tv Masters No More Al Jazeera September 27, 2020 4:00am-5:00am +03
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just so that the intervention is one of the few where you will see patients like this series at least 10 years younger than she was yesterday just within 24 hours on al-jazeera. forming a. fully back to bill in doha with a look at our main stories on al-jazeera a days after the death of supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg us present donald trump has officially nominated amy connie barrett to replace her support meant would add another conservative voice to the bench further shifting the court's balance of power to the right for decades to come trump says barrett's confirmation will be very quick and straightforward but democratic presidential candidate joe biden has a senate to wait until after the election a president trump as a squad barret as someone who will issue a ruling space on a fair reading of the law. we must preserve our priceless heritage of
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a nation of laws and there is no one better to do that that amy kone barrett law and order is the foundation of the american system of justice no matter the issue no matter the case before her i am supremely confident that judge barrett will issue rulings based solely upon a fair reading of the law she will defend the sacred principle of equal justice for citizens of every race color religion and created by me connie barrett has promised to serve all americans if confirmed i would not assume that role for the sake of those in my own circle and certainly not for my own sake i would assume this role to serve you. i would discharge the judicial oath which requires me to administer justice without respect to persons due equal rights to the poor and rich
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and faithfully and impartially discharge my duties under the united states constitution or democrats were quick to react senate minute minority leader chuck schumer says smalls goes against the wishes of the late justice ruth bader ginsburg . judge ginsburg at a dying wish. that the next president to. justice ginsburg must be turning or over in a grave up in heaven to see that the person they chose seems to be intent on undoing all the things that ginsburg did. i would strongly strongly strongly oppose this nomination. in other news lebanon's prime minister designate. it comes less than a month after he was given the task of forming a government he says he hasn't been able to form
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a government government of specialists in a country where power is shed along sectarian lines and government protests have taken place in egypt for 7 straight day at least one person has been killed in the rallies against corruption a deteriorating economy poor living conditions and the demolition of neighborhoods in a notable change from past demonstrations these protests are happening in smaller cities like giza and solidarity protests have been held in italy and the netherlands people gathered in milan and the hague calling on president abdel fatah sisi to resign. in an address to the united nations general assembly the foreign minister of venables has blamed western countries for weeks of anti-government demonstrations following president on examine look at this controversial reelection . zuma speech means brimming with cynicism have been made by a series of our western colleagues about their alleged concern for belorussians sovereignty and well being in actual fact they are nothing other than attempts to
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bring chaos and anarchy to our country to make a bell or lose many years of development we call on our partners to demonstrate wisdom restraint and impartiality. north korea has warned of a south not to enter its territorial waters as it searches for the body of a south korean official south korea's military says a knoll shot the man at sea then burned his body north korean leader kim jong il in a shoot a rare apology describing the killing as a disgraceful events in mexico investigators have issued arrest warrants for military members who could be lengths to the disappearance of dozens of students in 2014 it comes as relatives of the victims stage another notch protest in mexico city those are the headlines on al-jazeera i'll have more news for you after a struggle on the i.
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also one of tension even potential conflict. for centuries egypt has sought to be most of the not. seeking to tame the rivers some predictable flow until ensure exclusive control over its use. but today the country's upstream not challenging this dominance and of pushing for a greater say and a greater share the river nile. cairo capital of egypt. a teeming metropolis. that has grown on the banks of the nile. was.
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it's the 1st day of spring when egyptians for movements of life. flocked to the river. to celebrate the arrival of the new season. with a kid to america feel the view of good and mostly every egyptian wants live by the nile as a football field and if they can't then at least they can sit and picnic there then the slug you know it's the place of their dreams and mahmoud everybody from young lovers the troubled souls come here for different reasons either to enjoy themselves or to wash away their pain to see for him not. the ancient greek writer who wrote it has described egypt as being the gift of the
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nile it was a fitting description. we made to cities that run along and are only there because of the nile and the novels and it would just be another part of the so hard that you know it would just be dust and sand you couldn't live without and it is the life blood. attached to this source of life 95 percent of the egyptian population lives along its banks just 5 percent of egypt's land the rest just desert. the nile maybe most commonly associated with egypt. but its waters begin their journey thousands of kilometers upstream. there are 2 main sources of the river. one is the great lakes of eastern africa. and the other
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is in the ethiopian highlands where the majority of the nile waters originate. this is the summer rainy season in ethiopia. the rainfall forms gushing rivers and tributaries. they collect here in like ton. ethiopia's largest lake and a main source of the nile. the 600 year old monastery is situated on one of the lakes many islands. decorated with biblical
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paintings it belongs to the ethiopian orthodox church. the custody of the monastery adult it is believed the nile holds magical powers and is a kin to god. patten as an unworldly and bang of the nile is one of the 4 rivers mentioned in the holy bible that feeds heaven and i know that. the nile gives us as well as other countries like egypt all sorts of benefits mithun are you going to have and that. water isn't the nile's only get. the surging streams in ethiopia turn red would suit washed from the volcanic to turn. this silt rich in nutrients
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and minerals is born downstream. it was to prove a blessing for the 1st settlers in the nile valley thousands of years ago. each year rainfall in ethiopia caused the nile downstream to flood its banks in what is today egypt. this unusual phenomenon known by the ancient egyptians as the inundation was celebrated as a divine event. it was day find in the form of a god known as hobby. in minimum a most how happy if you look at the pictures of this character and graves on the walls of egypt's temples you find that have is their strange character on the whole he's a man with large breasts but not a woman welcome most of the caribbean he also has a petroleum belly so these 2 characteristics symbolize fertility and generosity
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granted by the nile xeon locals who what. was the key gift. when the nile flood receded the rich silt carried by the river remained behind fertilising the soil creating arable land in stark contrast to the surrounding desert. ancient egypt was the birthplace of agriculture. techniques developed thousands of years ago. are still in use to this day. early thunder in the herd envelop dylan was with still used the old plough the one pulled by cutting for there are many cracked it here my uncle has attacked my neighbor has what everybody has attacked and that would what a one at any thought but i pray. the traditional method.
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the pharaohs have long since passed from the stage of history but some of their legacy and years. from time immemorial the river has been a subject of adoration. and diana news all found a full mile all bountiful in iowa old bountiful mile ancient egyptians exult of the river nile there's an old chant that goes people don't eat jewels they eat the bread made from the wheat that grew on the banks of the river nile and. but there's a duck aside to this love of the nile. such adoration can lead to possessiveness. to the egyptians the nile is unquestionably their river
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above and beyond the claims of any other nile basin country. by the early 1906 great britain ruled the length of the nile. egypt was strategically crucial as the suez canal controlled access to india the jewel in the crown of the british empire. to co-opt the allies in 1929 britain awarded the egyptians exclusive control of the nile to phuket does our issued in the 1929 agreement stated that egypt had the right to veto any project on the nile that would affect its share of the waters or the flow of the river to the north towards egypt. this stipulation was based on the fact that egypt comes. lethally depends on the nile waters while the upstream countries
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have other water sources. 30 years later in 1959 a 2nd agreement was signed. for huge from colonial over rule egypt and sudan agreed on dividing the rivers waters. during the 1960 s. african nations upstream gained independence. nowadays these countries are challenging agreements signed when they were under colonial rule. look at the legal instrument and then. if you think you did and so we had 2 countries sit down make us a thing now and i'd need to said then tell what us them said and knowing very well that this what that that they want to share within the 2 countries actually.
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to this day egyptians regard the 929 and 959 agreements as technically binding. egypt has its reasons for wanting to uphold the treaties. that share of the nile waters has remained at 55 and a half 1000000000 cubic meters a stipulated in the 1959 agreement. however since then egypt's population has tripled to over 80000000. taking the country into water poverty. lift the figure that had been at these agreements give us a minimum amount of water. less than what we actually need we aren't homing any of the nile basin countries they don't need to know while they get their water from nature. annual amount of rainfall at the sources of the normal is $1.00 trillion
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cubic meters egypt and sudan use less than 5 percent of this amount the rest that's 95 percent is lost through evaporation in the swamps. but sometimes rainfall is not enough. famine has ravaged states through which the nile flames. here in ethiopia one of the river sources the failure of the annual rains has led to catastrophe in the past. millions have died. beyond such tragedy upstream states claim the past agreements violate their national sovereignty and prevent them harnessing the river for their own
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development. i know that some people in egypt. fashion i.d.'s. fashion i.d.'s based on the assumption that the night of the longs to and egypt and that egypt has a right to decide us for all gets what of the night water and the countries that are unable to use the night water because it will be unstable and because doing before. this circumstances have changed and changed forever. the change came in may 2010 at a meeting going into uganda when the upstream countries took matters into their own hands. in an unprecedented move 6 of the 8 nations signed a new agreement declaring greater autonomy in decision making over the nile's waters aware of the agenda egypt and sudan had refused to attend.
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what was signed an entirely set off alarm bells in cairo. touching the very core of egyptian fear about its water source of law would must it is a red line for egypt's existence. there is a difference between security and existence itself. we are wholly dependent on the nile we have no other water sources. so the truth is that any threat against the nile waters will result in the reduction of egypt's share this with threaten us with thirst and. the specter of a water war looms over the region. for egypt securing the nile waters
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is a matter of national security even if it means military action. a common feeling shared by most egyptians. egypt would die what would we drink about it of course we would fight we would fight anyone who attempts to stop i would force a water. 'd throughout its history egypt has been at the mercy of the nile. along the river columns such as this known as my limit as have been built to measure the height of the waters. controlling the river was of paramount importance. with the well being of the state dependent on the level of
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the annual flood waters. the key was in finding a way to reserve these waters for use during the drives some of periods. the ancient egyptians 1st attempted this. but it was the founder of modern egypt mohamed ali pasha who built the 1st ever down on the nile in the mid 19th century. to this day the old brick dam known as the delta still stands. in a new land as long as i live in the nile was on muhammad ali's agenda it was extremely important because egypt was threatened by drought that if. you wanted more cotton and grain plantations as well since in those days egypt used to export these products to your. muhammad ali himself laid the dams 1st
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stone in 847. but this was only the beginning. as demand for water grew more irrigation projects were completed in the 1st half of the 20th century. but it wasn't until early 1950 s. that egypt began to put in place plans to finally control the nile once and for all . in july 952 a group of army officers carried out a coup d'etat. egypt's king was dethroned then exiled a new regime to power. the main office a behind the coup was jamal abdul nasser we're going to gender to modernize and strengthen egypt. adoptive plans for a massive new dam to be built in southern egypt to harness the full potential of
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the nile. called the last one high dam it would be built on this stretch of river at a cost of some $1000000000.00 u.s. dollars egypt was going to need help. in the beginning britain and the united states went together and told. bank they were supporting them. however that support came with strings attached. egypt was expected to join the western camp. but nasa was his own man. in the cold war setting he was committed to a policy of non-alignment. a policy that displeased the americans. on july 19th 1956 john foster dulles the american secretary of state withdrew the offer to finance the us
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one high dam. nasa would not be intimidated one week later he hit back. with. nasa as decision to nationalize the company that owned the strategic suez canal was a bombshell. the revenues paid by ships passing through the canal could help egypt finance the us one hype that. it was a trump card but it rattled the powers in europe and led to the suez crisis of $956.00. last. britain france and israel conducted
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a joint attack on egypt to win back control of the canal. british and french troops landed in port sight on the northern tip of the suez waterway. but this was as far as they went. fading armies were forced to win. draw on the heavy international pressure from the united nations. egypt's relations with the west was shattered. nasser now look for friends elsewhere. in 1958 egypt signed an agreement with the soviet union for the financing of the hide them 'd almost the russians egypt to realize or 40500000000 finally this was not a question egypt paid back these loans from the suez canal gravelly as reese. with
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the soviet loans nasa inaugurated the start of construction of the us one high down in general 960. the project was immense. it is said that enough rock was used in the construction of the dam to build 17 great pyramids. through the 11 years of construction egyptian saw the dam as a symbol of national pride and defiance to the west. the shop a muslim operetta lot of the egyptian people prove that you here and bracing hide and project we should only they glorify it in their songs in t.v. and radio shows movies plays and everyday activities. that's how it became such an
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icon of the nation in the shop something everybody ready behind. him in. mass or the father of the project never live to see the completion of the dam. just 4 months before construction was finished he died of a heart attack. the opening ceremony in january 1971 was attended by egypt's new president anwar sadat's. the dam save the flow with over 30000000000 cubic meters of floodwater each year water that otherwise would be lost into the mediterranean sea . behind the dam a huge manmade reservoir known as lake massah was created. the
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water held in this lake was egypt's insurance policy against the river's unpredictable flood. they also. gave the egyptians a guarantee that the rain always the water there i mean during the drought. in the night and so it is night and they does. in sudan and i feel go. with you since they could go on cultivating us before because i don't know what behind the down and as well. that perhaps most important thing was that the us run down in the rain that's in my. living now in the. elsewhere the river remained untamed. upstream countries were still at the mercy of the nile and. experiencing at times either famine.
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or devastating floods. but playing with nature was to prove costly for the river and for all those living off it. water an essential resource for all humankind across europe pressure to recognise water as a human right and put its management back into public hands is increasing i think that the european commission would be very very glad to impose water privatization on anybody it's the only fields. those people who see ever to use something to invest a profit of they want are up to the last drop on al-jazeera. if
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you want to help save the world's. poorest. knees and your own. hello again i'm fully back to bill in doha with the headlines on al-jazeera u.s. president donald trump has nominated judge avi connie barrett as this choice to replace an 8 supreme court justice ruth bader ginsberg if she is confirmed by the senate barrett a favorite of religious conservatives would cement a solid conservative majority on the court potentially for decades to come democratic presidential candidate joe biden has just sent it to wait until after the election to confirm her white house correspondent kimberly how cat has. what we've got in front of us is an unprecedented battle in the u.s. senate to confirm judge barrett and the timeline is particularly tight where 38
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days from the u.s. election donald trump knows that he may not win reelection and as a result is very keen to energize his base with this appointment so that's one of the concerns for republicans now we've seen in the past that these can be very contentious hearings particularly as we saw with justice cavanaugh still we know that the initial hearings are planned for some time in the neighborhood of october 12th with a vote to confirm judge barrett happening somewhere around october 29th with just days until the u.s. election. the man picked to be lebanon's next prime minister has resigned less than a month into the job. says he hasn't been able to form a government of specialists in a country where power is shed along sectarian lines anti-government protests have taken place in egypt for a 7th straight day at least one person has been killed in the rallies against corruption in the terry orating economy poor living conditions and the demolition
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of neighborhoods demonstrations this time are happening in smaller cities like d.c. and inside an egypt and solidarity protests have also been held in italy and the meadowlands protesters have been calling on president abdel fatah sisi to resign north korea has won the south not to enter its territorial waters as it is for the body of a south korean official south korea's military says the north shot the man at sea then burned his body korea's leader kim jong un issued a rare apology describing the killing as it is graceful event young young says seoul's naval operations in the area threaten to raise tension between the 2 sides . those are the headlines on al-jazeera will have more news for you after a struggle over the nile. remote area liberia ponderous and cameroon al-jazeera world means full rightism performance. journeys
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to europe have changed their lives. and for as. we we are moving clean persecution seeking a safe haven and creative freedom. from whom journalists and activists on al-jazeera. in the us one high down in. man's greatest ever effort to control the nile. get hold to the annual flood. and stored a huge supply of water 50 gypped behind its great wall. and the dam was hailed as a triumph of engineering and water management. but there was a price to be paid. of the sense that i could be proud to the construction of the
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high down the river nile used to bring $4000000.00 tonnes of fertile silt each year that would deposit on the laptop out of the bubble if it was like a natural fertilizer for tell you ok now. this silt washed from the ethiopian highlands was no longer carried into egypt. it now dropped uselessly to the bed of the manmade reservoir behind the down. deprived of the silt egyptian the farmers today rely increasingly an artificial fertilisers fire and c the only my grandfather and my father used to need only one sack of chemical fertiliser for an acre of land nowadays each acre needs a thief 7 said. the loss of
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natural 30 lety in egypt's farmland was not the only negative repercussion of the us one the high dam. the reservoir formed by the accumulation of waters behind the dam was named lake nasser. today it's one of the largest man. lakes in the world stretching over 500 kilometers. it straddles the borders of egypt and sudan an area known as new bia. situated on the banks of the river nile rubia was home to many ancient temples. but in the 1960 s. during the construction of the us one high dam the rising waters of lake nasser threaten to submerge these monuments.
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the united nations spearheaded an international rescue campaign. more than 20 temples were dismantled stone by stone and relocated to higher ground. the largest of these were the 2 giant temples of abu simbel built by the pharaoh ramses the 2nd. in their new location the temples remain a major tourist attraction in egypt to this day it's. archaeological sites were saved but people living in the area received no such consideration all. the newbie ns
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an ethnic group originating in southern egypt and northern sudan have lived beside the nile for thousands of years. i.e. movie of old newbie and live on the banks of the night the nile is our life like fish and we would die if we left. they saw. this attachment to the river has proved a blessing but also because. during construction of the ass one low dam in 899 the newbie ns were forced to move. they were relocated here on the west bank of the nile in aswan. today the village of hobson hale is the most famous newbie unsettlement
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a place where tourists come seeking a glimpse of a traditional life. which i left. out the mock ali i grew up and worked with my uncle who taught me about sailing on the walk i worked with him into his i'm going to get on the bubble and now i have managed to buy my own small boat house. the newbie and community here has found a new way to make a living from the nile. but a 2nd major displacement of newbie ns was to prove far more dramatic. in may 964 egyptian president jamal abdul nasser and soviet leader nikita khrushchev attended celebrations marking the start of the 2nd stage of building the
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os one high dam. at the push of a button water levels behind the dam rose rapidly. the project was on track but at the expense of over $120000.00 newbie ends in both egypt. in sudan we were forced to move. out as i did that. it was very difficult to be pulled out of our homeland and taken to another place it was very harsh for the displacement my family suffered in the newbie and region was very painful it was a huge sacrifice anything that. they left everything behind many people died among the many children no one was given any time to do anything our people had to leave everything in a rush to catch the boat move. civilization
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dating back thousands of years was up to. the newbie in the school their homeland the land of gold. but it was now gone forever. just a meager sum of money. and a muscle and a world apart with my father to see 36 egyptian pounds in compensation for the house the land and everything else of the. the egyptian and sudanese government's a promise the newbie ends better living conditions. but their new home away from the nile proved far from satisfactory that a little didn't love because and then they moved us into concrete buildings and at a stroke took away our history and civilization they wiped out our identity. they
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took us away from the nile. new beings are only happy when they have decided the nile but not a single resettlement village was by the river. there . are if jamal is a sudanese newbie and he was a child when. the displacement occurred today he teaches african history in america after 50 years when you look at the new land that was acquired by the movie ends or what the new bands were displaced to is a miserable needing where you have an enormous amount of health problems you have very bad logistics and game massive migration but this time they look like refugees. fleeing.
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despite the form a displacement libyans have done their best to keep alive their traditions and their distinctive language. many newbie and song santa ana return to their lost homeland. that dance is inspired by the gentle flow of the nile. you can never forget your homeland the place where you are born and the place where you die we live now in our memories. i am. i.
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there is still a large newby and community in northern sudan which remains on the land of its forefathers on the banks of the nile. but even they are now under threat. in 1992 the sudanese government announced its intention to build a hj. huge hydro power station here in new bia. the planned project known as the catch about dam would use the nile flow to boost sudan's power supply . once again the newbie ns face being sacrificed on the altar of development. there is no solution or environmental assessment to get the communities against it we have talking about 99 villages and on the mind you are talking about one and a half 1000000 people we are talking about 1000000 acres of land we are talking
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about the last. place to just. that people live on we are talking about archaeology that did not even scratch the surface. of. the sudanese government put the project on hold but for the newbie ns it remains an ever present menace. it's just like a nightmare or a threat every now and then we hear the president talking about reviving this project which is. if they build the cars over this would be the last of the wonderful and. environmental and human factors have made many international donors wary of providing loans for large hydrological schemes on the nile.
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but the rise of a new power on the world stage has given new momentum to unconditional lending. china built up its own hydro power industry. and a few years ago they appeared on the global scene. they started funding projects which had before because nobody wanted to touch them. the metal. is one such project. it was officially opened in 2009. by sudanese president omar al bashir and the great celebration. the dam was seen as the solution to the country's shortage of power. its huge turbines using the river
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flow to generate electricity. but the sudanese had initially found it difficult to get the project off the ground. the sudanese government had tried to attract founding from european governments from canada. from other sources for many years and they couldn't succeed because of and by medical concerns and human rights concerns. in 2003 chinese and sudanese officials put pen to paper on an agreement in which china would provide a substantial loan for the building of the marilee dam. but during the construction clashes erupted when the sudanese army moved in to evict locals from villages that were to be submerged by the dams reservoir.
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this was exactly the sort of humanitarian suffering which had influenced many creditors to shy away from financing the dam. in the end the protests came to nothing the project went ahead. as the waters rose behind the some 50000 sudanese had to leave their homes and much of their property. i don't know exactly what i lost everything i had over $101.00 piece is the government going to compensate us if not then i would only compensation is it from allow them that i would i doubt. africa's large dams have not reversed poverty they have not been dramatically
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increased electricity rates they have not dramatically improved water supply for people living there what they have done is help create a small industrial economy that tends to be companies from europe and elsewhere and so these benefits are really really concentrated in a very small island. the number of hydro power stations along the course of the river nile is on the rise. with the exception of egypt the nile basin countries face a chronic shortage of power. large majorities of the populations in these countries do not have access to electricity. uganda is one such example.
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here on the nile close to its outlet from lake victoria there are 2 new hydro power stations. but combined they don't generate enough power for a country with a growing economy and an increasing population. 9 percent of our people have electricity 91 percent don't so we have an aggressive through an official program which is ongoing and new we have a target that in the next 4 years this number which says today 9 percent should rise to 16 percent in the east. the nile in uganda is characterized by high speed rapids and waterfalls.
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a decent living. but these fools are now threatened by the construction of a new dam. turtle is torn between the love of his work and his country's need for electricity. so for my comment about. just good and rough things good so it's for them to know what is good what is bitter between. christie but. our demo man i like erupting so much. i like you know so much. a new hydro power station being built here will flood the rapids and create a manmade reservoir. but the dam will meet only a fraction of the country's electricity requirements. in uganda the
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government is keen to exploit these fast flowing waters to generate power. another hydro power station is planned here further downstream of the karuna fools another project that threatens the natural flow of the river. if you force a lot of the dumbs means you extracting more would. not support and as a result of their lake victoria the liberals when the down more than 2. lake victoria is the largest lake in africa. and one of the most renowned sources of the nile. yet it is slowly and gradually shrinking. the increasing number of hydro power stations on the nile in uganda is drawing ever
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greater amounts of water out of the lake to move the turbines generating electricity. about half of the recent drop in like victoria which has been pretty extreme can be attributed to the stand there basically opened up and now water can be let out at any pace that the government chooses to. 3 countries share the waters of lake victoria. this. is the city of kisumu kenya's main port on the lake and the hub of its fishing industry. for 25 years thomas a good 2 that has fished here. he remembers the days when fish were once plentiful and business was good nowadays
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he's getting a much smaller catch. which we do know north and were raised we don't have enough fish in this lake because all the water is directed to that of a narrow margin and look at those rocks a while back you couldn't see them but now they show how much the water level has dropped and as they build more hydro post ations all the water and all the fish will go to uganda and to the nile looking for you when. the egyptians are content with the water continues to flow on downstream. they accept their nile partners building hydro power plants but they are not prepared to allow upstream countries to build dams that will reduce the amount of water reaching egypt. and i'm a lot of national i want to we don't have hostile intentions against anyone we don't go to war just for the sake of fighting but if someone is going to stop the
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water egypt will die of thirst then we will fight with all means available and get out it will die. as populations increase and economies develop demand for the waters of the nile is intensifying. the question remains who owns the rivers water. perhaps they answer may lie in history. in a bygone era when foreign rulers once controlled the full length of the great river . current tensions between countries along the river nile have their roots in a colonial past from eakins point of view the 9 to 29 agreement political victory for the new political realities on the ground are increasing the sense of
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uncertainty over cohen is that with a mild there was a need to review the other night of how the countries for which the mail was kind of in feet could have a. struggle over the nile on al-jazeera. hello the rain. off the east coast of the carolinas you can see it quite a few hours on a cool off and is the case these thunderstorms have a spawned at least one tornado this these pictures along myrtle beach you can see
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it actually came on shore it didn't cause thankfully and he widespread damage but that's will improve as we go through sunday certainly we've got to carry skies that warming up as well across into the carolinas the rain is back across the southeast in florida and a line of rather heavy rain working its way through the central plains strong winds coming down from canada so strong winds with these rain showers quite cloudy as well and then out across the pacific northwest beginning to clear to the south of the california time which is all set to rise again so the 5 danger is actually on the rise it will strong gusty winds high temperatures and very low humidity meanwhile the eastern half of the united states very unsettled a line of very heavy rain working its way through the midwest and down into the south we've got some very unsettled weather across areas essential america once again panama costa rica. cuba heavy rain that through sunday work its way across into florida and for the next couple of days we'll see scattered showers and thunderstorms across areas of mexico.
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was the promise for the white house 0 tolerance approach the southern border because government policy. children and separating families the stark reality. picture too much to bear for many americans in a country that was built on immigration. all of the key issues of the u.s. elections on al-jazeera. on the counting the cost brazil's economic meltdown. corruption but both are not up. he's on the olives mexican farmers fear what little water they have were given to the united states on the battle to get electric cars off the ground. counting the cost on al-jazeera.
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revealing eco friendly solutions to comeback threats to our planet on al-jazeera the. judge me kone barrett. donald trump nominates a conservative josh of the supreme court and pushes for your vapid senate confirmation ahead of november's presidential election. well you're watching al jazeera live from doha with me for the back to also i.
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