tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera June 13, 2020 1:00am-1:34am +03
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albie 30 action this is the moment he also trades on fighting over the idea we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on the edges there are. overwhelmed with the number of dead hospitals on cemeteries in india struggle as the coronavirus caseload becomes the world's 4th largest. watching are just there are live from london i'm dating obligates also ahead the fight for libya and for its oil the talking continues but there's no sign of some spy or. an urgent appeal for nearly $200000000.00 to help people fleeing violence across the sahara. and how mosquito saliva could save millions of lives.
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a dire picture is emerging of how the world's 2nd most populous nation is coping with corona virus india has nearly 300000 cases but the number is climbing rapidly and the health system is struggling there are now reports of people being denied treatment and a body is not being disposed off properly elizabeth purana reports from new delhi. hundreds of doctors and hide their bods main hospital for coronavirus patients on strike just one of many protests by health care workers across india a doctor here was attacked by relatives of a patient he had just declared dead who would rush towards us and they just throw the last lot of latitude at me and it did was broken it was hard to my
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a left turn and i didn't i was trying to escape and. i still was going to try it out and doctors in hyderabad want the government to enlist more hospitals to treat 19 patients nurses in india's leading public hospital protested for 8 days in delhi until the all india institute of medical sciences promised to improve working conditions even further there in 830-0000 cases and more than 8000 deaths along with a public health system that has faced years of cut. x. india public and yes just because you know an image is the i mean it's. the 1st limitations it's got streets it's in and it was. real for the whole world to see the watch says his father isn't receiving proper treatment in hospital but he was admitted here yesterday and a doctor came to check it out time since and no doctor has come to check on him my
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father is 60 years old and a heart patient he has a severe cough and a fever. his uncle died from the corona virus at the same hospital this week. to talk about it we kept on walking from the more to the hospital with great difficulty we got the body and did the funeral he too was admitted here there were no beds available in all of delhi we had to put in a huge effort to get him limited here the worst cities of delhi and mumbai to have some of the best healthcare infrastructure in the country but reports of people being turned away from hospitals continued and here in cali there are discrepancies in the number of deaths municipal council said then buried twice the number of coronavirus patients and those being reported by the government this week. delhi's chief minister says they are expecting more than half a 1000000 cases by the end of next month. by the 31st of
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july really 80000 births this will be a huge challenge. year delhi try to restrict the territories beds to its residents but the central government has overruled that decision india's supreme court says the situation facing patients is deplorable and asked the worst affected states to explain why the people aren't receiving proper care elizabeth al-jazeera new delhi. john byrne murdoch is a data journalist of the financial times here in london and he says low reporting may not be deliberate but a sign that systems are overwhelmed by the pandemic where now a hearing from hospitals in new delhi. and the suggestion is that this is the case elsewhere in the country as well that many many more people have died than are being recorded some people are saying india may merely be reporting around a quarter of its covert deaths so i think the overall message is we should
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absolutely be skeptical of the numbers we're here we're seeing here and the one thing i would add to that though is that in most of these cases we're not talking about any deliberate attempts by governments by officials to downplay the situation more the health care systems on mortality reporting systems are simply being overwhelmed by the numbers of people who are critically ill or in tragic cases dying results coronavirus death toll has surpassed the u.k. making it the 2nd highest in the world more than 41800 people have died and over 828000 infected since some intensive care units are more than 90 percent capacity scientists have described president j. of us and are as response of the virus as incompetence the world health organization is warning that pandemic is surging in size and severity across latin america. has more from bogota. h.-o. is also saying that so far the national health service in brazil as
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managed to cope with the situation on duty increasing pressure however there are parts of the country where the intensive care units are in a critical situation a critical state with more than 90 percent of the beds fool so the situation is very worrisome we've seen big crowds though going out especially in hotspots of coronavirus. crisis like in big cities like in rio de janeiro and sao paulo very dense cities but people are starting to go out to malls that have been reopened that this is of course of great concern there is also concern about the fact that the president here both the narrow continues to dismiss the effects of all this in his country and he called on his supporters to
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go inside hospitals and film and show what the situation throughly is saying that it's not true that some of these intensive care units are in crisis in that instead this is all a boy to try and get him out of office this equation in brazil is also quite critical because besides of beyond this pandemic there's also an increasing political division that is truly putting at risk the democratic stability in the country. as the u.k. government eases coronavirus restrictions it's watching the countries are rates a measure of how contagious the disease is so it's hoping to keep that figure below one and that would mean each person is infecting less than one other person on average a week ago that figure was below around 0.7 and 0.9 across the u.k. but the latest data for england's are rates suggests it could be as high as one
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they are rates is at its highest in the country's southwest where it could be hovering just over one meanwhile the british economy shrank by nearly a quarter over march and april as the coronavirus locked down hammered businesses the office for national statistics says the economy is now the same size as it was in 2002 u.k. has been warned it could be heading for its deepest recession in 300 years despite the easing of containment measures most shops in england will reopen next week and prime minister boris johnson insists the economy will bounce back lawrence lee has more from london. well the all rates the reproduction rates might not be going up in the u.k. but the real issue is that it's not going down the epidemic isn't slowing and it's not going away and that's not just a concern for public health it's also an enormous concern for the economy figures that came out on friday suggest in the 1st quarter of this year the u.k. g.d.p. the total amount of money created by the country fell by 20 percent that's the
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equivalent of 20 years of economic growth wiped house in the single go in the country whose economy now depends very greatly on the service industry things like restaurants and bars the idea that people still going to have to stay too far away from each other that the r.h. isn't going down is going to prevent them from reopening and just as european countries are not preparing for the summer the u.k. cannot do that at the moment is in the same way at the same time very large companies there is a lot manufacturing the sorts of things that really underwrites the economy of the country then now starting to lay off thousands and thousands of people with all sorts of rumors of even greater job losses coming over the coming weeks and unions of warned us that the social effects of mass unemployment in this country could be every bit as greats of those of the virus and so the problem with the our rate not going down is it affects the economy very greatly.
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libya's national oil company says it's lost more than $5000000000.00 since january because of the ongoing fighting it was forced to put exports on hold at its largest field this week after it was shut down by an armed group once again man a trainer reports from his erotica. in a major setback for warlord khalifa haftar forces loyal to the internationally recognized government in tripoli are now advantage into the city of sirte on libya's central coast after a string of victories in the west. syria is located near libya's most important asset its oil producing region in the east which is under hussars control. libya which has africa's richest proven crude reserves and relies on oil exports for nearly all its state revenue plunged into violence to the toppling of longtime
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leader while mortgage death the in 2011. the country's oil fields pipelines and terminals have frequently been damaged in fighting and putting libya on the path to economic recovery means preserving libyan oil facilities and strong access to the national oil corporation have to is backed by the u.a.e. egypt and russia among others more than a year after he launched his unsuccessful campaign to take control of tripoli from the internationally recognized government his backers are now seeking to keep half their involved through diplomacy but now embolden with turkish support and gaining territory rapidly government forces and officials say they will not negotiate with have to nor accept the ceasefire. we will enter a shot this isn't the battle for cities like shit. it is a fight for libya for freedom and democracy we will continue east until we liberate
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all of libya from the war criminal hoft our. european leaders have called for a cease fire with the german ambassador visit in half there in eastern libya on wednesday and then tripoli the day after which time i leave it there. unfortunately the international community stood by while have to our sort of tripoli and killed civilians the feeling among libyans is they no longer trust the international community countries who recognize the g.n.a.t. but support have to like egypt can't be trusted. the u.n. support mission in libya has said that the d.n.a. and half there's military delegations are now fully engaged in the 3rd round of talks but with both sides very strict conditions it is unlikely we will see a cease fire in libya and the time to now train up al-jazeera misratah still had on al-jazeera a bomb goes off during friday prayers in kabul with peace talks just weeks away. one woman's search for her birth parents leads to
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a landmark court ruling that could help thousands of. hello there it is mostly kids throughout much of a stray i knew zillow wanted to bits and pieces of travel by far the bulk of the rain is coming in with this mass you can see here there's a fungus has to work its way across the great by a drought south of a little brings a fairly brisk winds but also rain showers across as the south australia i'm beginning to push across into victoria as well for time being we've got some good case skies across the region here of new south wales still some showers and thunderstorms along the coast of queensland and it should be mostly dry across both islands of new zealand out across the west as being cloudy in perth of the rain showers should clear through. on sunday 21 degrees but we could just have one or 2 shots is quite a strong flow by then more showers across the southeast pushing down across into
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tasmania and very heavy rain working its way through new south wales and lingering along that queensland coast then up into asia and in japan this very heavy rain on the cars and a few showers in the last few as it has made way for seems like this in tokyo which is very nice but i have to says we go through saturday and sunday probably not that pleasant we've got some very heavy rain pushing and it's all part of the seasonal rains that trail right there back into central areas of china they'll pop up again on sunday but as you can see pushing across the southern regions of the korean peninsula and once again through japan. on counting the cost of labor reform but is it reform when they cracked the job fed in the millions with no redress what china's tight grip on home called financial hub status. jobs are they stopped at the real deal. counting the cost
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on al-jazeera. award winning documentaries from around the 1. 0. following on the top stories on al-jazeera this hour india has reported a record daily increase of coronavirus cases making it the world's 4th worst country with cases almost hitting 300000 the government is easing restrictions even though hospitals appear to be under strain. brazil's coronavirus that's over surpassed the u.k. making it the 2nd highest in the world more than 41800 people have died and over
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828000 infected. libya's national oil company says it's lost more than $5000000000.00 since january because of the ongoing fighting libya's oil field is close to the latest battles between the u.s. backed government and fighters loyal to warlords have to. un's high commissioner for refugees told al jazeera a perfect storm of terrorism climate change and a host of other factors is creating a dire situation for displaced people in the south has now made an urgent appeal for almost 200. dollars as millions of people flee violence and. so. hiding under the staircase of an abandoned school is a bully family shaken from an attack the classroom benches into beds beneath is everything they save before dawn militia armed with machetes and guns tore through their village in central mali 66 year old bully has seen
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a lot of conflict between philosophies and doggoned in his lifetime but the brutality of this week's attack has left him in shock i am afraid of the dog and militia not the jihadi groups or mali and forces they don't harm us like them but they don't protect us either the militias control or movements they kill us and burn our villages. the un investigation accuses duke on militias and the military's it is a hell of committing more acts of extrajudicial killings on the civilians they are meant to protect than the armed groups their fighting no individual has been a function and. nations so that has generated a general sense of impunity. and a repetition of. 2.3000000 people mostly children are on the move fleeing the violence and the 5000000 are facing hunger and are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance the united nations refugee agency says they are overstretched it's
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a combination of factors all coming together. poverty lack of investments in development for years climate change the action of armed groups of terrorist insurgency weak governments all of this is coming together now what started off as an armed insurgency in northern mali in 2013 has now spread beyond the saheli into togo and ivory coast with attacks being carried out by groups linked to islamic state and al-qaeda last friday while tens of thousands of demonstrated against their government's inability to protect people from the violence french forces said they killed the leader of al qaeda and islamic magreb. in northern mali you know incident comes as the united nations wants to slash the $1000000000.00 budget of the un peacekeeping operation in mali for failing to deliver peace the mandate of the $14000.00 troop is up for renewal while the united
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nations security council debates the future of the mission bully and his family wondered not when but if it will be able to return home nicholas hawke al-jazeera. a bomb has ripped through a crowd of worshipers at a mosque in kabul at least 5 people are dead including the amount who was leading friday prayers failure contre for the reports in the afghan capital. the shares sussudio mosque was packed with worshippers for friday prayers when an explosion ripped through it killing several people according to the afghan ministry of interior the explosives were placed inside the mosque some witnesses say they tried to help the injured president of the by 7 i was doing my. job with them as when i entered the mosque i saw all the injured people the man was killed on the spot we started to carry the dead bodies as well as the injured and then they didn't allow us to go inside the mosque. the taliban has denied responsibility for
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the attack explosion comes days after another mosque in kabul was targeted a mom was killed and i still claimed responsibility the government and afghans alike have condemned the attacks on these places of worship. by the. general that this is how the terror is a polo ending in targeting holy places like mosques we condemn this attack and it's against any rule of fighting the attack happened at a critical moment for afghanistan peace talks between the taliban and the afghan government are closer than ever some saying they'll start within weeks and as attacks some places of worship increase so is the concern that spoilers like myself could try to undermine the political process everyone involved in the negotiations says they must be prevented from doing so for your country free al-jazeera kabul.
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and u.s. judge's order of police and cea seattle to temporarily stop using tear gas pepper spray and flash bang devices to break up peaceful protests the city has seen wide. spread and to racism rallies after the killing of george floyd many activists calling for police reform some demonstrators have taken over a 6 block area that's completely free of law enforcement's particle hane has the latest. for weeks the streets of seattle were consumed by chaos day after day of protesters facing projectiles and heavily armed police the police said they were also attacked. the seattle mare ordered a temporary ban on tear down the police used it anyway and then they seemed to give up walking away from this police precinct the city's police chief said it wasn't her decision you fought for days to protect i ask you to stand on that line day and day out to be pelted with project aisles to be screamed at threatened and in some
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cases hurt then to have a change of course nearly 2 weeks in it seems like an insult to you and our community after they left the protesters claim 6 city blocks as their own calling at the capitol hill autonomous zone or trash is not of an aggressive or violent and that unlike we we didn't come out here for any of that just with those black lives killed by the police we want people to see that those lives matter it reportedly has the feel of a festival the protesters have planted gardens given out free food hosted long conversations about race relations but the u.s. president donald trump sees this very differently tweeting to the local leaders in part take back your city now if you don't do it i will this is not a game these ugly anarchists must be stopped immediately move fast the democratic governor responded writing what we will not allow are threats of military violence
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against washingtonians coming from the white house the u.s. military serves to protect americans not the fragility of an insecure president and the city's mayor also responded demanding we do better. there is a society and provide any true equity for communities of color is not terrorism it is patriotism it's unclear if the police will move in to take back their building as the 2 sides remain locked in a standoff a peaceful one for now paddy cocaine. the governor of the u.s. state of new york has signed a package of sweeping police reforms in response to those nationwide protests andrew cuomo says police will be held more accountable there is no quick fix to this there is no more well stop tear gas. change the uniforms that's not with this is about my friends and it would be a mistake if we went down that path this is systemic reform of police
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departments this is sitting down and taking a look at exactly what they do and have been doing and looking at it through a new lens of reform and reinvention because this has been 4050 years in the making a statue of britain's war torn wartime leader winston churchill is just one to have been boarded up ahead of anti-racism protests expected in london this weekend the contras prime minister says the marchers have been hijacked by extremists after monuments or attacked but as the day in baba reports it's opened up a debate about who still deserves to be remembered and how. a reflection of a wider debate raging in britain black lives matter supporters arguing with opponents by the statue of winston churchill opposite the u.k. parliament it was boarded up because of fears it could be targeted by protesters now the prime minister's called the need to protect monuments observers and
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insisted people should not be protesting what's happened with these these demonstrations is that a tiny minority or achieve a growing minority unfortunately have hijacked. and they are using them as a pretext to attack the police to to cause violence and to cause damage to public property so my unforeseen my message to everybody is that for all sorts of reasons why they should not go to these demonstrations. last weekend's demonstrators in the city of bristol pull down a statue of 17th century slave it would cost him it's now been retrieved from the river will be housed in a museum some commentators have suggested britain should leave such monuments up as a reminder of the evils of the past the local man disagrees statues you know in a not themselves do not do the job of teaching assistant you know if you were to try and base your historical knowledge of person on the statue of coast and you
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were using that in the paper i'd give you an 8 because it tells you he was a wise and to a son of the city but that's not the full story is and at the latest anti-racism protest in central london there was little sympathy for boris johnson stunts i'm not sort of for ripping going around and ripping down statutes but i think i mean people need to ask them selves releases serious questions about who we stop what we hold up a standard bearer i mean some parts and you people in munich i want to have a not just of the what other people do as we summon complain about how we're trying to get a message across so we pay taxes and i feel like that's one of the best face that mr president knows to listen too much to 70 things other people are just ignoring yeah these protests have given people a chance to a grievances about perceived police brutality and discrimination in britain right now but they've also opened up a debate about how the country remembers its past and who it chooses to celebrate
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the protesters say it's about opening up difficult discussions not just closing down symbols of oppression. al-jazeera london all nobody knows. where the next epidemic will come from but scientists in cambodia are preparing for a clinical trial of a universal vaccine against mosquito borne viruses they believe that the insects alive are could be the key to stopping the next health crisis several hire out explains. their small they suck your blood and their bites today's the saliva from these mosquitoes could help save lives scientists are dissecting them in this lab just outside cambodia's capital and they're extracting this through lines in the age of protein in an attempt to create one vaccination against all mosquito borne diseases but luckily. we have more than 8 an incubator the mosquito saliva gland if we see a yellow color it means that the patient has developed antibodies against the
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protein in this alone very. only existing vaccines inject a small dose of the pathogen like malaria is an antidote but this type of vaccine is unique enough to uses the carrier in this case in the ski to to train our immune system to recognize proteins in the mosquito saliva and then respond by weakening or even preventing the infection but most. 'd then only inject the viruses and other pathogen but also they inject certain level herbs and those routinely left bacteria and viruses also on into the human body so this study has been working on . finding those proteins that are going to say you care about is a predator and using that one as a vaccine and destroy it appeared that it induces strong immune response has been very little side effect we just certainly in hundreds of thousands of people die every year for mosquito borne diseases and more than half the world's population
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lives in areas where one type of species transmits multiple diseases including. meaning only one type of vaccination would be needed to protect us from mosquitoes one of the most dangerous insects in the world and scientists believe that they are getting closer to finding a way to prevent the next epidemic saddle height at al-jazeera. over the last 60 years more than 200000 south korean children have been adopted tracing their birth parents is notoriously difficult but one woman's search has led to a landmark ruling so a court has officially recognized cara boss as they daughter of her biological father she was adopted by an american family at the age of 2 but was refused help when she attempted to locate her birth parents many koreans up to use face legal restrictions when trying to trace their roots friday's ruling means boss will be able to access official records on her father's family. i think this is momentous
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for all of us adoptees just to have a right. to. the struggles that we face with not having any rights whatsoever to be able to contact their families and i hope this can change and hurry up i hope. no one else gets to go through what i did to be able to come behind these details of knowing just up fundamental rights of whom my parents are and for my family. hello again the headlines on al-jazeera india has reported a record daily increase of coronavirus cases making it the world's 4th worst hit country with cases almost hitting 300000 hospitals appear to be under strain shops and factories have been reopened even as reports emerged of people being denied medical treatments and bodies not being disposed off properly brazil's coronavirus
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death toll has surpassed the u.k. making it the 2nd highest in the world more than 41800 people have died and over 828000 infected scientists have described president also there as a response of the virus as incompetence. the governor of the u.s. state of new york has signed a package of sweeping reform bills in response to a nationwide protest against police brutality andrew cuomo says officers will be held more accountable the death of george floyd last month sparked calls for justice across the world but. there is no quick fix to this there is no no well stop here gas. change the uniforms that's not with this is about my friends and it would be a mistake if we went down that path this is systemic reform of police departments this is sitting down and taking
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a look at exactly what they do and have been doing and looking at it through a new lens of reform and reinvention because this has been 4050 years in the making libya's national oil company says it's lost more than 5000000000 dollars since january it was forced to put exports on hold at its largest field this week after it was shut down again libya's oil fields are close the latest battles between the u.s. backed government and fighters loyal to warlords after a bomb has ripped through a mosque in the afghan capital couple of things 5 people are dead including the a man who is leading friday prayers those are the headlines on al-jazeera counting the cost is coming up next looking at china's grip on hong kong and the rise of virtual jobs thanks for watching by. rewind i can bring your people back to life i'm sorry. but on the best of
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al-jazeera documentaries. from back till now use distance rewind continues with baltimore and nationally of an american city close friends who are lost to the streets i can literally see the future of baltimore to the ass of my students and it does not the rewind on al-jazeera. this is counting the cost on al-jazeera a weekly look at the world of business and economics this week india prime minister narendra modi rushes through the labor reforms as the pandemic and his own economic failures crash the indian jobs markets also from a trade war to a new cold war china time whose its grip on hong kong the united states sanctions chinese officials through it all can hong kong remain aged.
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