long court process that's been followed closely across the world george pell the most prominent catholic figure to be convicted of child abuse wasn't in court he his final bid for freedom but some of his supporters and opponents were. not. running high and opinions divided and here. in georgetown the catholic church i hope reso approach the acquittal the fact an
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acquittal of a man and. in late 2818 poll was found guilty of sexually abusing 2 quiet boys in the 1990s he served one year of a 6 year prison term and has continued to maintain his innocence lawyers lost an appeal last year to or the turn his conviction over the next for days there arguing to the high court that that ruling was unreasonable his team has focused its argument on the credibility of a witness and the timing of the offending lawyer lisa flynn who represents abuse victims is concerned that if the high court overturns his conviction it might stop other abuse victims speaking out. by many survivors and victims all around the world in terms of it really people could come forward and that they would be able to. leave. despite being
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a convicted sex offender george pell is still a cardinal but so far the pope has declined comment until all avenues of appeal are exhausted that moment may not be far away now gauge al-jazeera camera. 3 human rights activists in malawi have been arrested for organizing anti-government demonstrations some of which turned violent protesters have been calling for new elections after the constitutional court and now the results of last year's disputed vote. ports. up to 5000 people marched in solidarity with timothy matunga as a prepared to hand himself to police in the long way the tambo leads the human rights defenders coalition which is organized and to government protests since last year's disputed elections some have turned violent they've always decide not to dispense the only. jackass this is this something that got distanced our police
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from the people this time to this day here because people did go in there with the police have been looking for metabo since sunday when 2 other activists were arrested in blantyre mcdonald's and gives track and are accused of inciting violence we got him on that from the high court in the wrong way. ordering that these 2 gentlemen should be taken back we don't know yeah and they have been used and we had the alledged of things while i was commuted malawi's constitutional court canceled the results of last year's elections in february citing irregularities parliament approved a bill to hold fresh elections in may but president putin with 3 has not signed that. metabo is vowing to keep up the pressure saying he'll call on 5000000 people to shut down the president's official residences if he refuses to act. out of syria
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. we're going to offer you any time on our web site the dress that is al jazeera dot com and you can just lie back looking on the live by can. the top stories are just there the world health organization has declared the coronavirus outbreak to be a pandemic that classes it has spreading globally not just an epidemic of smaller localized outbreaks officials said it wouldn't change the response was criticized alarming levels of inaction by government when i was a chanst scientist said they expected the number of cases and deaths would rise further in the coming days and weeks. deadly june has been are still seeing this outbreak around the clock and we're deeply concerned by the alarming levels of spread severity and by the i'm not a mean
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a level is actually. we have that for a man to be our system and that 19 can be. used as a pandemic. but under me he's annoyed awarded to use lightly. carelessly governments across the world are scrambling to respond to the economic impact of the coronavirus crisis u.s. markets are closed almost 6 percent down as investors wait for the trunk of the restrictions response to the outbreak in europe italy says it will spend more than $23000000000.00 fighting the outbreak there and largest outside china for more than $10000.00 people have been infected meanwhile during his budget for the coming year britain's finance minister pledged more than $38000000000.00 of measures to support the country's economy from damage caused by the virus appears remain that europe could slip into recession as the german chancellor said the continent must unite to
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fight the spread. an uptick in the number of cases recorded in south korea has dashed hopes that the country has its large outbreak under control just under 100 employees of a call center and some members of their families were diagnosed with the disease in the capital so we will australia has lengthened the list of countries it's banning travel from people from italy china south korea and japan will not be allowed in and australians returning from those countries will have to self isolate and more for you any time on our website just that is al-jazeera dot com do stay with us women make science is up next i'll have a news after you straight off that i fear that. al-jazeera. where every.
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really broke up. when i was your age i read about barry bonds and i think what they were the coolest thing you have ok then you can have these really really. hope you do and you know what when i when i'm older i want to work with robots i want to build robots. or you are going to. be ready yet. i own without her so i'm going to make the robot. a little bit
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and might not like it i think. and you know really. just really just let it go. thank you and then it's going right back to what i was like right in the bronx very . close 19 at the time in my 2nd year at university and i saw all my classes and my she tauriel so there were very few goes my quasi and my professor told me that this is a big problem not just in no band but all travis trailer in the well that i thought oh i could do something about it oh ok was angled through much or too little. too much. so once i decided that i was going to do this i recruited a few of my friends and so i start designing these robotics workshops and so we had
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the 60 people sign up for a break i was with him greatly with us actually 1st meeting in the 1st 3 months before 124 go through 5 schools around open. it changed everything going to like it just gave us a. national platform to spread our message and it went that i was impacting hundreds of people way thousands of people alone with thomas you know or writing about us and thinking about how they were getting engaged and involved and that just had a ripple effect in terms of cost getting out there and doing war crimes was coming
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in mostly girls had no idea what engineering is on the backs they tell us things like. i thought it had to do with engines. have to do with metal i thought they would train drive ins and my press new favorite. i was wondering if you know you sheldon of the big bang theory was in my head with friends was just sort of busy in the end i did 140 speaking. in 8 months and so is like flying everywhere and giving like 20 speeches along we need to be teaching our kids from this only as primary school how to make stuff. i think of cutting through wire very good and i was going to hear. that. if i get it wrong the real thing but it's a lot of work to fix
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a. these are telephones very well if they allow people to be moved to places simply asleep to be in cape town south africa and have these 3 boats in melbourne australia and really down into the very bob and have a midi in mobile well having your meetings and going about your life in cape town south africa same time. it's so exciting this technology because it gives people a super power of. being more than who they are you using technology to amplify your empower. so we've got full reverse sort of even. with good reports here the fully builds and just say any. final victory rigorous testing. you know if you make sure they cause everything and say during this in the back to be fixed. i always try to think of.
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my robots in terms of how they can be useful to people at the disability. and we decided that would put the ability to recognize objects on the fire so people with better vision would be able to recognise everyday objects just by pointing their for another. hey guys. i'm going to be demonstrating a new app for the blind that point really enjoying it is calling it a i believe so we can detect objects you put your phone and object it will try to write a. laboratory for the so-called good had a blind school contact us in favor in their classrooms and the girls in particular really live to it because it meant that when they went to the bathrooms they didn't have to feel around for the the same the toilet all been that way it
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made their whole experience hi jean. sasha we're should all have known hole in the bubble of the neck straight yeah. yeah. i mean. yes. our robots can see people going to civility we really have to come up with a variety of control and. different people have different. in terms of their ability to move ahead on their. own. so that's. serious just.
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the tasks he tells me to perform and to complete those projects airport for 46 roi . that's fine that's a good side to the other one yes. the robot is easy and i can show him what's happening and have the procedures progressing leave some extra yeah he gives me if you're short messages any questions all asking all right i'll leave a little bit extra. so. it's. nice. to hear about them ok it's. just. a shame it's. 3 hours. if both
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are really heartwarming but. it's teleport and life is better for him in some way. people with lucid upland mobility they want to just feel like as human here is a would be independent and g. things by themselves i think it's really important to listen and just get into that weldon be there for them 'd. but leave that at that. but you say roy of the soldiering was. before i felt anything i spoke to pay for over from the strong quarter play association i reached out to friends and was introduced to friends he had played they told me they're really excited about robotics being able to give them the ability to have independence and
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. little shows around the house for themselves so i made the robot arm for peace with limited awful immobility in order to fix things up off the ground all eyebrow given sells a very. great about shiva in terms of. its compactness its functionality if you said we want to we want to be able to lift 2 liters of milk. and so like the idea here around which chamber it was formed this is a hybrid of shiva and teleport. so in terms of being very forward and backwards left and. like a crab and rotational that's 3 degrees of freedom we're actually see are at another
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try to preserve freedom and with. murder. lifting up over and the wrists. are at 7 degrees of freedom. and then being able to rotate the hand that's out after freedom in this robot arm. the math is quite complicated because a so major is afraid on the so many different joints and also figuring out how to get from one place to an elbow and where all the joint stationary in order to forget about is as also quite challenging sorry. it's it's a very interesting problem. so once it has teleports head he'll be like a tele presence robot with an a to her freedom should for we do all that would actually have to get an end
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effector off cheever and put it on there and that it has a hand to pick things are. really important to understand through your booty. and get into their well until you actually talk to them you never actually nor they have insights that you never thought of. the paperwork a strong quarter pledge to association either have a disability or work with people with a disability all the time and server to get their feedback was really important so we took this robot on and this robot and we can biosphere together all and we may be this 8 degree or freedom robot on the can list 3 killer is. from 80 centimeters away so you're in a chair you know like control your robot walk in front of me or the door fear you
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have your own personal. i think i'd like a touch of you know i have a portable back into the hands and have to just walk around from the other concept specially opinion program that's thought to measure imagination how can you sit around the house all the sort of things. they're quite hard to put in the house we're born to use time to explore more and more always toward still more problems chocolate so i can go out you know this can reach to that hard time oh and go shopping something else well you see the broom and look at them to catch it. he's another a protestant save cup pre-prepared me was in the fridge open the fridge door take it out there tell you believe it to i've been to a touch of mark wiped oh again drop it in the buttons again and did and it got there independent you know dinner is ready for them as well this is a great seed for those clients who don't want that 24 seventh's we've got quite
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a few clients that just get sick of someone always having to baby that want to be a light in those days a call for them. well sixty's although i didn't say that with my colleagues coming. and i'll see if i can. say 100 later on. the list by the g.b. can get a trial on top of those 5 on the way those plans lead the higher up journalist ability fought. side by typing it in my head. so that's what i'm told this was my team. has become a company. name good how do you fight so you're guessing at the theory will be looking well. i think it's a decent rate song here as well it's set up sorry tell me. yeah if you
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had a robot he found what would you want to do with that whole a lot of using the pay that it's possible. that the wired dot were good and where they were going. to come up i saw this good blow out like this. yeah it was well up quick and he actually rather than blowing his yeah we're out getting a drink quite a time ago care to hold my trip bottled up karl feel a bit sorry for them that that was then their then what you're trying to call himself would be. or may not feel for about any of the little things like i feel like it's the little things that really make a big difference who i am where you people. love is making them. and i want to shake their hands. i want to shake my hand so. i don't feel so all who are the. value of human like. claim
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with no concept of back. that's why i will usually like to meet you when you go to express my warmest wants them. yet my mother went to the pub where i caught the pirates i being it's. so quiet and spreadable about what to look there was a way to be a little bit to the moving out. the other side the side why didn't touch my. team play yeah that's what i usually do when i when i meet someone yes but usually i just i just reach out and i just touch it and i like going i think i lace it softly with. the space that interaction it yeah yeah just as a connection. that has very hard and. there are lots of people out from. that for the very smart ones ability to.
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someone's brain and you'd be integrated produced by kids that's mostly bad with a good pair honestly. and that's why what they cover. when you go and meet with people and they give you feedback on a project you're watching on they really reiterate their parties and their priorities become your priorities for your project and what you're trying to achieve. put another controller on it. and we actually took. it apart and it wasn't.
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small on what is the hotel room. she works really hard so but my brother and i have it is a pay in various extracurricular activities and we could get a good education and it made me think if i became an entrepreneur and you know if everything went badly i think she thought i could get a look at it and get any job and just provide for my family and sir i gave me a lot of freedom and. i knew that even if i would everything with a. great pleasure to kick off for seedings with them. please welcome. the memory.
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and when i received the study mechanical engineering at imperial college in london when i 1st arrived i thought it would be so great to have our regulars here then we could be global. no one showed up to the 1st meeting. and so when i realised it's not for about half an hour i cried. that experience really taught me that it's ok to have things not work out as long as you learn from your mistakes. from them and keep going. and just. the right.
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also made using temporary prototyping kinect is. a. great success. it's you know i have a lot of patients. it's up rationed and show to be. of a lot more functional when it's finished well and he was so pretty early in the process that. yeah i just want to get it working and get it out there. treasury. well enough to ask
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someone else to help me with questions myself. yeah would you fold to the guy. what makes sense for him all complicated than all those is that we have to have 9 murders compared to 3 and tell boy 6 in jail i'm sorry you've got to find a nation of things i think. this is part of the process it just makes us realize that what we need to work on and make reliable before we can reform. is way too many. of just one. sir we need always cost. to mesh well with the life we. always have my doubts but things were. but
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i also learned get so excited about what i'm creating i know that i learned a lot and i know that i'll be a better person at the end of a and. i just go ahead and do it anyway and say what the consequences of. he. missed so many exciting projects you could get involved in as an engineer it's important to teach how the next generation how to think i work with clay how to think creatively i just want wall to align engineering so they can be part of the journey of training interventions to help the wild. side of that engineering right. they have to think problem to get through the plate all day every day and get those problems with people and like make their lives that
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the shocking treatment of disabled people in eastern european state run caverns in these cages you can not have access to a toilet or water and the bureaucratic indifference to their plight he has his hands and his fates sides to the beds 5 years off to fast highlighting such abuses people in power returns with a 2 part investigation to continuing mistreatment and neglect europe's recurring shame hard won on al-jazeera.
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