tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera August 25, 2020 10:00am-10:34am +03
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to break out of this dream on out is there understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world so no matter when you call home we'll bring you the news and current affairs that matter to you. violent demonstrations in several u.s. cities after the police shooting of an unarmed black man and scones. and there i missed on the attack and this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up. waiting for justice we need the rain to refugees desperate to return home 3 years after myanmar's brutal crackdown. the e.u. demands an independent investigation after doctors confirm a prominent russian opposition leader was poisoned. plus hong kong reports the 1st
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known case of a repeat coronavirus infection raising new questions about private 19. now the police shooting of a black man 7 times has brought protest as a back to the streets of several u.s. cities crowds of come out in new york minneapolis and the city of commercial wisconsin where that shooting happened on sunday. as you can see tear gas was fined to force backgrounds who defied overnight curfew what is in that city demonstrators also set fire to cars and garbage trucks used to block roads the national guard was brought in earlier in the day off to violent protests on sunday 29 year old jacob blake was shot in the back as he leaned into his s.u.v. john hendren reports from. think about the border once again
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a local mayor struggles to answer for the put on a shooting of a black mayor all that no matter. how you are wrong. lately or wrong the shooting captured on mobile phone is difficult to watch jacob blake apparently on normed walks around his s.u.v. his 3 children unseen inside seeming to ignore the police following behind at the door an officer grabs him by the shirt his back to police. police fires 7 shots. the shooting set off a night of protests in the streets the city blocking roads with garbage trucks demonstrators set them on fire leaving behind charred chances including a neighboring car lot and a message on a courthouse wall and be clear this was not an accident this wasn't bad police work this felt like some sort of been dead a being taken out on a member of our community the officers daily actions attempted to take
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a person's life in broad daylight the shooting drew condemnation from presidential candidate joe biden who issued a statement saying the nation wakes up yet again with grief and outrage that yet another black american is a victim of excessive force these shots pierce the soul of our nation. blake survived and is in stable condition jacob blake's lawyer says he parked his car and got out at this corner in order to break up a street fight and as he sought to deescalate a conflict police for reasons that remain unexplained treated him as a threat. the shooting of jacob blake adds to the anger over police brutality that erupted following the death of george fluid in minneapolis. and briana taylor in louisville kentucky the outrage that reverberated across the u.s. now engulfing can no ship ellis is now a word i sobbed. i just had to gather my thoughts for
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a moment i can't speak for the carcase the community maybe is surprising to me it's not surprising to me despite a curfew in the arrival of the military troops of the national guard to control the streets protesters are continuing their demonstrations demanding an end to a cycle of official violence against black americans in confrontations with police that could have ended peacefully but didn't john hendren al jazeera can no show wisconsin. now today marks 3 years since me a lost art had a brutal campaign against range of muslims which the un described as a textbook example of ethnic cleansing hundreds of thousands of ranger fled and now almost a 1000000 people remain displaced in neighboring bangladesh unable to return home. reports. for the rohingya one of the world's most persecuted minorities it often feels like the storms never end as monsoon rains threaten to wash away what little
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these refugees have to hold on to. the letter mother water enters into our shelter and then worms get under our maps defacing so many problems. your kids rebuilds and reinforces as best she can but that brings little relief she knows full well the heart will flood again and realizes that in a life full of temporary fixes the only real constant for her is sadness there's a lot of them my heart burns for my country the whole night and day and i try to sleep at night to sleep doesn't come and stood my mind goes to man. it's been 3 years since me and morris military launched a brutal crackdown against the rangar in iraq on a state. a campaign of mass killings rapes and arson that was quickly deemed by the united nations to be a textbook example of ethnic cleansing and one that forced close to 800000 routing
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across the border into southern bangladesh me and more denies charges of genocide at the international court of justice saying its armed forces were conducting legitimate operations against what they called militants who attacked police posts which in the ensuing years bangladesh and me and more have attempted voluntary rohingya refugee repatriations but refugees have refused to go back and observers say conditions remain unsafe for their return. with life at a standstill for their hunger the makeshift camps grew into the world's largest refugee settlement and conditions became ever more dire their 1st sections on every aspect of their head to a refugee is lives the same clear to sections on freedom of movement restrictions on access to live a hood and of course there's internet and communication restrictions right now rahmatullah like many other refugees used to get a lot more work. that was before covert 950 measures forced aid agencies to reduce
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their presence in the camps these days he takes any job he can look at right. now because of the current a virus we can't go anywhere we're not getting work opportunities of n.g.o.s has made our living conditions much tougher. community leader abdul hamid says the time has come for the rohingya to get the justice they deserve. and that we are very thankful to bangladesh and its public for hosting us but we don't want to stay here any more we want to go to our place no one expects that will happen soon but that won't stop the adults from searching for a solution and it won't keep the children from finding ways to play for in these camps the suffering may be apparent but the resilience is abundant. that's now speak to mohammed john jay has reported extensively on the force displacement of their attention from myanmar he joins us now here and well you've spent so much time in those camps it really doesn't feel like a lot's changed. it hasn't nastasia i'll tell you the 1st time that i went for
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a reporting trip to bangladesh cox's bazaar which is home of the world's largest refugee settlement now the 1st day the my team and i went into those makeshift camps we came across a woman named jarring a refugee who just arrived she disc a privilege in rakhine state she just arrived in bangladesh she was trudging through the mud barefoot with an extremely distraught look on her face and we asked her what she was doing she was searching for a family member she'd been separated from but she told us that she would be glad to have stayed in me and more to have stayed in her home in iraq kind state if only the military hadn't been burning their homes and raising their villages and shooting them and their children and that really gave me a sense of just how bad things were across the border this is a sentiment that i hear reflected even today to the refugees with whom i speak constantly they say they would love to go back they're thankful that bangladesh has
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allowed them to stay but they say conditions are not yet safe enough across the border in their homeland for them to return in fact many rights groups have said that there is an ongoing genocide against their hang in man mark to this day now there are these mechanisms there is a case at the international court of justice there is an investigation at the international criminal court you know these take time these investigations and these cases and while there were refugees that i've been speaking with over the years are glad that these cases are in these forums that these investigations are taking place they also don't expect that they will get justice any time soon and that's one of the reasons they continue especially on days like today which they call genocide day they continue to press for the international community to do more to put pressure on me and more so that one day they can return home safely and get
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the rights that. they say they deserve it mohammed you touched on in your report that we have seen some positive tests in the camps let me ask how have they been weathering the pandemic so it's been very difficult and one of the reasons for that is because there's not a lot of testing be done there's not a lot of testing being done in those camps and cox is bizarre there's not a lot of testing being done throughout desh actually that's a problem throughout the whole country and that's one of the reasons why many of the aid workers that i've spoken with while they're seemingly glad that kobe it hasn't had the kind of toll on the refugees that they initially feared it might have and might still have they believe that there could be a lot more cases in those camps than they know about there have been dozens of cases there have been deaths but there's still a very few amount of tests being done per day per week per month and beyond that a lot of the rohingya refugees who were so traumatized back in may and more they're
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afraid to go to these health care centers that have been set up by aid groups in the camps in bangladesh they fear the stigma that will cause in their community they're also fearful of the medical profession because of what happened to them in myanmar throughout their lives and especially before they fled. they just face so much trauma that it's very difficult for them to be able to intrust the medical profession there to take care of them even though there are these groups that are trying to build trust with the community and trying to encourage them to come to those health care centers if they don't feel well now correspondent mohammed john jane the history of course it extensively on the hinge on muslims and will continue to do so i thank so much more. well now the 1st documented case of a patient being reinfected with the corona virus has been reported in hong kong researches at the university of hong kong say effect she 3 year old man fell sick again 4 months after his 1st bout in march but scientists say he is suffering from
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a different strain of the virus and unlike his 1st infection the 2nd time around he actually didn't have any symptoms researches have suggested that patients who recover from the corona virus immune to reinfection but antibody levels can fall after a few months the world health organization warns against jumping to conclusions based on just one case well julie fish as an associate research professor of microbiology and immunology as well as director of the elizabeth griffin program at the georgetown university medical center and she says this latest development suggests that re infection in patients can happen without any symptoms being present. it's so it's not so much a mutation as the virus is error prone when it replicates mistakes get introduced into its genome and over time to virus sort of drifts away so that there are distinct families and that's what appears to have happened in this case it appears that he was previously infected with with a variant
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a strain that was circulating in the u.s. in march and that the most recent. re infection was with a newer strain that's circulating in europe currently and what it means is that it confirms that even though people do make antibodies while they are infected which is a sign of immunity that waning immunity may allow them to be infected again the interesting thing news here is that this was actually caught by a screening a mandatory screening at an airport and the single case do not have any symptoms at all so it's very difficult to extrapolate that to the whole population but it tells us that it's possible that that for just infection does confer protection against severe disease but it clearly does not mean that the that once a person has recovered that they are protected from ever becoming infected again and it's clear that they may be able to transmit the virus to others even though
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they themselves are not showing any symptoms. still ahead here on al-jazeera trapped under the rubble the search continues for more than a dozen people buried on this building comes to. $72.00 think times that a massacre and mexico are amended 10 years on. hello there is still plenty of nice warm sunshine across europe as you would expect for this time of year but the level of rain and cloud around is what he called a stream of cloud across eastern areas and then quite some miles on its way up towards the u.k. but when you combine sunshine a warm temperatures this is what you seem to find moldova people enjoying a cooling fountain the same scenario across into geneva in switzerland look at this in spain as well in the south people again cooling off and those cool water is not
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much of europe on tuesday is mostly clear we've got that rain further to the east work its way with you all the way from scandinavia through the baltics right down to the balkans and then you know this mass here heading across the u.k. now there are warnings in place as you might expect with a storm like this across the u.k. very heavy amounts of rain and some pretty strong winds they could be gusting to about 70 kilometers an hour and look at this just sweeps across the whole country the rain fairy heavy through northern england up through scotland but it moves pretty swiftly on words as we go through wednesday but then take surveyed in the strong winds through the low countries and in particular some very strong winds through northern areas of germany so elsewhere on wednesday more of that rain working its way further east but really the bulk of the continent is fine and dry the next few days then we will see some rain showers in london but not a bad day on wednesday and then the sunshine remains across madrid. frank assessments what are you seeing back in yemen the 6 percent of the new poll
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elation and why it didn't suit this is an informed opinion which is ethiopia on the verge of a breakdown many parts of the omeo region are actually under a de facto state of emergency and critical debate after is a proxy because of the recent enters the bill if you feel an in-depth analysis of the day's global headlines inside story on al-jazeera. let's remind you about top stories this hour anger over the shooting of a black man by police has prompted even more demonstrations in several u.s.
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cities crowds in defiance of a curfew set fire to cars and can osha where that shooting took place demonstrations of also spread to new york and many outlands. it's been 3 years since myanmar launched a brutal campaign that forced hundreds of thousands of range of muslims into neighboring bangladesh almost a 1000000 people remain displaced in crowded camps there. and the 1st documented case of a patient being reinfected with the corona virus has been reported in hong kong researchers say a 33 year old man fell sick after returning from spain 4 months after his 1st bout scientists say he's suffering from a different strain of the virus. us president donald trump accused democrats of working to steal the upcoming election the republican national convention got underway speakers railed against what they say is the threat of the democrats radical left this year the republican party has not published its own platform instead valen blanket support for trump's agenda white house correspondent can be
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reports. it was a parade of some of the president's starch his supporters deliberately designed to show diversity. if you care about black lives republican candidate for congress kimberly clay sick who recently went viral for highlighting urban decay in the city of baltimore accused democrats of taking black voters for granted the same cycle of decay exists and many of america's democrat run cities and yet the democrats still assume that black people will vote for them no matter how much they let us down this lawmaker told the convention he's crossing the aisle to vote for trump because . the democratic party does not want black people to leave their mental plantation president trump has scored low marks for his handling of race relations throughout his presidency well not defending the president specifically a former member of trump's cabinet nikki haley
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a daughter of indian immigrants defended america's reputation in much of the democratic party it's now fashionable to say that america is racist that is a lie america is not a racist country speaker after speaker cautioned against the alternative to trump his democratic rival joe biden they say abided presidency would destroy schools and suburbs and crush working people with socialist policies but those warnings included one from the president's son joe biden and the radical left are now coming for our freedom of speech they want to bully us into submission if they get their way it will no longer be the silent majority it will be the silenced majority they want to enslave you to the weak dependent liberal victimized the ology to the point that you will not recognize this country or yourself. after appearing in person at
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the convention during the day on monday from made to appearances improve recorded sessions from the white house to honor frontline workers fighting kovac and with former american hostages who he helped to bring back from other countries republicans are promising even more appearances from president trump including on the final night of the convention will accept his party's nomination for right here at the white house once again breaking with political tradition kimberly health at al-jazeera the white house. search and recovery efforts underway in india to fire. and at least 18 people still trapped in the rubble of a collapsed building 2 people were killed when the 5 story apartment building collapsed on monday and the 16 people have been rescued because of the accident is unclear but there's been heavy rainfall there in the past few days well let's speak to him his but the problem she is following all the developments for us from new
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delhi is just how is the rescue operation going now. so well the rescue operation is still very much ongoing more than 15 hours after the building collapsed on monday night the national disaster response force fire brigade sniffer dogs are still on the scene they have rescued tens of people so far from the rubble of a 5 story building which had 45 apartments and around here the family thought to have lived there now the official from the disaster force of this is what's called a pancake collapse that's when the highest. on the lower floors several of the injured have been taken to the state capital in mumbai around 160 kilometers away for treatment now building collapses in the state of mind a common during the monsoon season due to heavy rain a building collapse last week in mumbai killed one person last month heavy rain rain led to the collapse of another building killing 9 people but these are usually
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very old and very dilapidated structures this building wasn't it's thought to be around just 10 years old and that's why local police have registered a case against 5 people including the builder the architect and the contractor and the local politician who represents the area of the hardware the building because he said that if any government officials are involved in allowing the construction of a shoddy building that strict action will be taken against them too but for now the priority very much for remains trying to find 18 people who are feared to be trapped under this rubble. and as a person i'm there for us in the capital new delhi thank you very much says now the afghan taliban is claiming responsibility for a car bomb explosion which killed at least 2 people a military unit was targeted in the northern province of baloch that blast also injured several others including women and children. the e.u.
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has called on russia to launch an independent and transparent investigation into the poisoning of opposition leader alexina valmy doctors in germany have confirmed test results do show the kremlin critic was poisoned he is now in an induced coma at a hospital in berlin after being transferred from siberia on sunday a long time opponent of president vladimir putin collapsed on a plane on thursday after he drank a cup of tea a tomsk airport professor alastair hay is an environmental toxicology expert he thinks the substance that was likely used on of on the is an atory s. nerve agent not easily accessible to the general public those are the preserve of generally of governments the nerve agents there are a variety sarin reeling off some names here now sarin taboo on the compound the x. that was used on the north korean leader's half brother in malaysia and killed him
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. those substances are all what you would find within governments they're all strictly regulated and there shouldn't be any in general circulation not the truck type chemicals also fall into that category they're ones where you would expect it to come from some government source very unlikely for an individual to have it although it is not beyond the ability of competent chemists with good facilities good protection in their laboratories for the person making that substance for them to be able to make it. and california firefighters says racing to prepare for lightning storms which could wesson hundreds of wildfires that among those burning already are the state's 2nd and 3rd largest ever blazes nearly a quarter of a 1000000 people have been told to evacuate as our reports from los angeles.
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packing up and getting out richard camacho of sonoma county is part of a mass exodus of northern california residents fleeing raging wildfires we're living in where times are now in this i mean 5 years back there was no fires every year and now it seems like every year's record record fires every year the fires of august are among the largest ever reported in the state with an $800.00 homes are reported destroyed with 25000 more structures at risk more than $40000.00 hectares of land have been scorched the l n you lightning complex fire stretching across 5 counties is now 20 percent contained according to the california fire agency cal fire it like 2 dozen major fires in the state was started by lightning strikes from dry thunderstorms the fire concentration the challenge that we're facing here in the state is now
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disproportionately impacting northern california and that is because of close to 12000 lightning strikes that we experienced over a 72 hour period lightning sparked fires ravage giant redwood trees in california's oldest state park the big basin redwood state park in santa cruz county was established in 19 to now historic structures and a museum lie in ruins. more than 1700 firefighters and support crews are trying to contain the blazes many of which are burning in rugged inaccessible to rain reinforcement crews have arrived from arizona montana nevada texas and utah president donald trump approved a major disaster declaration making federal funds available for recovery efforts in addition to nature's fury residents of the fire zone have also to contend with human mendacity law enforcement authorities reported looting of vacated homes one
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thief broke into a firefighters car and stole his wallet it takes a special person to wake up in the morning and say you know what i'm going to go to victimize and traumatize people who have already been through everything that this community has been through more dry thunderstorms are forecast for northern california rob reynolds al-jazeera los angeles. 10 years ago and mexico at the z. says 72 migrants at a remote ranch and. the only survivor said they died because they refused to work for the gang that killing shocks mexico are now in the massacres and they're being remembered as john holmes reports from mexico city. these photos are all that's left from the massacre of 72 migrants in mexico 10 years ago they were mostly central americans crossing mexico to reach the u.s. when a criminal group lined them up and shot them in this ranch. and there's
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a story behind each step this is glenda made that iran knows she was a 23 year old student heading to the states to make money for her family we talked to her mom mina back in the family home in el salvador. in the end she didn't want me to have to keep selling flowers and she said mom i want to go to haiti used to fix up the house. mexico has moved on since glenda died warring gangs have committed a host of other atrocities but for me in the in a way 10 years ago time stopped when my business in this day had this pride and the being together at the table and. even when a smile but you cook for the family there's always the potion for that child and we try to forget that we never really think of them. this sunday the pope remembered
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the killing his scream when i'm yes only then i express my study diety to the families of the victims who still today are calling for justice and truth the lord will ask for a reckoning for all the migrants who perished in journeys of home. and on the weekend activists put up a monument on mexico city's main of the new owner in the 72 migrants he's known email ribbon or if they peer anything that we have in our country that remain of the battle is diagrams and asylum seekers who are trying to have a safe like. mexico's policy since 2014 has been to try and stop migrants from getting in a tool it's getting harder for migrants to cross mates go on the per. sure from the united states the country's really tightened its southern border but activists say that means that those who do good for a force to use eval or remote routes to cross the country not least and vulnerable
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to criminal groups. especially in tama lipa stay with the 72 were killed a decade old the same dangers exist for migrants john home out to sea to screw city . and again this is out of there and these are the headlines and over the shooting of a black man by police has prompted more demonstrations in several u.s. cities crowds in defiance of mcafee set fire to cars in connection where that shooting took place demonstrations have also spread to new york and minneapolis it's been 3 years since me and my launched a brutal campaign that forced hundreds of thousands of range of muslims and to neighboring bangladesh almost a 1000000 people remain displaced and crowded camps mohammed janjigian has the same say they would love to go back there thankful that bangladesh has allowed them to stay but they say conditions are not yet safe enough across the border in their
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homeland for them to return in fact many rights groups have said that there is an ongoing genocide against they were hanged in myanmar to this day now there are these mechanisms there is a case at the international court of justice there is an investigation at the international criminal court you know these take time these investigations and these cases the 1st documented case of a patient being reinfected with the corona virus has been reported in hong kong researches say a 33 year old man fell sick after returning from spain 4 months after his fastpass and notch scientists say he's suffering from a different strain of the virus. germany has issued travel warnings for 2 regions and france including the capital paris the 2 regions which also interviewed parts of the french riviera now considered high risk it comes as france and other parts of europe seeing rising numbers of new infections. search and recovery efforts are
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underway in india to find at least 18 people still trapped in the rubble of a building collapse 2 people were killed when the 5 story apartment building collapsed on monday at least 60 people have been rescued because of the accident is unclear but there has been heavy rainfall in the past few days. the afghan taliban is claiming responsibility for a car bomb explosion which killed at least 2 people a military unit was targeted in the northern province of baloch. and the e.u. has called on russia to launch an independent and transparent investigation into the poisoning of opposition leader and that scene of the doctors in germany have confirmed test results do show the kremlin critic was poisoned well those are the headlines i'll be back with another news update for you here on al-jazeera after inside story stay with us. history has called it the great in the final episode the 2 sides fight themselves to a standstill while britain and france conspire behind closed doors to produce
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a secret agreement that will shape the middle east for the century to come world war one through our of us on al-jazeera. e.u. countries using that coded 19 emergency to clamp down on refugees if laying greaser accused of being more hostile to migrants during the pandemic is another humanitarian crisis in the mediterranean on the way this isn't a story. hello welcome. italy and greece of long complained of being overwhelmed by undocumented migrants desperate to get into europe the e.u. members are the main landing points for refugees and asylum seekers crossing the mediterranean sea for no.
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