tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 12, 2020 1:00pm-2:01pm +03
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something as monumentally horrific past slavery studio to be unscripted on al-jazeera. al-jazeera. hello there i missed on the attack and this is the news hour live from our headquarters here in doha coming up in the next 60 minutes the united states becomes the latest countries will prove the fight is a corona virus vaccine the elderly and key workers will get there as fast jabs and receptors in europe asking can a combination of 2 different vaccines provide more protection than just one. iran executes a journalist convicted of fueling antigovernment arrest. and president donald trump
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attacks the u.s. supreme court after it rejects a request to overturn joe biden's victory. i'm going to go go with the sports the pressure is on manchester united as they face a local rival city that's one of 2 big european zombies coming up on saturday. now the united states has become the latest country to approve the pfizer biotech corona virus vaccine for emergency use president donald trump says the fastow's could even be administered within 24 hours with millions more sets and nation wide distribution mike hanna reports from washington d.c. thank you very much. followed immense pressure from the white house during the course of the day the president trying to additional while wall between politicians and the v.a. deliberations with a furious early morning tweet. describing the f.d.a.
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as still a big old slow turtle and addressing the f.d.a. commissioner he continued get the damn vaccines out now dr han stop playing games and start saving lives the white house chief of staff is understood to have followed up with a phone call to the f.d.a. commissioner urging him to expedite the approval 1st followed to rip you off the vaccine by independent health experts thursday voted overwhelmingly to recommend emergency use authorization president trump has now welcomed the f.d.a. approval of really good news today our nation has achieved a medical miracle we have delivered a safe and effective vaccine in just 9 months this is one of the greatest scientific accomplishments in history it will save millions of lives and soon end the pandemic once and for all the vaccine manufacturers pfizer has said it will be able to roll out an initial $20000000.00 doses within 24 hours of approval in terms
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of guidelines drawn up by the centers for disease control the 1st recipients will be frontline health care workers and the elderly in assisted care facilities though it will be left to the governor of each state to establish distribution protocols. the governor of new york state andrew cuomo said he was expecting 170000 doses by sunday or monday this will be enough to treat 85000 people in the 1st wave of vaccinations. a 2nd vaccine manufactured by madonna will come under review next thursday it too says it will be able to roll out 20000000 doses within a day of emergency use approval the virus continues to rage throughout the united states with more than 200000 new cases being reported each week and some 3000 deaths a day being recorded and health officials warn that it will take months before the
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vaccine begins to have an impact on the stock statistics mike hanna al-jazeera washington well allie fasten is a vaccine ologist and also vice president of vaccine research and development at pretty well our biologics he says despite the approval it'll still be a long time until the u.s. is back to normal. the need is is glassful and therefore going to be a long time is not going to be a short fix but they're all out to be gradual meaning that we will have people at higher risk in order to win the immortality that we're observing also we need to keep the health system going and therefore doctors and nurses will be on a road be also in line for vaccination and that's after the another advantage for all of that is that there you are establishing
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a reassuring that doctors and nurses are standing in line to receive the vaccine. the people in the un and the industry it's really credible it's safe and if these guys are in a world with a why rope so they can get so we should be having more confidence in that and that's a great way off it trying to overcome the hesitation that is. in doing there in the community and in other areas of the community when out christmas astra zeneca is set to start testing a combination of its experimental vaccine with russia but make the show trial so the combined inoculation offsets begin by the end of the fear that he bought the reports across the united states for getting ready to vaccinate people against covert 90 it's a matter of urgency with the daily death toll reaching 3000 this week and hospital
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struggling. as we now accident more and more people we will ultimately maybe by mid year next year when the 20 wanted sheep herd immunity. perhaps 75 percent of people vaccinated this shutdown and and a pandemic well late in 2021 in another big move u.k. and russian scientists to teaming up to study whether combining 2 vaccines office better protection trials in russia will evolve adults getting both the sputnik v. vaccine reported to be 90 percent effective and the astra zeneca vaccine developed with the university of oxford with average efficacy reported at around 70 percent it's almost like cross training in athletics where 2 different sports can make you a better athlete so rather than giving them the 1st dose and a booster dose of the same vaccine maybe giving different types of vaccine for the 1st and 2nd doses might give you a stronger or more durable immune response but there are new setbacks to france's
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cental feet and britain's got so smith kline say their vaccine won't be ready now until the end of next year after interim results showed a low immune response in older people the vaccine was set to provide almost a 3rd of callbacks doses that's the global vaccine purchasing facility which many of the poorest countries are relying on and australia's counsel production of a domestic vaccine off the trials showed it could lead to false positive tests for a choice fixing the problem could take another year this is one of 4 vaccines the government there has ordered it's still planning to start vaccinations next march insisting its success in stopping coronavirus spreading means it doesn't need to rush we're aware of what is happening in other states and and other nations around the world we have a front row seat frankly is as die guys through that and we're through any potential issues that arise in europe the u.k. has a head start on tuesday this 91 year old became the 1st person anywhere to get the pfizer biotech vaccination as part of
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a mass rollout it was manufactured in belgium. which plans to start vaccinations in early january other nations are set to follow once there's a green light from the european union of. sponsors whether that will happen within the same hour week 27 member states that the needle is injected everywhere at the same time i'm not sure but we want to do this in a very coordinated fashion and show that everyone has the same kind of access meanwhile health experts and campaign is urging wealthy nations to make sure the world's poorest citizens have access to vaccines if and when they're ready to d. barbara al-jazeera when all of this is happening as a number of countries across asia reporting a rise and coronavirus cases after initial success in containing the spread from syria takes a look at what's behind the surge. everyone living in this apartment block in quaalude bay hong kong has to take a coronavirus test after the building reported at least 7 confirmed cases of covert
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19. earlier this week hong kong banned evening dining at restaurants and ordered gyms beauty salons and message palace to shut in a bid to contain a 4th wave of corona virus infections the government has also set up temporary testing stations but people can get tested for free. both the government and citizens are responsible for the outbreaks some people are too selfish and continue to organize social activities illegal. please also the governments fault all troubles from overseas should be under full compulsory quarantine. hong kong isn't the only place that seen a resurgence in corona virus cases in asia is battling a 3rd way the country largely avoided a massive outbreak because of strict early lockdown but following a local election in sabah state in late september malaysia started recording a rise in daily cases last month hostels that house workers for
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a glove manufacturer were locked down after more than 2000 workers tested positive for code that 19 health officials say the number of daily new cases is likely to remain high as they expand screening on migrant workers authorities have also reopened a temporary or in teen and sweetman center just outside of quality to deal with the includes in south korea authorities are building temporary hospitals and shipping containers as a 3rd wave of coronavirus cases threatens to overwhelm medical facilities many experts believe even with the vaccine available it will take a while before normal life can resume right now there's limited vaccines and. we also don't really know if that. transmission. in the. in the early stages we were pretty good at saying i think leave the vaccines that it will decrease a severe disease but well no it will stop the transmission in the early stages the
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still to my mind. the question but authorities are keen to reopen albeit with precautions the thai government recently said all nationalities could apply for a tourist visa if you turned on an earlier stipulation that only those from low risk countries can apply it even allowing big countdown events to take place on new year's eve lawrence louis ouches era. all moving on now and cobbles international airport has come under attack with a series of rockets killing at least one person an afghan government spokesman says the shells were fired from a vehicle on the city's outskirts but no one has yet claimed responsibility. iran has executed a dissident journalist convicted of fueling anti-government unrest according to state media report was captured by the revolutionary guard and 29000 after he is an exile he was the founder of a modern news and social media channel with more than a 1000000 subscribers some was accused of stoking violence through that channel
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during nationwide protests and 20172018 has all the latest from tara. from the time that he was brought back into iran and he stood trial the charges against him there were 13 charges and the most serious one being what they call here corruption on earth he was also accused of cooperating with intelligence services of israel and france and also. revealing state secrets but he was the sentence was handed down to him in june of this year and then up held in the supreme court last month and then he was hanged this morning this is one of the fastest cases that we've seen of somebody being executed within the country in recent years now sam wasn't just a journalist he came from a clerical family his father was a cleric who worked within the establishment in the ninety's he was also accused of revealing secrets he claimed he had sources within the intelligence ministries and
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the government and in that telegram channel he was revealing certain secrets and that was one of the mean issues but he was arrested in iraq in baghdad according to his wife who is still in france and he left iran following the. instabilities that happened after the 2009 presidential election and he eventually ended up in france with his family that is when the intelligence officials here. saw the channel that he started on telegram which had over a 1000000 subscribers followers. now new evidence in the case of an italian student tortured and murdered in egypt could further implicate security officials that video clips obtained by al-jazeera from the taliban traditional sources in the case of the fast time the 28 year old was such a journey origine was being monitored while in egypt carlock has
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a story. to which this video recording may not show much but for italian officials investigating the brutal murder of julio region in egypt it's a breakthrough the 1st evidence that the italian student was targeted and put under surveillance by egyptian authorities was actually going to matter was this image was. it comes after italian prosecutors announced plans to charge for egyptian security offices with the students torture and death they say one of the defendants colonel as a commercial assigned the informant to monitor julia originate a month before he was killed. case guard or say we saw today we know that the egyptian general security followed regina's tracks for 40 days we know that he was arrested 1st in a camp been transferred to cell number 13 of the egyptian ministry of interior this
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is a very dangerous matter me telling people strongly condemn it and we firmly maintain our position with respect to closing diplomatic ties with egypt ridge and his body was found on a desert highway after he disappeared in january 26th seen he was last seen near an underground subway stop in cairo where he'd been researching the sensitive topic of labor movements in egypt his mother later said his body was so mutilated she was only able to recognize the tip of his nose rights groups say the marks resemble those resulting from widespread torture practices in egyptian facilities the national security agency is quite or torrijos we have documented. rumpel the torture we have document to force disappearance in the country and hold the judiciary affectively in service of the system of repression. country the death sparked outrage in italy and strained diplomatic relations between the 2
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countries with italy's government accusing egyptian authorities of non-cooperation we want stores and justice for our citizen who has been killed and tortured in such a terrible way without an explanation egyptian prosecutors have continued to insist that region his killers remain unknown and all thirty's deny any involvement in fact they've announced a temporary suspension of the investigation but he said he plans to push on with the case regardless the suspects will be tried in an italian court in abstention as for julia region his parents they're still calling for justice for their son his mother applauded an investigation that not only shed some light on his death but held up what she called a mirror of how human rights of violated in egypt every day car leg al jazeera has plenty more ahead this news hour including forced to pay bribes for services that should be free the people of ghana say systemic corruption and we've got to. find out why climate change is threatening the lives of mountain climbers and the french
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alps and face announces its short list for the best men's footballer of the year that can best man stop messi and ronaldo when america. now the u.s. supreme court has rejected a legal bid from the state of texas to overturn the results of the presidential election trump had backed that lawsuit which sought to throw out results in 4 k. states that were won by by. your reports. many legal experts in the us predicted this outcome the supreme court dismissed a bid by the state of texas to overturn the presidential election results much to the anger of trump who tweeted the supreme court really let us down no wisdom no courage trump and his republican allies wanted the court to set aside results in 4
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states won by president elect joe biden michigan pennsylvania and wisconsin 18 republican attorney generals and 126 republican members of congress supported the lawsuit bought in a short statement the court said that texas has not demonstrated educationally called musical interest in the manner in which another state conducts its elections biden's team celebrated the decision saying the supreme court has decisively and speedily rejected the latest of donald trump and his allies attacks on the democratic process this is no surprise dozens of judges election officials from both parties and trump's own attorney general have dismissed his baseless attempts to deny he lost the election trump and other republican organizations have 52 seats in various states they've achieved partial success in only one but legal analysts say trump may continue to try to overturn the election results i don't count now
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for trying to just do something else even though it probably won't get anywhere because it is over as of monday when the electoral college to me but we cannot be in the head down the think what he might try to do next but this was really his last day on there critics of trump say his refusal to concede defeat has damaged the integrity of the u.s. electoral process and biden's victory will be officially certified by the electoral college next week victoria. well let's dig into this with scott is the co-founder of america unfiltered news and analysis on u.s. politics and foreign policy he joins us now from birmingham in the u.k. it's got great to have you back on out of the plenty to unpick here i want to start with the state of play does this court order secure monday's electoral college vote and does that finally mean the end of this. well as your correspondent noted don't jump ahead could lead us anywhere in the next few weeks but in terms of trying to prevent joe biden getting into the white house it's done you have the combination
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of the supreme court which twice in the past few days 1st on tuesday in a case brought over pennsylvania then of the texas lawsuit not only rejected the truck camp's attempts to overturn the elections they said there's no way we're going to consider this there's absolutely no standing here and you combine that with the political which is the electoral college meets on monday they will confirm joe biden's victory of 306 electors to 232 and that's it it's done what does trump do next he then looks ahead probably saying he'll run for president the presidency in 2024 to reclaim what is rightfully his how much support does he get from the republican party and from his supporters to go for this for another 4 years while i would just want to come back to the supreme court decision itself it was handed down and i'm standing at a very brief and it is the supreme court even with its very conservative makeup that they trying to send a message here. well they sent
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a legal message and the legal message was that in this specific case 7 of the 9 justices said texas you've got no right to try to interfere over the way that elections were conducted in georgia wisconsin pennsylvania and michigan these 4 key states that voted for joe biden and the 2 most conservative justices samuel alito employments thomas said ok we would consider your case but there's absolutely no chance that we would grant you what you want which is to throw out the elections in those 4 states so this was comprehensive what is important beyond the supreme court decision is the political message and that is in 57 of 58 cases the courts have said a must immediately you really shouldn't be here to the trump lawyers they said there's no claims of fraud there's no evidence and your legal theory is completely inappropriate and misguided well given the political context that's talk about the republican party now 18 states more than 100 republicans in congress and dos this i
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mean it's mcauliffe for instance have been calling for due process but where does the process end and where to for the republican posse when the smoke finally play is. right let's be very clear 1st of all don't jump doesn't care about due process double care trump clear is about hanging on to the oval office and when you have 126 of the 196 republican house members and when you had 18 state attorney generals that went along with this they were quite happy to defy the american system now here comes the big challenge once joe biden becomes president does someone like the senate majority leader mitch mcconnell continue to ally himself with the trumpets to try to tear down biden even if that might tear down the u.s. system or does mitch mcconnell and other republican leaders finally cut themselves away from donald trump and say look we want for a party that had economic and social policies that worked within the rules do they go back to this or do we see the tropfest effectively taking over the g.o.p.
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will scott then let me ask you the big question that the entire us democratic process rests on the perceive the dishonesty of these elections so where does this whole saga leave that well i said before the elections this was the most important american moment since 1905 in the end of world war 2 it still is you know the question of whether this system which has stood for well almost 250 years continues to function is in the balance but you will headline quite rightly those people that support trump that will go out on the streets that will spread dissent from ation that will shell hoax on the other side we have a new government of by the ministration if it can get control of the pandemic that has killed almost 300000 americans if it can provide for a neck an economy which has been bashed this year if it can provide for social justice for all americans not for some well results talk and that's the big hope that the american system how honest it's competence and responsibility for us as donald trump's twitter feed scott because that and america unfiltered always right
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here thoughts here on out there thanks for being with us again. thank you. now gone the anti corruption activists say the country is losing the fight against graft and currently ranks on the corruption perception index $180.00 countries and citizens have little faith the newly elected politicians there will adequately tackle the problem on the reports from a capital accra. was a shameful picks passengers on his motorcycle for a fee although the government has banned commercial much cycle operations in the capital across the business thrice he says what keeps them in business is paying a bribe. to work for. you go from the police on the streets to markets in public or business offices many gunnin say they are compelled to pay bribes for services that are meant to be free
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that was what pushed and thus to your book into activism i had an issue with my. electricity meter and so i had to go to electricity company. gets there and stuff where demanding that i i had to pay something before they quote a funny service but exposing corruption comes with a heavy price in 21000 a young journalist was assassinated near his home because of an investigative story he was doing. and that's most famous investigative journalist and has conducted many undercover investigations and corruption in guyana. the mosque award winning journalist says threats against him and his colleagues are real and it's intimidating many i must say there's a dip a bit of in depth of some level of fear by some journalists because they think that this government is a bit intolerant and journalist many have died many have sacrificed that's not
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induce in us in a sense of the city. again and say they are more worried about corruption among public officials even institutions investigating abuse of public trust at mit the problem is huge i would say the truth i would say people are beginning to be alive to the responsibility of holding people accountable and this is general election corruption was a dominant theme part of last time in an election gone has got a hung parliament one no party holds an absolute majority analysts believe that there is also one does vote sends a strong message to politicians that people have taken note of more corruption cases and i demanding accountability. when i would talk to say how much of that they will get from public officials activists a strong institutions a vibrant civil society and fearless journalists are needed to tame corruption
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that's draining hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayers' money each. al-jazeera across got. time for the web that we have. hello there we still got some rather stormy weather across central parts of the mediterranean that's all going to shift its way little further east as we go through the next couple of days and things will turn more mobile into western parts is because the balance of cloud and rain starting to slide their way through a little ridge of high pressure keeping things quiet for the u.k. briefly before the next weather system gradually pushes through but as this area of high pressure down towards the southwest it will dominate across western parts of the mediterranean quieten things down here it's been rather lively recently over towards the east and indeed in kiev we had some a rather tricky conditions a long spell of rain followed by clear skies and some snow and you say this for women having a bit of trouble making any progress judy the icy conditions that resulted about 170 towns were affected by the ice here and it did lead to major power outages and
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you can see difficulty conditions also there on the roads things snow changing too much over the next couple of days still some rain around so further icy conditions on the cards for kiev as we go on through sunday but it should turn a little drier a little clearer as we go through monday the snowmaking as well little further northwards notice for these to sort of the mediterranean pretty wet here over the next couple of days with the possibility of flooding for many. well straight ahead here on al-jazeera the forgotten we follow the lives of internally displaced bosnians 25 years after the war. mexico cancels the wilds of the largest catholic held image but the save the celebration and now more than ever. and spanish leaders that president madrid take on their local rivals and one of 2 big european dobby is on a fast of a that's all coming up in sport to. play. i
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was raised in france. these are my grandparents. these are my parents and this is mean. by them both isis and us on. the 1st of a 2 part epic tale of a remarkable family. the father the son and the jihad part one on al-jazeera when the news breaks the impact of the storms in honduras has been particularly devastating when people need to be hurt no group has claimed responsibility for the shooting on the outskirts of srinagar indian administered kashmir people here say they're living in fear al-jazeera has teams on the ground they never ate this type of food that we simply don't know if we can't be here to bring you more award winning documentaries and life needs on air and online.
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the. the i. know they are watching out as their top stories here this hour. the u.s. has become the latest countries will prove the fires of biotech coronavirus vaccine for use the president says the 1st dose should be administered within 24 hours with millions more set to nationwide distribution. iran has executed a dissident convicted of fueling anti-government unrest 20172018 according to state media who was captured by the revolutionary guard and 2019 after years in exile.
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the us supreme court has rejected the legal bid from the state of texas to overturn donald trump's election to trump head back to back door suit which sought to throw out the results in 4 key states where joe biden has won several of the several other legal challenges have also been rejected across the country. today marks the 5th anniversary of the paris climate agreement since then extreme weather events from drought wildfires and super storms of all taken their toll and highlighted a renewed course of action so how is the well placed in its battle against the climate crisis edison takes a look. it was an extraordinary moment after endless years of negotiations nations of the world united in this common cause and the paris agreement was born that girl it was a it was for
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celebrations they were short lived within 18 months the accord was in deep trouble suddenly u.s. leadership was lost. the united states will withdraw from the paris. thanks lima to court well in the 5 years since paris national commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions well they haven't measured up and time is running out remember the agreement ange to stop global temperatures from rising 2 degrees celsius above pre-industrial levels ideally one and a half degrees but average global temperatures are right now as i speak at $1.00 degrees and climbing and the impacts of a warming world they're already shocking displacing millions and costing billions extreme weather events are becoming all too familiar from superstorm stew record wildfires from heat waves to devastating floods ice packs they've continued to
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diminish at both poles with the current decade the warmest on record it sounds bad it is bad and yet despite it all suddenly there's an opportunity president elect joe biden has pledged to return the united states to the paris agreement the world's 2nd biggest emitter of greenhouse gases back at the table and the number one a matter that's china responsible for 28 percent of global emissions they promise carbon neutrality by 2060 other countries have followed suit japan and south korea committing to net 0 by 2050 joining the u.k. the e.u. and next year the united states and hopefully more to come out of the tragedy of the covert pandemic suddenly major economies are eyeing a green recovery with trillions of dollars in stimulus funds available i think yes we are in a moment i would say in a turning point in a moment in history and it's set in my view it's
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a great opportunity very few either some very few generations have the opportunity to become so relevant for history overall it doesn't mean that it is going to be easy on the contrary i think these bullets on our shoulder. and even be there for sponsibility the thing is nations political action is one thing implementing policies to assure new found hope is not misguided well that's quite another but never will there be a better opportunity to realize the goals of the paris agreement and to put the brakes on the worst effects of climate change and you can watch our extended interview with the executive secretary of the un framework convention on climate change patricia espinosa who you are hearing from there that's at 830 g.m.t. on sunday on talk to al jazeera. well climate change is having a devastating impact on the french alps where ski resorts have closed because of unreliable snow fall and scientists in the alps say the rising temperatures are
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also causing mountains to crumble attash about to reports. striking and majestic the french alps aren't chanting site for thousands of years people have lived and worked in the mountains or simply come to admire them but scientists warn these ancient peaks are crumbling rising temperatures are melting permafrost the frozen soil an ice them holds them together speeding up erosion and triggering dangerous rock falls glaciologist frost manuf says the high vertical rock faces of the alps are particularly vulnerable to changes in temperature only think we have noticed that in one period particularly the last 2 or 3 decades rockfalls have been more frequent than in past colder decades or so when the summers are very hot as they were in 20032015 the rock falls happened more often. also
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melting faster than before there are 4000 in the alps chain that spans 7 countries scientists say half will have disappeared by 2050 climate changes also transforming low altitude mountains like those in the photos region in eastern france it's still snowing here every winter inventer on the problem is the snow fall has become less reliable the ski season much shorter so that's why be operated this year has decided to close the resort. duke's grandfather created the ski resort his family have always run it is odd competed in the olympics shutting the resort down wasn't an easy decision but he says he had no choice he now plans to build a luxury hotel to attract tourists all year round. the ski stations faced the same problem. because to work you need snow at the right time during the holidays and good weather so it's hard to have all that in a short season we used to have
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a bad winter every decade now it's every 3 years so it's impossible to recover the rising temperatures the forced dozens of ski resorts to close in france in recent years scientists warned that unless more is done to stop climate change snow capped mountains and glistening places may 1 day become things that the past natasha butler al-jazeera venture on live. let's speak to chandra bush and he's the executive director of i forest the international forum for environment sustainability and technology he joins us now from new delhi chunder we've just been watching their reports about how climate change is affecting one of the richest countries on the planet and i know your contending with widespread impacts there in india to the sorry long negotiations around carbon cuts were about common but differentiated responsibility is the rich and poor divide about who should do what do you think we're beyond that now. i think you want to actually. have any shot of dying as your report shows and as all still the scientific of all
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that has come out in the last few months you know one of those one of the interesting thing that happens or trying to change is for dissent but you see a lot of it tripled and what is happening across the board i don't think i'll ever trouble could all get education you wanted but everyone is saying that. it's less just ok because the challenges of increasing backs are increasing but as the efforts that country support it don't so it's reducing emissions as are those that get to climate change is really falling short so yes i need to save and i'll have to take about a group one culprit to pick out as i'm done with the stream big difference but more developed and developing countries and don't know a lot because i'll get up to got to see how to stop us. but that that division that has goes to show us what a difficult and ambition. priest impression of even i'll have to
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get boss to get a start doctor about how to spend each other how to debate it a little what if you're mechanism go look at the well done all troll you get all of it is about life so then you're talking about you mentioned some of the 4 costs that i see kind of tracking now has the patent on course for a 2 point one degree rise by 2100 and i know you personally estimate that it being priced at 3.2 degrees given the current investment in fossil fuels these are huge devastating scenarios can you paint a picture across as to what happened. this is. not a country says cuban eccentric doctors say they're going to become serial commissioned by going to shift now the number of research just art projects games go point one degree and point 0 degree is still on going to trust the docket but we all understand order to go to site and why it is important to give
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a good teacher of god at every got to show is in god distribute act it is much more important but gives finally agog it so that it can measure it it can bet its light it can see by the countries that did you know action or not and therefore i think this message that is going out does that yet on track to 2 point one actually is quite damaging i think up you could have to give this message of lot of disclaimers the fact is that getting doggett's that countries have blood on the table is 40 point you see now just oh i just wanted to get it's like this point but obeyed the picture the fact is 2.2 days is isn't about all i'm and it's very difficult slaughter is scientist to actually project it would ha we're just looking back people at $3.00 degrees because even longer lines i don't mean to say b. can give you a broader picture of what is going to happen but at the end of that is that are committed to slow going to devastate a key point you didn't just go talking about arabs in india b.s.
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in there but you're just going to be devastated so we have an alibi and it goes to have grasped that we have such you know under bill ecosystems and communities dependent on the those ecosystems they're going to devastate jeanette's even $1.00 d.v.d. $50.00 tickets so we're not as i started by saying we aren't dealing with people i 98 in the sendai of scientific debate been misstepped picture of the most wonderful community which is already suffering and is going to be devastated when you mention the politics around these negotiations and. really i always felt like climate negotiations have been situated with an economics potentially rather than a sense of moral collective action but it does seem that we are seeing this growing awareness that a shift in what the green economy actually makes more financial sense do you think that is might is that could actually be what saves us the fact that it would actually make people more money to do that. see i think the
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point that you made about greed economies probably the only saving money that i see right now. you know being that it really was becoming a real electric regulars' is going to become you know much more cost complicated an inexperienced. electrical gain i mean just a source of fuel that trend that we have following right now on green energy and great technology if we all work together collectively be can also go to destry in next 10 to 15 years and literally i'm saying this because it india for example today solar is 40 percent cheaper than will buy a new solar plant become a house the bought stuff millions of for coal right now these are these are dramatic changes that has happened the last 5 years since you have signed about this agreement countries need to recognize that. there is stock fossil fuel
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infrastructure that we have in fact the difficulty today is not your infrastructure but how did it get it all still all in trust. and dance floor on one hand going to still have to work on building new infrastructure and green and such stuff and bridges as you rightly said is profitable but we also have to start talking about closing don't hold interest and that's where the transition has to be also just because for example all communities will suffer and we don't want them to sort of spread and we will have to think about how do we transition all money those are the things that the world you also have someone who would have to do it not you drunk on the phone but also what just transition committees did you go to so of course chandra bush on there from forest reminding us of the need for urgent action there thanks for being with us on out of there chandra great to hear from. thank you very
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much i'm reading on and the 1st international aid convoy has arrived in the ethiopian city at the center of recent fighting in the interior region a convoy of trucks from the red cross will distribute medicine and other supplies to hospitals and mek away if european army has captured that city and declared victory while rival finances from the people's liberation front have valid to fight . 25 years after the bosnian war tens of thousands of displaced people are still unable to return to their husbands the economy there is crippling their lives but for many leaving is not an option turning back a visit at a camp where people are still fighting for a better life. time has stood still in parts of rural bosnia to make a living these men have to scavenge for low grade discarded coal the way they did 100 years ago they were promised a better life but 25 years after the war ended they are still suffering they are the forgotten in 1905 the settlement at the age of that benefits sea in northeast
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bosnia was meant to provide temporary accommodation the roof leak there is no insulation and the living conditions are cramped other sickly or they're not and everyone is promising us that they will get better but nothing is getting better yeah where we are like cattle stuffed and these buildings had 0 was wounded by a serb shell instructor needs her brother and several cousins were killed she knits socks to sell for a dollar a pair she's one of more than $7000.00 internally displaced bosnians who have largely been forgotten and they have been forgotten by the government small children who came to the temporary collective centers have remained in them and they're having their own children in the now it's unbelievable how much time has passed and they're thill in the same horrible situation local authorities say they are working to improve the living conditions of all those who've been displaced and projects are in the pipeline but so far nothing has been done another approximately
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90000 displaced people have found their own accommodation because they haven't been able to return to their homes even though the dayton peace agreement stipulated the right of return for everyone. i think it is unsafe to go back to srebrenica especially for the children i was a child when the one genocide happened i experience so many horrible things i would never want my children to experience what i did 78 year old fighter all of which wasn't scared her husband was among the 8000 muslim men and boys from strabane eats are executed by the serbs the village of qana which polly was overrun 27 years ago and she had to flee but she won the right to return to her. house although she says she suffered several beatings from the serbs she also won a legal case for the orthodox church built on her land to be demolished but servile saudis have so far not complied with the court order julia was done piano. i sued the orthodox church when i returned here but nobody wanted to help me
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establish my rights i tried so hard and it took 5 years for me to win in court i received threats from the serb side this community like most in bosnia expected so much more when the war ended but after 25 largely fruitless years their lies of hardly improved and with the political paralysis and the economic stagnation many are either choosing to leave or want to leave official figures show that 1800000 bosnians have left the country but leaving isn't easy for the poor here they have to stay and fight for a better life tony berkeley al-jazeera years of its camp northeastern bosnia. now the wilds largest catholic pell grant has been cancelled and president tom cole says that 10000000 people visit the bezel of the basilica of our lady of guadalupe and ever walk but this time chechen government officials of catholics to accept her and stand by your pal reports from mexico city. every year millions of people flock
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to the mexican capital for the day of the virgin of guadalupe celebrated on december 12th. it's the largest catholic pilgrimage in the world and an important religious festival for many faithful catholics. this year however the coronavirus pandemic has put those celebrations on hold. get the natural house was among the last catholic pilgrims to visit the holy shrine before authorities closed it to the public. can't just be back my mother's in the hospital she's in very serious condition and i have faith that our lady of guadalupe will help me so that she'll be home soon. mexico city's national shrine houses an image of the virgin mary which according to a legend dating back to $1531.00 is said to have miraculously imprinted itself on a cloak belonging to an indigenous boy named one diego the day of the virgin of guadalupe is mexico's largest annual public gathering on any other year this area
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outside of the basilica of our lady of guadalupe it would be a sea of worshippers but as deaths from corona virus have continued to increase dramatically so have restrictions on public gatherings. enforcing these restrictions or more than 1700 mexico city police officers with the annual pilgrimage officially ancyl church leaders and government officials have encouraged de boaties to attend catholic mass via television or live stream ceremonies online . buddy slow day to an artist in the state of one haka says even though people aren't allowed to visit the national shrine they can still bring the virgin of guadalupe. into their homes i mean that's. what's being proposed is for people to not go outside and his stead set up an altair in their homes where they can receive the blessings of the virgin where we can still say the same preggers were used to i'm sure the virgin would gladly make an exception in nice case and visit each one
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of us in our home. the annual pilgrimage for the day of the virgin of guadalupe is a tradition that reaches far beyond mexico's borders even though travel to her sanctuary won't be possible this year faithful catholics in mexico and around the world are finding other ways to worship money ended up a little al-jazeera mexico city. had hair on al-jazeera a former british open champion as a thing to add another major to hack election channel be here with all the action. building a new life on an entity beach living off the sea and. a dream shed why so many but so few make it a reality. a family business led by a remarkable woman with a flair for cooking and desist when if. i didn't catch it
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on al-jazeera. as a 2nd wave of covert 19 brings us surgeon infections a few months ago there were dozens of cases a day now if we chose 2000 and countries and force new measures to curb contagion this is the 1st step forward for the government aim of mass testing the entire population scientists are on the brink of releasing new vaccines to reduce the spread of the virus will it be enough to bring the global health crisis to an end the coronavirus pandemic special coverage on a. the or.
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however it's now time for sports history without the football action absolutely yeah there are a couple a big dobby games coming up in europe 1st to manchester where local rivals united play city in the english premier league united come into the game looking to bounce back from the disappointments of the champions league exit earlier this week the pressure is on minute manager are they going to salsa as they say 7th just a point ahead of city when you get the 1st goal in a game it's easier of course it is so that's something we we want to get to in this game we've done. well against. city in the last few few games against them early on then again it's a 90 minute game and we but we want to get off to a good start of course meanwhile his counterpart at city pep guardiola but social to handle the situation and says he doesn't need to give him advice on how to deal
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with being on the pressure i don't have to get into board because he has he's a strong enough he knows how it works does does job and like you said to begin of the question so when you win we are a genius and when you lose you have to suck up and in united all the clubs around the world deserve reality meanwhile new calls so boss steve bruce says he feels like a doctor rather than a coach as the club deal with a coach in $1000.00 outbreak the premier league game against aston villa was called off last week but they are able to play against west brom on saturday albeit with a few players still missing. it's been a significant number of people and i've got 2 members of staff who are. poorly at the minute sick with it so we hope we hope that they're ok we really really hope that they have. to see the clock to stop everything that come for the welfare of the players and the staff i feel like a doctor this week rather than a football manager it's been really really difficult when the other big dopy of the
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day see spanish leaders athletico madrid face local rivals rial in la liga atletico are on an 8 game winning streak in the lake and qualified for the last 16 of the champions league on wednesday royal life for 6 points off the pace and with just one win in the last 4 league matches but if history is anything to go by atletico haven't beaten rail in the league since february 26th st louis. we are a very competitive team and it's going to be a very good game we are going to try to win the match without thinking that we are the champions we want to defend what we won last season and we will do it until the very end mollies you on which is you must sign your real madrid have been competing at the highest level for years now so that makes us admire our rivals and their players even though they are getting older with some players 333435 years old they are still competing as if they were young players in their heads i admire them even
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though they are an historical rival for us in italy said they add this season surprise package sus wallow have moved to 2nd in the standings on friday they hosted benevento 7 minutes in they went in front thanks to a penalty from dominic about out of the. then went down to 10 men when lucas harris lynn was sent off early in the 2nd half it didn't matter though they had their goal and denied benevento to win one nil. the only man who can stop leno messi and cristiano ronaldo from winning the fifo best men's player of the year award by munich and poland striker joins those 2 on a 3 man shortlist with the result to be announced next week dusky has already won the european awards called 55 goals to help buy and win 4 trophies last season including the champions league when they beat messi as barcelona 82 in the quarter finals but only once since 2008 has faces award not been won by messi over now to.
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well heavyweight boxing champion anthony joshua defends his titles against challenger cooper a pull of later the things that got a little heated already security guards had to separate the pair as they faced off at the y. in joshua has won 23 of 24 fights with 21 knockouts while his ball garion opponent has only lost one of his previous 29. 1000 fans will be allowed into london's wembley arena for the bouts. now after sitting out the last prey with coated lewis hamilton will be eager to get back onto the front of the grade in qualifying for the abu dhabi grand prix later the world champion returned to the track for practice on friday but it was his miss sadie's teammate valtteri bottas who was quickest hamilton is just happy to be back. safe felt like i spent a lot of time away from the car very or so it was just hearing about me from there i was myself in the car the car wasn't. quite. the way it was when i. had
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left in spain the sense of the balance was in the same intensity i had got to previously but i'm working my way back to learn comfortable with it. but there was drama in the 2nd practice session for kimmy reichen and his al for mayor suffered a big engine fire worrying scenes given that running groeschel suffered burns in a serious finally accident 2 weeks ago in bahrain thankfully on this occasion reichen and who's known as the ice man was able to escape with no injuries. japanese go for hinako bruno is at the top of the leaderboard at the u.s. women's open carded a $67.00 in the 2nd round and easton to take a 3 shot lead the 22 year old is looking for a 2nd career major title after winning the 2019 british open. all right that is like a sport for now have will feel later thanks so much to well that's it for this news
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hour doreen will be here in a moment with more news on our feet off the bat. i'm mad no moved out of his parents' house after he got married he says he found more space living in biscayne after a run of eating it last year it's now his home along with his wife daughter and health but there's really governments at the cables reconstructed we've gotten permits and issues that the militia ordered last month our interview would cut short as he hears that the israeli army has arrived in the village with a bulldozer residents say soldiers give them one minute to get home it took the
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found me months to build their brick house and less than an hour to see it get demolished. it uses performance art to draw attention to the critical controversial issues facing china. when a states charge. on al-jazeera. gay calm and make sure you're not hyping the situation be part of the debate my main characters are women and when no topic is off the table the law is in the last allow child marriage to happen legally these are basically archaic walls dads often legitimize them grega was pedophile on arrow online jumped into the conversation and leaching to be part of the discussion this stream on out is there a. well
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. the united states becomes the latest country to approve the pfizer coronavirus vaccine. you're watching al-jazeera live from a headquarters and. also coming up president donald trump attacks the u.s. supreme court after it rejects a request to overturn joe biden's victory. the 1st international aid convoy reaches the capital of if yo pierre's words or integrate a region iran executes a journalist convicted of feeling and.
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