tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera April 27, 2020 7:00am-7:34am +03
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to the jewish homeland at the expense of the palestinians. the story of the british declaration that changed the middle east for seeds of discord on al-jazeera. glimmer of hope in a year of the country's worst hit by the coronavirus record their lowest daily death toll in over a month. player watching al-jazeera live from a headquarters in doha i'm fully back to people also ahead back to school classes in some parts of china resume for the 1st time since killing 2 months ago because of the coronavirus crisis more than a 1000000 australians download an app designed to trace close contacts of covert
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1000 patients but how effective are these ops rats we need to farm workers in california alice a harvest time is a season of fear caused by the virus. the daily death toll from coronavirus in the hardest hit european countries has fallen to its lowest level in more than a month and there are now plans to saudi easing some restrictions it's of which has seen the 2nd highest number of deaths in the wild after the u.s. will loosen its lock down from early may people will be allowed to visit relatives and some businesses will reopen it will go to my job at the arguments for legal so for me for the wholesale sector will restart but it is obvious that we'll need a market and therefore for me 18 if we expect to reopen the retail sector from then we're also planning to reopen museums exhibitions and libraries and sport teams can
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resume training we also hope that june 1st will be the dates of the reopening of bars restaurants beauty salons and hairdressers basically all personal care activities. and spain children aged 13 and under have been allowed to leave their homes for the 1st time in 6 weeks now a has the story. it's been 6 long weeks stuck inside for 6 year old marco and his parents in their apartment in central madrid and it's been hard for all of the kids of his 18 itself is a collectivity and a lot of that that those activities outside is suspect in him somehow he is more i never said. this a call to mine it sometimes. since the lockdown came in adults have been allowed to go out for essential reasons but children haven't so sunday was a big day for marco people. the new rules apply to children up to the age of 13 only. to go out with up to 3 children for one hour and no further than one
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kilometer from their home. they still have to observe distancing as this drone reminds people mean they can't be tough with their friends and parks remain closed in most places but specialist suborned of the effect of the lockdown on children's health and mental well being and this 9 year old has certainly missed just getting out. the streets i missed the streets and the park and feeling the air on my face and i never thought i would miss school but i really do spain has the world's 3rd highest official coronavirus death toll but with the number of daily deaths fully the government's hoping to ease restrictions further from next weekend's new study. i would like to announce that if the evolution of the pandemic continues in a positive direction as it is doing so far actually starting from may 2nd and people will be allowed to go out to individual physical activity and walks with the
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people with whom they live however always in the conditions laid down by the health authorities and i thought. it was somebody city of sybil's the annual fair isn't happening but that hasn't stopped them celebrating with people dancing traditionally. vocalise generally enjoy ritual salute the who don't the city council move will be vented september is prone to the prone to recovery truism industry. right now there's a cautious optimism in spain as people take stock of when he leaves the quinces who's already taken. the debugger. schools any universities in some parts of china that were closed because of a pandemic are beginning to reopen students have been welcomed back to class in the capital beijing and students in the city of 100 where they operate began will start heading back to school as early as next week al-jazeera star clark is in hong kong
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she says social distancing measures are still in place as china tries to prevent a 2nd wave of infections. is a milestone in china on the grounds that the schools have been locked down in a nationwide lockdown for about 3 months or so schools in some provinces and some of the major cities are turning some schools have already opened and that was in march the beginning of april but some of those cities that are reopening on monday shanghai beijing and one job in the focus is really on the senior and the middle school students particular the final year classes that are preparing for the end of school exams and this role that's been happening and will happen over the next month also with the primary schools to return in mind all schools are required to have various contingency plans in place the teachers have been trained to deal with emergency procedures to try and prevent any outbreak of transmissions the students of course have also been provided with protection a social distancing measures are in place during the lunch breaks and the canteens have also been set up almost like exam rooms to try and separate to divide the
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students and the reason why these schools are slowly reopening is we've seen a gradual for declining numbers in the number of crowd of us cases in china and that's why the schools are reopening the national health commission on monday has reported just 3 cases in china and none of which were in the who by province of course this is the epicenter of the province where we saw the initial chrono virus outbreak and on sunday. the national health commission reported no new coronavirus tyson's in that particular city and this of course was the city there were 11000000 people a went into lockdown back in january and it's graduate reopening but i should state there are questions still about the calculations being use a bunch by the national health commission and some countries are also calling for an investigation into the modeling in the calculation of china's official figures in the united states hugh white house official coordinating the response to the corona virus outbreak says social distancing may be necessary through the summer dr deborah burke says the u.s. needs a huge technology breakthrough to expand testing before the country can reopen but
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state government is remain divided costs are reports. despite clear warnings the virus continues to spread some americans have just had enough it's been 5 weeks and most people here with thousands of calls cannot get through to unemployment they don't know what they're going to do protesters gathered in downtown las vegas begging to return to jobs that shuttered casinos and entertainment venues along the city's famed district police arrested several beach goers in california who showed up to take in the sun despite prohibitions are you concerned the message from the white house coronavirus response coordinator was the opposite we should still social distance we should still wear those mass to protect others as we work through this epidemic she warns social distancing should continue through the summer even as a handful of states allow barbershops and other businesses to reopen. but the vast majority of the country remains closed the white house economic
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adviser says the next jobs report will likely show unemployment at 16 percent or higher this is the biggest negative shock that our economy i think has ever seen we're going to be looking at the unemployment rate that approaches rates that we saw during the great depression the number of dead in the u.s. also continues to rise it's now more than $54000.00 with newspapers pain tribute to so many names and faces of the lost castro al jazeera silver spring maryland of president trump hasn't made appearance at the daily coronavirus briefing since the controversy about his comments telling people to possibly consider disinfectant as a cure for the virus earlier we spoke to bill schneider who is a professor of policy government and international affairs at george mason university and he says the president is now limiting his appearances because it's
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damaging him politically he's given over 50 news conferences he have a news conference on friday but he didn't take any questions and now the white house staff is suggesting that he might be doing fewer news conferences he's had this in a tweet just yesterday he said that the briefings are quote not worth the time and effort because he's asked so many hostile questions by the press whom he has otherwise defined as an enemy of the people he's asked hostile questions by the press so therefore he said the press sense the agenda they ask the questions one of the thing is that his aides one him to progress more now on the recovery of the economy and less on public health issues where when he goes to a news briefing these days you insist a lot of questions about public health which he does know much about he knows more about the economy and people who secure about that so he wants to control the agenda more than the briefings have been able to allow. iran plans to reopen some
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mosques in areas that are deemed free of coronavirus the government will start labeling regions either white yellow or red depending on the number of deaths or infections mosques in white zones will be able to resume services iranians have already returned to shops and bazaars as the government tries to kickstart its battered economy the president says regions will be classified on a case by case basis do have to shoot food to know who would get them who after 2 weeks there are no deaths no new cases it is them up to the ministry of health to search according to its own criteria so that this area this county this search is white and other areas can be yellow so we will divide the country as the basis of why east yellow and rose by israel supreme court says the government must pass legislation within weeks to continue with a controversial surveillance program which tracks a person's location via their mobile phone from minister benjamin netanyahu gave
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security agencies the power to track the mobile data of anyone suspected of having the coronavirus the supreme court says a measure is a breach of people's privacy meanwhile in australia more than a 1000000 people have chosen to download a mobile phone. tracing it people was launched on sunday the software uses bluetooth technology to the next with other phones so users can be traced and connected if they're exposed to covert 19 david vaile is a simon or expert at the university of new south wales he is warning the app may not be as safe or useful as a government suggests. they've put a lot of effort into marketing and promotion and certainly they've tried to make it feel like a national obligation to do this and look it may be when we get to the bottom of it that it may be useful and safe to to use our concern really
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is that they've left out a lot of the information if you're looking for informed consent. you need to know not only what we'd like it to do and promises that will do the right thing but also one of the limitations what are the risks that sort of things and unfortunately that sort of information which would include design specifications the software source code the technical protocols and a privacy impact assessment that would be involved why the consultation with everybody likely to be affected that sort of thing has not been released now and you know in that sense it's very disappointing when it gets to the questions about . whether this is voluntary or not. they've they've gone a long way you know in the last week to saying it's absolutely not and there are proposals for a law that whenever parliament gets again which could be when at sometime soon that they will legislate in ways that. do protect it and that ensures that it's
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mandatory. the fact that so many of the entities involved with this were paid a week ago to float the prospect that if if we didn't do the right thing if we didn't get the right answer that it would be made mandatory that really you know the cat among the pigeons. still ahead on al-jazeera bodies in bathrooms victims not properly identify and we talked to a health worker in ecuador where hospitals are overwhelmed plus food allergy prevention will look at the link between a child's immune system and the bacteria in their body this common. hello the temperatures have been on the rise that you cross much of the arabian peninsula and the next few days that sets it really changed
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a little bit we should see a bit of a change in the direction of the winds now there's plenty of cloud to the north really taking a few showers not very many but really on monday they will work their way east was the caspian sea pushing to these northern areas of iran elsewhere it is mostly dry just maybe a rash of showers across areas of turkey but as i say touches have slightly been very high sunday by monday down to 34 celsius in doha but still warm across into dubai 40 celsius the winds getting a little bit prisca as we had to choose they say that might just make things fit a little bit better but again that's not really fluctuation very much 34 again is the high on a very well 39 across into riyadh temperatures have been warm across central areas of africa but also we've had some very heavy thunderstorms over the last few days very typical for this time of year of course the seasonal rains but as you can see through monday central northern areas a day o'connor the rains very heavy there again and very widespread across areas a tons of air pushing up into the kenya and beyond into somalia and ethiopia but
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also on monday the rain back in the 4 calls through the central and eastern as the south africa very heavy at times and really cooling things down in johannesburg just 14 celsius. i don't think in isolating times the listening post cuts through the noise leave the looking at another side of the story not the mark the information around the outbreak but the misinformation separating propaganda from fact book it's reality has to reach a lot exposing the optics triathlon if the rhetoric and shit but they cannot manipulate the fire listening post your it's like going to the media on al-jazeera .
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welcome back a recap of our top stories on al-jazeera the daily death toll from the coronavirus in europe's august 2 countries us fall into its lowest level in more than a month it's knee problems to begin easing restrictions and in spain children have been allowed outside for the 1st time in weeks more u.s. states are loosening long don missions as a nationwide death toll passes 54001 ton is reopening places of worship one colorado city at home order has expired on friday georgia became the 1st state to reopen most businesses despite warnings from health experts and schools and universities in some parts of china that were closed because of the pandemic are beginning to reopen students in the city of new holland where the outbreak began will be going back to class as early as next week. now with the backdrop of
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increasing diplomatic tensions $2900.00 songs the not just take in military spending in a decade the world's nations spent a combined $1.00 trillion dollars on their armed forces it's a cold international peace research institute found that leading the way was the u.s. it spent $732000000000.00 a 5 percent increase on the year before china increase its spending to just over 260000000000 dollars while india shelled out $7571000000000.00 that was the 1st time 2 asian countries were among the top 3 spenders overall more than 60 percent of the world's military spending came from just 5 countries the other 2 being russia and saudi arabia while the saudi led coalition in yemen is calling for an end to violence after separatists in the city of aden declared self rule the southern transitional council is seeking a return to independence and is accusing the government of mismanagement but saudi
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arabia is calling for all sides to abide by a power sharing agreement signed 5 months ago dosage of ari reports. the internationally recognized government in yemen is calling it a coup after the southern transitional council announced it was in control of the port city of aden. the council accuses the government of being unable to cope with the coronavirus pandemic and failing to improve the lives of yemenis. so far there has been only one confirmed covert 19 infection in the southern region of how they are marked this is actually a pileup of. mis management and misgovernance in especially in south yemen well that's why the f.c.c. is right now compelled to take to take action to their own ends while still calling for a cease fire calling for deescalation in all fronts we want things to go smoothly or things you want to be able to deliver a service is going to be able to battle this and them but the government warns the
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breakaway attempt could have catastrophic consequences describing it as a resumption of an armed insurgency. it's yet another complicating factor in yemen's 5 year civil war which has been marked by shifting sometimes shadowy allegiances. to southern separatists are backed by the united arab emirates and have been nominal allies of the saudi emirate ticklish and in their war against the whose these was was the government says the separatists action is a rejection of a power sharing deal brokered to end last year's unrest which saudi arabia hailed as a step towards a wider political solution to the war there are thought to be at least $25.00 regional separatist groups support on the ground is also in question critics say control should be taken by force but actions within yemen and in yemen could split not in book 3 but for the. regions or earlier and i think this is like
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a premature decision that the. well it's all in the little areas of the evidence based on other places basically we believe with one of the. google google the southern transitional council says it continues to support the unilateral cease fire the clerk by saudi arabia 2 and a half weeks ago it has been just extended by month but it's declaration of autonomy and state of emergency adds to the uncertainty for yemenis who've already suffered years of hunger and war. dorsetshire pari al-jazeera. meanwhile an island of yemen's coast is among a number of southern provinces that have rejected the s.t.c. self governance the government in so-called trial has instead page agents to president abdurrahman so hadi that a source inside the internationally recognized government has sold on his ear at
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the u.a.e. is bribing army officers to carry out a coup against the local authority the u.a.e. deployed its troops of culture 2 years ago and their presence on the island fueled protests there in the past so people in lebanon have defied a lockdown and curfew to continue on thai government demonstrations protesters blocked roads and fought with police want announcing the worsening economic crisis last week lebanon's currency reached a new nose against the dollar sparking calls for the central bank governor to resign. returning now to the coronavirus pandemic in ecuador's number of confirmed cases have almost doubled over just 2 days there officially nearly 23000 cases but health workers say people are dying faster than 'd they than they can be tested and the strain on the health system has begun to show in disturbing ways a lot of america at its embassy and human takes a look at a bizarre case of mistaken identity. this is 74 year old i'll beat them my duty
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3 weeks ago she was supposedly crim ated after reportedly dying in hospital from corona virus but now her family has been informed she's still very much alive and that they have the wrong ashes. this isn't the 1st case of mistaken identity in ecuador's chaotic cold with 1000 epicenter of. nationwide the number of confirmed cases has doubled you'll see very ill this is not because the cases appeared overnight but because all the backlog tests were processed and reported yesterday. from oklahoma in ecuador no one can really say how many people have died from cold 19 only that people are dying faster than they can be properly tested and identified a nurse who doesn't want to be named says that in his hospital in by a key he said to pile of bodies in the bathrooms because there's no more room elsewhere. that's very traumatic for us imagine i have my manz i'm not very well
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psychologically we can do more for a critical question than get them sailing solution when what i need is a pencil. in brazil it's a similar case this is the no such in your up but i see the symmetry in man else the gateway to the brazilian amazon even some of the grave diggers have died after contracting the virus in the desperate race to bury victims of the open. just lost his mother in law who he says could not access emergency care to him. a person who needed to be in intensive care unit was in a basic hospital but where they didn't even have x. rays it's a horrible film i never expected to see this in my life locked up in a bog. hospitals are reaching their capacity even before the expected peak of the pandemic malaria and yellow fever are already widespread in this region where communities along the amazon river are days away. from the nearest hospital now
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menow says has the highest mortality rate from cold 19 in all of brazil ascended to emergency that's become a calamity you see in human al-jazeera. in the coming days we're looking at how if engine industries are being impacted by the coronavirus pandemic beginning with farming the u.s. depends on millions of farm workers to maintain its food supply but cram to working conditions and living conditions are putting them at increasing risk of infection rob reynolds reports from oxnard in california the country's biggest agricultural produce. strawberries are right dinning in the fields waiting to be picked but for farm workers like maria harvest time is a season of fear but. i am afraid of getting sick because if i don't recover i will die so i would leave for children in the orphanage i am obviously afraid but i have to whack maria who is undocumented and asked that her surname not be used is
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one of an estimated $3000000.00 farm workers in the us all are considered essential workers like doctors nurses and law enforcement but unlike them they are paid low wages have fewer legal protections and many lack protective gear are to seem to me the bottom line the last line think about them they don't think about. any form workers as a group are already among the least healthy in society poverty lack of access to basic medical care high rates of diabetes hypertension and lung problems from exposure to pesticides means that farm workers are at high risk of becoming extremely ill or dying if they get corona virus a coronavirus flare up among farm workers could spread like wildfire extremely difficult to prevent the spread if there's a there's
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a major outbreak in the agriculture industry even a good one outbreak among say one careless farm labor contractor can cause an outbreak among the whole industry many farm operators do allow workers to practice social distancing for example by working alternate rows of crops but the pay structure discourages stringent hygiene and many workers are being paid piece $3.00 per box a lot of strawberries they get 20 seconds washing your hands can feel at this stage you're waiting in line during a break and want to get back out there in the fields to pick more california and a handful of other states have laws. was providing unemployment insurance and compensation for injuries on the job to former workers all of the other united states of america do not have a single instance. of an instance for workers like maria working from home obviously is an option even sustaining hold while sick is an impossible luxury so
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in a couple i'm the only person in my family that is ending in income so for me it's either you work or you during. or that i have from him they are essential workers putting food on the country's tables every day yet somehow they remain invisible and vulnerable rob reynolds al-jazeera oxnard california and the next report in our series over a in the u.k. where the lockdown is encouraging more people to grow fruit and vegetables in their back gardens as on tuesday right here on al-jazeera. staff have been told to brace themselves for more job cuts than initially expected a letter addressing employees warned the european pain maaco was needing cash and call for immediate action and us has reportedly lost a 3rd of its business in a matter of weeks with air lines being among the worst hit by the call the 1000 outbreak a chief executive says even though they have expanded credit lines
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a business needs to resize and adapts. now discovering your child has a food allergy can be a frightening experience researchers in australia think they have now found a link between the chances of babies developing a reaction to bacteria found in their mother their stomach has a story. you know an easy a making the most of playing outside but it isn't always fun and games for the twins who live in melbourne both have had allergies since they were babies noah had his 1st allergic reaction to an egg when he was just 8 months old he was 18 matt and a short time later had swelling. to stress vomiting. kinds of things that was pretty scary australia has the world's highest rates of food allergies research is there a study in women in their babies during an after pregnancy what they found is a link between bacteria in
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a mother's digestive systems and reducing the chance of food allergies in the 1st year of life what we found was a very strong signal women who cared for carried a bacteria called predatory or coppery. by bees were to substantially reduce risk of developing food allergy pervert teleco pre is a microbe that ferments fiber from food into fatty acids previous studies of baby mice that had a high fiber diet showed reduced allergic reactions. the latest research looked to see if that was the same for people who had allergies are on the rise and for some people can be life threatening scientists are still trying to understand why early g.'s and more prevailing in developed countries and urban areas. but studies have shown a link with our modern lifestyle pollution and hygiene products which kill bacteria all affect our immune systems our bodies contain trillions of bacterial cells many live in a digestive system the australian researches say they hope their latest findings
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could help develop a probiotic that stimulates a baby's developing immune system and reduces the likelihood of later developing an allergy. it's might not be a cue to know an easy but it may be one step closer to an energy free life to millions of others so to hide it's a disease. hello again i'm fully battle with the headlines on al-jazeera avidya daily death toll from the corona virus in europe's hardest hit countries has fallen to its lowest level in more than a month and spain children are now allowed to go outside for the 1st time in weeks italy will also be easing restrictions we work to my job at their local move to a legal school for me for the wholesale sector will restart but it is obvious that we'll need a market and therefore for me today we expect to reopen the retail sector from then
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we're also planning to reopen museums exhibit sions and libraries and sport teams can resume training we also hope that june 1st will be the date for the reopening of bars restaurants beauty salons and hairdressers basically all personal character . schools and universities in some parts of china that were closed because of the pandemic are beginning to reopen students have been welcomed back to class in the capital beijing and those in the city of one han where the outbreak began will start heading back to school as early as next week and more u.s. aid said loosening knockdown measures as a nationwide death toll passes 54000 montana is reopening places of worship while colorado's stay at home order has expired iran brands to reopen some mosques in areas that are deemed free of coronavirus the government will start labeling regions either white yellow or red depending on the number of deaths or inspections israel supreme court says prime minister netanyahu government must pass legislation
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within weeks to continue with a surveillance program which tracks a person's location vs them obama phone the supreme court says the measure is a breach of people survive a sea meanwhile in australia more of a. a 1000000 people have chosen to download a mobile phone tracing app the software uses bluetooth technology to connect with the phone so users can be contacted if they're exposed to covert 19 and other news the sounding led coalition in yemen is calling for an end to violence after separatists in the city of aden proclaimed south for the 7 transitional council declared a state of emergency saying it will govern the city and other southern provinces emmons government is calling it a coup the s.t.c. is supported by the united arab emirates saudi arabia has a rich old size to abide by a power sharing agreement signed 5 months ago those are the headlines the listening posts is next on al-jazeera stay with us frank assessments wise it's really struggling to cope with the number of coronavirus patients believe it's
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a really aggressive action with them behind the curtain and in-depth analysis of the day's global headlines inside story on al-jazeera. prime minister announced that if prime minister or coverage of the hour's notice to walk down here it took over our area kerry traveling. there probably picks up the prisoners you've marked parse them for a friend and it. alone richard just brought in you're watching the listening post here are some of the coronavirus stories the media angles that we're tracking from home this week india and the pandemic much of the coverage is defined by politics and driven by religion reporters must choose their words carefully europe remains under lockdown and e.u. countries are in a standoff with big tech.
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