tv The Stream Al Jazeera March 11, 2021 7:30am-8:00am +03
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see there is widespread opposition in spite of government assurances that the water has been treated your banking on their water got again and i'm concerned about what will happen to the fishing industry in the next 10 years there is talk of releasing the water and i'm very worried for many this anniversary to reflect on a natural disaster that took so much from this part of japan and that is still dealing with the legacy of it some precedented force mcbride al-jazeera. this is all just here these are the top stories the u.s. house of representatives has approved a $1.00 trillion dollar pandemic relief bill it's going to provide stimulus checks for millions of americans as well as extend unemployment benefits and tax breaks everything in the american rescue plan addresses a real need including investments to fund our entire vaccination effort more
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vaccines more vaccinate tours and more vaccination sites millions more americans will get tested including home testi schools will soon have the funding and resources to reopen safely a national imperative the american rescue plan a partnership between johnson and johnson and merck proves we can do big things important things in this country international pressure is building on man mars military over its crackdown on anti crude protesters the u.s. is imposing sanctions and 2 children of the country's military leader while the un security council has condemned the violence libya's parliament has approved a new interim unity government which will oversee elections in december libya has been divided between 2 rival administrations until a recent u.n. backed deal. the biden administration's announced plans for its 1st high level
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face to face talks with china secretary of state antony blinken says he'll be laying out his concerns on a range of issues at next week's meeting in alaska the number of daily covered 19 deaths in brazil has exceeded 2000 for the 1st time widens disfigure pushes the total death toll to more than 217000 health experts say the surge is being fueled by more contagious strains of the virus a senate inquiry is underway into the killing of dozens of judges and lawyers in the philippines during president to territories so-called war on drugs at least 54 have died since he took office 5 years ago rights groups say most at risk a lawyers representing people accused of terrorism or drug related crimes those are the headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera after the street go by. frank assessments the world is on a brink. that model failure is that
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a fair assessment you catastrophic. white. informed opinion should be coy ultimately it will be sovereigns and governments who are buying that is the direction this is all headed in-depth analysis of the day's global headlines the inside story. a lot of the stories that we cover all highly complex so it's very poor we make them as understandable as we care as ours is there a correspondence course will be strong to. hire for me ok and your in the stream it's nearly a year since the world health organization declared what has turned out to be a devastating covert 19 pandemic today we all sky global panel how the coronavirus
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has changed this and you can join in the conversation too obviously i'm going to be focusing on family work and community tell us about your pandemic experiences and i live you tracked. more than 117000000 people worldwide have been sickened by coverage 19 and 2600000 people have died the fine demick is the most deadly since 918 and it has changed our lives in ways that would have been on finkel just over a year ago joining us to reflect on this challenging the russian i do she is a clinical psychologist in dublin south africa freida sidhwani is also a clinical psychologist she joins us from mumbai india and erika felix is a psychology professor at the university of california santa barbara hello everybody i am going to give you ladies one would i want your instant reaction this is my mu truck i want to know where your head is right now to russia could 19th 1st
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thought i think for me were unprecedented to have really defined what over 90 promise president table. covered 19 chaos and uncertainty ok erica. revealing. how i know where your mates are at right now let's start with family life and how it's changed for you in the past year his jason story i was one of the 1st people in the united states to get covert 1000 i had it last march and that up in the hospital when i couldn't breathe without oxygen had to go back to the hospital 6 weeks later with painful complications and my lungs wasn't till about mid july when i really felt better took about 4 months to get over it took a huge toll on me physically also mentally took a huge toll my wife wanted to take care of me the whole time and one of biggest
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worries that impacted me and cost me some friends people who even after they saw what i went through still think this is all overblown or fake which i still don't understand erica's chasing misspeaking that i can see you nodding it was obviously resonating what he went through and the level of grief in the united states as the u.s. keeps counting the number of people who have died from what is down to the country to living in. yeah the impact on family has been huge but the people most directly impacted your gas and just having to adjust and adapt and take so much more her plate but also the family is having to change and adapt in living with each other like i'm a university professor are students and had to go home and so families are welcoming back adult children that they thought had moved out people have been moving from urban cities to back home to their family of origin just to be able
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to pour into you know or shelter in place in places where they get a little more outdoor space so it's just been turbulent and the grief. just how do you prove it or losing a family member to kobe but also missed last school. changes in jobs a lot of businesses it's been massive so when i think about i think about how powerful those connections are here for me the family is so caught connecting your family call that what happens when you have a cell phone knocked down and something like public 19 how is indian family life changed. so i think that are 2 important aspects you know you know initially with the lockdown coming in peace all 3 generations of family vehicle sitting together in wary clothes new tools so the levels of trust ration angle were very high
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because they were space constrained and with the lockdown prolonging pro couple of months we saw a lot of you leaving this happening so yes we lost the connectivity we lost there was a lot of grief coming in there was a sudden panic in the atmosphere we didn't know what was cool with 19 to a large population in india is also you know not had the former school so for them to understand what this lie this is it's very transparent you can see it you know is it actually true or no and so there was a lot of panic and chaos in the community so it took a lot of trying oh for the government to sort of you know help or to social media is to yes this is the widest rioja to save your little bit i'm awfully quiet but the entire process was you know took a lot of lot of time families you know went to children men into online schooling more stores the kids do not have your formal gadgets you know i pads schools were
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not equipped to go into our 9th goulding so unlike the us and on and around the world you know interest in india is very big sort of a personal level and so a lot of schools took a lot of time to start the education back on. i'm just thinking about life and right now compared to life in devon and you're looking at the family. well i think mostly it's been shifting roles though moms that have to be home school teachers dads that have to do different things but it's very much the same as erica and others experiences people had to learn and change but i think the difference with south africa is that this is not our 1st huge social destructive experience in the sense that the pandemic is just be in living memory that there had destructive experience we've had as south africans we've had
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a whole hiv pandemic in south africa which destructed our lives and shifted family roles and then most people in living memory have lived through a transition in a party so i think south africans are kind of adaptable and can do things on the run but even this pandemic has. i think shifted and challenge people's looks ability how they are able to change and shift between community whole family and their different roles i think i think it's the shifting and changing of roles has been the most challenging i would love ladies for you to listen to must hear that decide. listen to me here and then respond right off the back of her she speaks about greece has taken that there has been a dramatic increase in complex belief here in this going pandemic one out of 3 americans has lost someone beautiful with 19 globally traditional mooning luci
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would have been disrupted you do poorly did precautions many even battle a guild of having transmitted corbet 19 to the deceased still left the social support required during these trying times the the some of the factors that have complicated because already difficult grieving process. yeah i think i completely agree but tell you no because you need india we are you which country would get to the chills to the guys different religions and each state and each religion has its own way of grieving and that long process or 20 the process of leaving is extremely important and i think we all waited we lost that initially you were not allowed to accompany you know the disease to the morgue and that was extremely distressed wonderful family people oh you know people it was
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a lot of stigma not to touch the body you know what are the last rites to the body and i think this led to a lot of trauma you know a lot of lives so i think using that and diode ritual which helps the community to born sharing is healing and i think we've lost that. i am going to talk about what's next because working in a pandemic and a lot down heart it's an understatement economist diane lane is particularly concerned about the impact on women. so a lot of women are mark that word has been disrupted by the pandemic because women tend to wear the human intensity types of jobs in the human intensive industries so leisure hospitality housing education services those jobs are fortunately are also for fortunately tend to be hard time jobs women choose those jobs especially working models for the flexibility of schedule but those jobs don't tend to come
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with benefits because they're part time so they don't come without insurance they don't come with a leave. one of the shocking stats that's come out of the impact of covert 19 on allies is how many women go all the way up and kicked out of work and they've lost their jobs this has happened from the u.s. to sap and south this is happening around the wealth erica he stopped what happened yes like in september kids went back to school moms didn't go back to work yes many moms have chosen or feel that it forced choice honestly to have to take care of their families in a way that does not allow them to work any more and just yesterday our vice president was talking about 2500000 women and having left the workforce in the pandemic started and how that will affect our economic recovery we've all tried to be very flexible and we'd like to be. trying to just work schedules but the
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ultimate reality is that the caregiving role disproportionately burdens women and they especially ones that are in that sandwich generation as we used to call it in terms of having to teach your children at home and also have responsibilities for all their parents and so there are just such a strain on their ability to keep up their job and so they're the ones working part time they might leave and hopefully have a partner about how to spend it effects our economic outlook too much to pick up. i think it's interesting we've come across a term recently which described the story well and it's called sci fi session literally recession of women from from the environment and it speaks a lot to moving women and diversity issues back to economically and socially but more than that i think again the shifting of roles for women and the gains that
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women have made in terms of gender diversity and a lot of research shows that women if they're more educated and better off to raise children better these and these are again that we're using as as a species as a as a population but in my own work which is mostly with with health care workers who are highly trained professionals i've seen. then having to cope with great grief and what erica mentioned of there being the sandwich generation having to have heard stories of of healthcare workers having to put their their parents in a hospital and then go to their own hospital and take care of our covert patients so it's not just the work button but it's the emotional burden as well in going back to the issue of grief as a psychologist dealing with healthcare workers and mostly women are presenting for a mental health care at the moment i have to say they need literally have to
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rewrite the book as archaeologists as mental health care professionals where to really write a book and grieve most of our work that we know one treif comes from from war or from learning about grief post war planning about grief in terms of terminal illness but pandemic related grief this kind of global pervasive grief is something is something new and and as erica mentioned women suffer the greater burden it's it's really an unsocial social economic spiritual all sorts of levels and there is a town where it's a well known term that we've that i've researched in in hiv in south africa it's called the burden of care. it's really the burden of care when you say you haven't to rewrite the book what hooping end up hope what will be in those chapters that we've learned in 12 months. what will be there is eric is going to suggest that we
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go once and also in chapter one. gosh no i didn't hear it interrupt that i was just thinking greed is so many different levels of course we've had to deal with that intentional he remembers getting sick or or losing loved ones but people have also had to grieve i variety of losses so losing a business can cause grief that economic loss the loss or dreams like delaying education or other things people wanted to do to grieve over the last leg of dance like we had students missing their graduation missing. grief over not being able to get together over holidays so it's just it cuts across levels and so we all can be green being different things are different ways of course that people who've lost loved ones have the most. permanent big words we have hope that
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some things will be restored really cuts across a variety the have different losses to not letting you off the hook yet i do want to know what's in your when you're rewriting the book on how to treat us as a global community what would be in that but i'll give you some thinking time here . shot at i'd love you to respond to some of this tat says on small businesses are shutting down in sweden a lot of people are losing jobs homelessness mental health is staggering drug abuse governments not paying for a nice talking about over disaffected all parts of our lives not just our working lives she has a home to see her family in the here and then talks about the long lockdown having impacts on mental health children and young people it's like there's no part of our life that we can combine a cup of putting
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a little box. it hasn't been the tate. thoughts i think i think that's a very it's a very touching story because i think we can all relate to it i've been seeing a lot of patients through the pandemic and of course being and had chemical we physically had a comforting sessions and i primarily open my clinic because we were getting very very high rates of being it's your site and you know there was nothing that was buhl be done even the of course there were some headlines but you could feed their depression angle i monger kids raising the rates of addiction have gone high also i want to point out your domestic weiland are initiating the pandemic i think that some point that we need to highlight. and you know and when you're looking at disparity in domes of gentle women did bad and do bear a lot of that part of the while and so i think that's where especially in india we
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have a lot of laws supporting the women but that deliberates have significantly grown up in doing some drug abuse me have seen very very high rates of drug abuse among the knee joints and this is big huge maples they haven't gone back to school for single b. roll the pandemic has started they don't know how to cool they have mental health programs through school but i think that isn't enough so i think there's a general loss all you know would be a hoot and i want to point out you know it is you know as a society we look condition then we had better ones of living and all that i think she'll call a pattern i think different the well equipped in different ways so to readapt to you know everybody had a different groupings die. just to say for the 1st chapter in this new book that route. writing for how to cope with mass going to what would be that chapter titled i think it would be about dealing with multiple levels of grief all at the
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same time it's been an emotional to experience the loss of a loved one loss of a job loss of a style of living all at the same time and it's been quite common will also have to talk about communal experience crizal not all levels of grief different types of grief experienced as a community circle etc so yeah and also anticipated grief so seen what's happening to others and know what's coming next and we haven't seen that level of anticipated grief as we've seen with this pandemic but also will have to know more are how to work globally as a community and i'm glad you spoke about not start relations but that the particular area of interest of mine and how the world is really the whole globe is really too old to the more rise so all the attention kind of falls to the north so it's it's a term i've used before the northern tilt and we have this whole pandemic as
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redirected our attention to how the south experiences grief factor for instance global compassion is a thing that we have to think about as well how we share the vaccine how we share knowledge how we worry about other people because the more people that are vaccinated throughout the world the safer we all are so northern tilt global compassion anticipated creative and multiple levels of grief i hope we do you know what joe it is that i find it really interesting the in the same way that we are having to keep away from each other this pandemic has also in some ways united as as a globe let's talk about what kind of virus is meant for our sense of community we spoke to dr compatible have a listen. i think the impact has been especially hard on adolescents and young adults who are in the pandemic is just shocked at all the key aspects of their lives from meeting in meeting friends to completing education and finding
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a job this is of course also the keith is of the life course when mental health problems and large the most important thing to address young people people's needs is to ensure that their voices are heard and their aspirations are prioritized when planning how societies contain the epidemic. young children are having an extraordinary time growing up why we're not seeing our friends and not playing with your friends so heart wrenching stories and thinking about the kids right now. so it's. yes i'm a child psychologist and so i'm seeing as many of the same clients i had before and just how it is exacerbating like any existing depression anxiety that they've already had with adolescents we know that their peer group is critical part of their development and as dr patel had mentioned and so not being able to see their
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friends is taking a huge toll on their mental health and it's taking a toll on the family relations because parents are trying to find this savors ways for them to get some social interaction are trying to make up for that but it's training on the family as a whole and so i just see that families are trying their best they're trying to persevere i hear my my adolescent clients trying to put on a good attitude but it waxes and waves over the course of the pandemic it's a year on out there's weeks they're doing better and there's weeks that there are really struggling and i'm seeing a lot more symptoms you know guests and go i just i just wanted to add something on this and you know i think what i really want to add you know to ease them or to they should you know and you can keep popular would ration for a couple of months but having stretched up be able to be should without any external that will without any extent of what has been a huge huge obstacle. we have now and i've seen now it's all up to you sorry
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but i had. just about like you know when it 1st happened and it was like a global community coming together everybody seemed to be in lockdown as those kids really were good there was a lot of accommodations for academics but now i'm even seeing honor students who have their motivation you really hit on that it's like they're now struggling and can barely make it to class and people are like the students are barely waking up or the zooms are missing and it's just hard to be motivated a year on our you know to be motivated for online education and they even have access to that which we know that there's been a large disparity is in terms of the ability to access education and that this is high let's say here's the thing we have spent over 20 minutes talking about our horrible terrible bad year and i am wondering if there is anything wrong in the last 12 months why oval face like really thinking that we can take away what has
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been good for us for our spirit we've adapted i'm going to give. on this to. help where he talks about what how and what is the title of a helpless. one of the challenges that the community that i serve faced at the onset of the pandemic was the loss of community comes in right before the month of ramadan which is like very communal spirit and then as the horror of the pen to make a big end to trickle down led to the deaths of family members and friends and those we love our inability to come together and support each other and be there for one another and although initially that seemed as as a formidable foe i think many of us have come out stronger with a greater capacity to serve greater empathy greater investment greater maturity more wisdom and to take things that maybe in the past we took for granted now that we're coming back as a community to really understand and appreciate their value. i guess i also for
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a sentence to stop with i'm going to also for a sentence to always what have we gotten calls attempts. to russia where he learned a valuable hope and it got to. i think oh what a specific meaning beyond what we have be thinking but now you've made it has to go back and make we have docket acknowledging that compassion fatigue is a real being and that we can get one don't you know are a couple hot. i think we've learned that human capacity to it down not to even thrive in difficult circumstances is strong and i think we've learned thank you i already thank you so much yes i really appreciate each excellent one thing that i've definitely learned on the strong is misinformation and kozak 19. like this let
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me point you into the right direction so you are never misinformed verified partnership championed by united nations you will find it in your search engine and go that accurate 19 information thanks for watching. what should americans be thinking and doing right now it should be a bad idea they don't care about their work is all they care about is making money china is not going to be left out of the calling for the bloated defense budget to be cut the bottom line on us politics and policies america act on the world. we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no
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we say to america help is on the way. the $1.00 trillion dollar covert 19 relief bill passes its final hurdle in the u.s. offering financial boost to millions of americans. i'm about this and this is all just a live from doha also coming up manaus military is accused of using battle tactics as it intensifies its crackdown on anti food protesters.
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