tv [untitled] September 29, 2020 11:30am-12:01pm +03
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$100000000.00 in debt for 20 whatever dollars 1000000 dollars in debt to home different countries what is the leverage they have so for me this is a national security question and you can find much more nor those stories if you head over to our website al-jazeera dot com. and let's take you through some of those headlines down coronavirus deaths of surpassed 1000000 the u.s. brazil and india account for nearly half of the world's coronavirus deaths the u.n. secretary general described it as a mind numbing and agonizing milestone he warned against misinformation and complacency our world has reached an agonizing milestone the loss of 1000000 lives from the coffee in 1000 pandemic it's a mind numbing figure yet we must never lose sight of each and every individual
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life there were fathers and mothers wives and husbands brothers and sisters friends and colleagues the pain this mean multiplied by the 7 minutes of these disease research the infection kept families from bedsides and the process of mourning and celebrating the life was over and made impossible. and says it's taken another village in the in the garden of cut about a region that's after a 2nd night of fighting with armenian forces dozens of people have been killed since violence escalated on sunday the governor cut about his international recognized as part of a survey john but controlled by armenian forces. u.s. house speaker nancy pelosi says financial information about the president revealed in a new york times report is a national security issue don trump has dismissed the allegation he's paid hardly any income tax in the past 15 years he reportedly has hundreds of millions of
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dollars in loans giuffre payment within the next few years but the russian opposition leader. has met the french president during a visit to lithuania she says emanuel macron has promised to help negotiate the release of political prisoners they were detained during weeks of protests in belarus against president alexander lukashenko. amnesty international is stopping all operations in india because of what it calls a witch hunt for human rights group says it's been put under pressure because of its work on indian and minister of kashmir and the riots in delhi the government has accused amnesty of illegally receiving foreign funds those are your headlines the news continues here and now to syria after the stream stay with us. 0. is the government taking the necessary action to really address some of the structural issues we listen i still think that travel is the safest mode of travel
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and to spend that we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter. i actually ok you watching this on this show we have many many discussions about refugees and migrants today we return. on the island of refugees or appealing to help after that refugee settlement can the camp burned to the ground this is how a.j. pos stories. visited back riyadh area no man to man and his art they would never do to.
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find out there are a little problem out. there saying that everybody. needs to be new can be just after one night you want to break from death count. on the family to give matter how much damage the mafia image of the sort of mocking up on the other mock him of the need for such an. if you g.'s in distress again i know you have thoughts on this and experiences as well jumping to the comment section if you are in your own when you too can be part of today's show.
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and i guess it's good to happy i wish it was under better circumstances eva nice to see you tell everybody who you are. i never said i am the grease researcher chimera i want to make up for leap thank you for joining us here on the stream introduce yourself to go local audience and i warrant you did declare your reasons for 5 years and if you watch al jazeera english i know you are no stephanie step introduce yourself to people who don't know. i'm a corresponding with out of their english already and have been here on less falls for just over 2 weeks now. thank you so much that thank you guess good to see you i was watching the news a couple of days ago and there was a report that steph was doing live and he jumped out at me to say just so much about what is possible what is the potential of refugees and migrants potential
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rather than a problem here stay for a couple days ago let's have a. i want to thank you i want to just you're talking about the young generation here there's a lot of these 11 years old. i mean you think. you know you're 11 or so mature we were talking earlier tell me about what's it like. you know it's a bad situation is too hard and you know when i sleep at night i pray that they will attack on us and they will burn now everything with that he had it's too hard you know. that your and we are not there i mean there is no i don't want to stay here any more with my family i want to go to another country i want to have a normal life i want to have but i really i want to go to school can you believe that i have never been to school but you're in love how did you learn english and english is incredible i learned it from internet just by phone on the phone. a lot
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of people have been telling us here also they're trying to learn languages one young gentleman from afghanistan are saying i'm sitting with some somalis and some people from syria and iraq because i want to learn languages and people here want a future i think we really have to remember that when we talk about the numbers of the 12000 refugees that are here who are trying to figure out where to go you know people with dreams with hopes trying to educate themselves they had jobs they fled their homes. he's not a little boy it's a little man how do you tell the story to the well. yes a little mad and i think it's always amazing when you know that lived there it was a half hour show when they allowed it to run for 11 minutes which never happened and i think because people were so. amazed to hear their stories in english speaking directly to our audience of course not everyone speaks english we were
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very lucky to find such eloquent you had mattie next to him as well eloquent young men to see how their stories in fact to people i mean that people messaging me up to that saying they were in tears and mattie who was the these 28 years old sitting next to him was also saying to us which i think something was quite significant when we talk about the aid organizations and how people worry about the asylum seekers migrants refugees it was like you know i don't worry about my stuff i don't worry about water or food i worry about my mind and what the limbo of months if not years on end in these camps with no idea what's going to happen to actually does to my mind and he says you know i don't know if i'm ever going to be the same person again and i think we also forget about the mental impact that this limbo has a lot of these people don't even understand the legal processes that they're going through so i think you know it's very important to remember that these are individuals with tragedies with stories and with hopes. cody ham is picking up
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immediately on nietzsche cody thank you for watching today the refugee crisis is a human crisis behind the statistics of people filled with unique life experiences and dreams for the future their mother is longing to return home from office yearning to work again children searching for childhood that's poetic thank you for the i saw you standing in a new facility that hadn't existed a month ago where you very quickly not you but the u.n. h.c.r. very quickly found some way for those 12000 refugees who've had their camp destroyed to go what is the situation like than now. well as you said the situation was desperate hire going through the whole malia kept destroyed it all and $12000.00 people on the street on parking lots without any place to go of course most of them wanted to live leave the island and go to europe go to the
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mainland greece but it could not happen immediately what was important was to provide some shelter for them and indeed it was done by the greek government with our support now there are 1400 people living in that you kept in tents you know just small tasks family tents but at least they have a roof a tent they have some water they have some truth but of course as you have heard most of them are seeking for solutions and so that their dreams come true and we always talk about the resilience of refugees the boy you saw who has become a man most of the refugees i have seen throughout the 30 years i have been working with them all over the world they want ordinary life they want lives with education they want life to continue their lives and right now we would not like this young boy to be a man we would like him to enjoy his childhood his youth through being in that
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school so what we need to do now we have all the 1400 people who are in that camp is to as quickly as possible look for their future finding solutions while bringing them today a roof water food health in particular in cobi times where all these 1400 people have been tested before entering many of them have been tested positive 250 others are in quarantined because they were close to the. people so you have around 800 people in crunch time among the 9400 people living in that camp but again all of them are only going to bite the solution. let me just bring the mohammed also the co-founder of refugees reffing to having the refugees voice in the conversation in this situation is critical is what didn't cut it anymore. you know and then of. our concern about your future that you know not only important
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you know a lot in your corner then and i mean just the way things. are patterns are you hold on to hope. and the only hope. that they have as from unicorn country. unco you have to have you know you're also human yeah. i mean you know i'm one of their child. eva eva i'm i'm having a hopeful voice a little weary face what would you tell us from the human rights watch perspective about the prospects for the thousands of refugees who are now on the last boss i think feel each issue and then the main worry really is new gown that many call morea $2.00 these how can bury really be. because
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we hear tribe 6 months which means that people will have to spend a winter in these tents and. we're going to also say that the location of these gowned is at the such place next to the sea that the 6 flows to weather conditions so these new cressy has brought more and certainly more shear we spoke with women mccool are who are survivors of gender based violence for example and were in safe spaces in moria before and now are in the same maybe as their separate traders and people with disabilities do they have access to the leds to bathrooms yes certainly the east they live main thing that people are thinking about how long are we going to stay here how are we going to survive and because they can at least for now is very basic sticking it.
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yes i agree i mean the 1st time we saw the camp we had the same question it is so exposed to the elements it's right on the shores it's a very windy island winter is coming and i think that the key issue is how temporary is it i mean for the people really when actually are described as an emergency cab i think there is a consensus that this is not sustainable in the long term but then the question is where do you put a new camp we know that there is backlash also from the local community when it comes to that so you know a very complicated situation we've been speaking to islanders as well who you know this is a divided island these days and and they've been saying some of them that they blame the european union for allowing this situation to get to this point i mean i think even us here having this discussion only because moria bircher the ground because otherwise it would have been a continuing reality that certainly these frontline countries are having to deal with so now i think it is important that we are discussing it
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a gag and term solutions are needed i think if you look at i agree with that. but going to be. step you're breaking up for a moment we will get back to what it is you're making of me take a point but felipe i know you can pick up a medium ino what's that say. well well nobody will regret it was 5 times over crowded and there are many other camps like this which still exist on some 11 times the population are living in extremely bad conditions so it's for all these counts that the situation has to improve so that's why lucian's are provided more quickly than they have been in the last 4 years so this is our priority to push both the greek government as well as the european union to find solutions so that people have vocal again and can trust the procedures that are put in place
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both the refugees themselves the migrants as well as the local communities there is a total lack of trust today among the people of the islands that have shown so much solidarity previously you remember when 2 in 2015 in 2016 so many people were coming and we were showing and seeing all these access i don't you know the islanders on their i understood they trust is not there with their government with the e.u. policy and these 2 with our support and the civil society as well have to come back with a decent and human based response and not what you have been in the last 4 years so you have to share with you some of the comments that people are making as though they're watching in an order if you get even and staff as well rosy cheeks this is just so sad and we all need a little more compassion toward death a lot of humans danny boy the entire world must redesign a new refugee concept this is appalling darlene this is very sad and discussing it
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these people believing that they were going to go somewhere that they could live freely this is unbelievable so just after the fire had destroyed the movie at camp which for the p.s.a. was a horrible campaign it way. this is what the premise of family is that yes even then we give a shit what the what the prints agree said and that you can come right off the back of that i'm wondering if we're seeing these concrete actions that he said that he would provide all right so here i am right here on my laptop as soon as the damage is a fully assessed and a full coordination of the european commission we will undertake concrete and mischa tips approach remains the health and safety of the island's residents as well as all the migrants and refugees that was the un to take you from the prime minister of ritz eva go ahead. well i don't know about concrete initiatives just as we talk of the government has he nishi a procedure to shut down why no they won't be around to see some of the item and
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that haunts some of the most vulnerable people people we numb syndrome cancer patients it's called and the government instead of investing in this kind of these has announced the biggest shutting it down by october 15th so my question is where are these solutions and why closing if i see that these were working perfectly that these safe haven for people and try to bring them true at a basic count no i know you're very much with it if it's if i may because i think it's very important that the government takes has the right priority is the right priorities right now is to ensure that those who are in need and those who are the most vulnerable have dedicated shelters for them you have to speak up you have got to be you have made a nice center who are posting the most vulnerable among the people who are in mali are and this does not need to close in any way before solutions dignified solutions
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are found for anybody so we also have the case for the government not to close any of these solid argument it is that the people of and the islands have put in place that are so needed while the solutions are being organized so the 4 shelters have to be made those who are outside of the new county i'm going to say that are not ok me saying yes yes there is a test and he's going to be. yes that at the same kind of the government on the mainland is shutting down hope i see these that were costing asylum seekers i of course were saying that and mainland has a capacity and people cannot be transferred but this is not true they are shutting down soon so the beginning of june there is that her posting asylum seekers emptying them and shutting them down and we believe that people who are only as lost and as well as another i next by i only i think burnable groups should be
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transferred to the mainland and to those facilities and this i see this should mention down. staff guys i know you have a mission literally a dozen towns remain 5000 places are there next week we are discussing with the government the priority traps for many of the people who are in this post but also on the other islands in very bad conditions so that they benefit from hotels which can host them while waiting for others not all will benefit from the look east and other european countries but right now the 1st step is to ensure that as much as many people as possible and we have counted more than 2500 people or currently on the i think it's less bush who have no early look to leave for the mainland right phillips of what i'm hearing and what we're hearing right now audience is these conversations of to happen behind closed doors we hear the tensions if it's been up the tensions phillipe has to sleep and u.s. h.c.r.
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in a very awkward situation because greece is the host what are you going to do and say here's vegetarian and let me say something that the sun from a about is that you may think of someone who has asylum and they go to athens there is very little support people end up really on their own with no help no integration policies and many people we've spoken to also end up on the streets homeless so the problem is every step of the way i was talking to a young lawyer who is helping what works for one of the ngos providing free aid legal aid because the appeal process also the refugees need a lawyer it's complicated but he basically broke down into tears as a young man i think he was an older than maybe early thirty's beginning and twenty's early thirty's and he said that when his when the people he represented got the side and this is the dream right it was does it is describing one that is from congo who was crying she was so happy this is everything she had hoped for he
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said it broke him to then tell her how difficult the path for it was going to be for her and made her cry and he literally. well the up into tears and began crying because it broke him so much so i think it's very good to say we're going to i think tomorrow actually has a fairy leaving here with around 700 people who have had to sign and granted the question is what kind of infrastructure what kind of help helps these people the greek government these days as well if they have asylum they're independent and they're on their own well these are people who've been languishing in camps for months and years on end they need help and that help is very difficult for them to get whether even if they have the means and the money to for example rent an apartment which is we're talking that in the top of the top here they need to get a tax number and if that they call and get that if they haven't had a permanent address that was so i think we do there is that we can talk widely but the practicality of this issue is so complicated. that even if you're granted
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asylum you're still faced with massive challenges so if one isn't complicated i'm going to share a story that you put on twitter which again touted me you have this ability to find those stories that really again this is samir are from afghanistan look you might not talk she wanted me to take this picture and to send a message to the world samir we're doing that stef thank you and then all miss know it says everyone in a utopian country we have a very need to your help if you love human please transfer us from greece greece government is no good it goes on it is not perfect english but yes learn to write english and i think you hear that appeal the ukraine union commission also we're hearing and being pressurized to come up with some kind of migration pact here is what the chief of the e.u. commission said just last week have a listen. this package reflects
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a fair and reasonable balance between responsibility and solidarity among member states we all share the benefits we all share the burden this package also reflects a very pragmatic and realistic approach even a you convinced you seem to be the cynic in this conversation. so on a wednesday the european commission published their so-called migration act we all expect that there will be lessons learned from what happened in moria but instead we see the same land where tree producers we hear are about border protection are not about cooperation we 3rd countries even about you know in the context of so you bury these that other countries could bring to greece we even hear about return
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sponsorship so instead of showing genuine solidarity and they think people from greece and to another member state i can treat who just special they deport haitian of people back to their countries it's just appalling and who are missing all of a sense of their wards what the sort of narrative anymore i want to bring in martha russo because mafioso's from the international rescue committee when we totally were doing this story she took a camera and sent us this report that have a lap. i'm here in the emergency temporary camp of 5. weeks ago the 1st thing to really ensure here is what there and sanitation so people can actually wash themselves and keep safe from one thing the 2nd thing that we would ask is to ensure that there is protection for vulnerable people people with disabilities very young children single parent survivors of gender based violence
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and the 3rd thing is really european solidarity and ensure that this will not be a permanent solution. international rescue committee that very very what they need what we need to be i was on your twitter feed and and i found. solutions solutions to a possible and i want to show people because as they're watching you on you cheap they're very depressed about what is happening. so this is this is to see the doc family fled syria but found a new home in the city of hair in crete and the neighbors cheat them like every other family in a camp they don't have to conditions they're living amongst people like people as shipping. moving on ok she is a humane and klute example of inch of european select aleksey you need to see
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coming from greece 127 people in the past year where they went to the different countries they went to sleep this is not mission impossible what are you stopping something more this from happening very pleased and this. mission impossible as you say we see concrete beyond the island of crete which is a big island. the only you were mentioning this family we see refugees in canada another middletown. where which was hit by floods and where refugees are right on the ends of these people lie to me and we shout i'm going to give you the last word . so let's say that it's by their words solidarity and responsibility this is what we need but in a couldn't create way meaning that integration has to happen in greece relocation has to happen in europe but let's be responsible and be sure that all show signs returns well happy these days i don't go on thank you aberforth for those not in
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need of international protection thank the media it is a difficult topic i pretty well for jumping in on this conversation to be continued since watching everybody i see next. move out of his parents' house after he got married he says he found more space to begin discussing after a run of eating it last year it's now his home along with his wife daughter and health but the israeli government said the key was to be constructed we've gotten permits and issued the demolition order last month our interview were cut short as he hears that the israeli army has arrived in the village with a bulldozer residents say soldiers gave them one minute to get home it took the found me months to build their brick house and less than an hour to see it get demolished. rewind return
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to update us on the best of our desires documentaries. are sick and need to be just reacting to. the gift of sight. so sickly intervention is one of the few where you will see patients like this says at least 10 years younger than she was yesterday just within 24 hours on al-jazeera . we're heading to the place some deep in the true premiums on it's taken us 2 days on this boat just to get there from the search through the. macaque no look at what is being done to protect one of the region's most iconic creatures are disappearing because the legal pad trade with booming researchers wanted to see if reintroduction of my clients was a viable option to save some of these population pretty good. techno on al-jazeera . a diverse range of stories from
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across the globe from the perspective of our networks journalists on al-jazeera. a 1000000 deaths from covert 19 the world passes a somber milestone and the head of the u.n. calls for unity. it's a mind numbing big figure yet we must never lose sight of each and every individual life. i'm sami say that this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up a growing death toll as fighting escalates between azerbaijan and armenia over the disputed territory of no god no cut about. food.
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