tv earthrise Natural Wisdom Al Jazeera May 19, 2021 12:30pm-1:01pm +03
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and the netherlands is facing a major challenge in holding the contest in the safest way possible during a global pandemic stop fastened al-jazeera in rotterdam it's funny an interesting move by the italian super common in fact lamborghini says it will only produce hybrid cars and will be doing it by 2020 for the scion became its 1st petrol electric hybrid when it was launched last year beginnings investing $1300000000.00 in converting the rest of its range into hybrid power and aims to produce its 1st all electric car by the end of the decade. the i will take you through the headlines on al-jazeera israeli forces have fired a warning shot at another town block in gaza dozens of palestinian families have been forced to leave their homes across the street more than 100 bombs and
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artillery shells were fired throughout the night and into the morning over in the west bank funeral processions on the way for palestinians killed during the largest general strike in decades which happened on tuesday 4 people were killed across the occupied west bank more from what a bill hamid residents of a complex of 2 buildings 16 story buildings were told to evacuate the building now that's a building that is in between gaza city and it is by and large a residential building each floor has about 6 apartments and so you can imagine now to panic of those families trying to leave as quick as possible maybe grabbing some belongings because they were they don't know whether they will be ever be able to return to their homes or whether that building will be flattened we've seen with other buildings in the days before. for the 2nd day in
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a row the number of corona virus deaths in india has hit a record high or than 4 and a half 1000 recorded over the last 24 hours but the number of new cases has been coming down in recent days after reaching daily highs of more than 400002 weeks ago . people in france are back enjoying cafe terraces once again is the next stage of lockdown easing comes into effect museums non-essential shops are also reopening theaters and cinemas are welcoming back audiences at 35 percent capacity and people can stay out later as the nightly curfew has been pushed back from 7 pm to 9 pm. and migrants are continuing to travel from morocco to a spanish enclave in north africa despite the poor conditions there around 8000 people have not crossed into the by sea by walking around the coast dozens of also reached millia spain's other on in the region earthrise next on al-jazeera and then hala is here with your news on. how concerned should we be about the rising flu
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crisis or is this entirely down to the pandemic we bring you the stories and developments that are rapidly changing the world we live in a prime minister designate of a very broad scope fixing a war torn economy counting the cost on al-jazeera. while those indigenous almost live in his us on his own she just came up there was some in law do you know sitting to thank you for. sandra sic a sense of the populace oh my cynical me all those awful bill bennett that's a loss that you thought of simone thing diva my joy did the sense of the beauty of
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it said that kids should the whole. last month in most i mean madea would do it at the his speed to all secure the view that. the plan is all that he's will do you. really see that they view the us so mom was at that because they support us on the simple slept with ice. well i mean it us all of the goals. and this is a good. shared a well does it got me about as well dusty much less stand on me but leave me. with all that most. of them go to someone. else i mean there. has been almost always was some stuff that is so muslims it's almost indigenous. in this suit or the bell money now but i've been up to it is. they need to look at view see for
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the. most. of the society you know stuff for the sundance july's. people there was up in the. people that was up in that close one but at that point you know genesis things. became delay and australia's from right northwest because one of the most ecologically intact regions in the world that remark misalign contraceptive forever and now it's under increasing threat from modern day activities traditional iron is thousands of years the taking the late in caring for their country teaming up with scientists and government to create an indigenous led marine protected area i'm excited to see this collaboration through my work as a marine scientist i've become passionate about bridging the gap between traditional knowledge and science. 800 islands make up the kimberley's
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back in the archipelago a place reaching out of this it's now under threat from development and climate change. carl often provides an early warning system so i mating lamb rowland's from the kimberley marine research stance and has been monitoring local carls the signs of stress. what's so important about these cars in the kimberley is one of the biggest standout faces is their exposure to the elements on the low top sort of have that no one made a top. which isn't saying too many other places of the world you know they've got these thermal resilience which we don't say with a lot of other calls the carl he can withstand on precision to temperature extremes of up to 8 degrees celsius a day and they bring it's a better as our nation temperatures rise so we use a model called every major we get a shot and it's the side photo year after year and month after month so wait a week i. think marks along the lawn what we're chosen here is just that little spirit level into the center well that's tricky to get it's still it's not. like to
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think that. that is easy and then we carry on like a 16 more to go to. this simple method and loudly and to compare the state of the car i repeated time. and he's night to signs that even this resilient car loan is reaching its limits. it's got his fully fledged growth on a bleaching aka's when the water is too long an alkie the carl's food silis is exposed so it's really completely what it's really blowing in my system and it's just a huge picture you would look at you're a 1st just i'm engineer and to lose that building block you just lost your structure you lost your community someone's house. and we have this ecosystem out here which is but it is also on the cost of having this glitching event so it's it's definitely something when i took it very close on. carl's support a closure of the odds means b.c.
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that scientists could take that up to 90 percent could disappear by 2040 and makes creating a marine park here even more on edge and. leading the way is the indigenous bad community there regularly were closely with scientists. so we're going to speak here in greece yeah so you can do that or if today marine biologist scott whiting is joining them to carry out a research trip niren as a turtle your little point here is a really dramatic turning point they all sort of come way on the highway. there's a turtle and you're right it is so they must be pretty important to you guys just glorious and. dangerous being the secret. peter body heat you know. people always. we struggle hard and. shared with our tribe the thousands it is the body.
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of sustainably these days the knowledge of the churches behavior is proving invaluable to scientific conservation efforts working with local people it's really important there are many ways. understanding completely what like the playful knowledge about totals it's important. not going to make sure there's abundance of generations you know but recent precious i mean my conduit to lying we don't have that other data from other areas to show the full effect of what's happening basically we didn't really think about climate change. pollution making with. and what denali did we have been traditional. in that the environment. which has been everything that lives in this state. in 2019 the body people presented their design for the buck in iraq a pack it's now in the planning phase and likely to cover to 6000 square kilometers
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of combined night of total area integrating dark modern science and indigenous cultural values for this stage is rarely achieved. but now it's time to hit the wars and planning into action separately there was a common area this morning a better look out of the world that we are here for you but say how this is a really big water understand we really are not. the best but made a step out of. it we can't. these is what they call it a natural right the ranges jump off the bite straight on to the turtles back. now. to fight or run around but eventually that
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one picks out of his stride on the fact that if. they want to say it was a pretty good sleeper send them home so i won't be able to do is tell where they still come from no i don't see many different so we just stand tagging with pictures of the town and they put an individual tags on age for at some point if blessed that the other one can still be he spoke. a few times to move on to the mind i am not interested but the tape measure and the let go the skin off of the fun thing and the way that turbos with children since you know you want their thing to be handling the tattoo as my look crap but it doesn't them green cyclo billions and change and gathering this data is vital for the conservation exist i'm unclear. yet she's got to get to noisy 7 centimeters before she breaks the mood there is a fuss that the dr said mostly for the health of the population that's happening.
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this trip is part of the ranges of scientific training activists that we independently catching tiptoes and collecting data on a regular basis has been in the technique something you would call when you were very young but the 1st thing you learn believe in but this via dublin a boatload of. them they go 5 of them small to the physical funding to get to learning come out of. it's clear there's a real merit in leaving traditional knowledge in scientific research scientists sometimes will get a snapshot of very great in so i think what's happening in the environment what the traditional knowledge can bring is that the longer term noise. brings together to knowledge systems sort of programming in. the buccaneer acapella is sorry remarked that until recently scientists need very little about it and this is one place of
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extraordinary but of this is how they would never found without the body. the getting there today is proving tricky figuring it that once they have a very very genuine need but not quite a crushing very funny giving free account. of the phase extreme tides may be difficult to navigate but twice a day as the waters recede the hidden while it is revealed. well you know what the odds bring to light strength is that. we have saved us here which the totals alone when the tide goes out these rock pools and these pools are would have been extremely hot and approaching 40 degrees they're living at the age that they seem to be driving working with research. we started to understand that their grass grows when something new that they wow that's really so good with sea grass we should have come to. this is unprecedented for
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a plant that has been rebuilt to irish and longing. and say grass absorb carbon dioxide up to $35.00 times faster than a rain forest if conservation is crucial it's extraordinary discoveries like these that it driving the creation of the marine pack this area that hasn't been mapped to the fore and so that's the big thing is is not being allowed knowing way you want to protect things we were up a clam groups and they started napping in their own areas what they value put into marine parks planning for zoning and all the type of areas that you want to protect but even if you're indigenous or a western scientist you still got the same objective to protect. your country for future. the buccaneer acapella. by 2024 with scientists saying that at least 30 percent of the world's oceans need protection in the next decade creating a refuge in areas like this goes a long way to achieving that goal and working with indigenous people is proving
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essential to safeguarding biodiversity. and whatever is in the sea made this what oh yeah we have to look after a country and we have to keep it i said war when i was young but i have good or i think i was up for a lot of people fell apart anyway. i am part of the ottoman indigenous community which is located in the highlands of central mexico and for me coming from an indigenous background means that i with my own live in a more holistic way one of reciprocity where we acknowledge that what we give to the earth is what the earth gives to us and so it's our responsibility as humans to
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protect that relationship when i grew up i had the idea and i everybody saw the world the way i did that everybody have this innate love for mother i soon realized that that relationship was being broken by a lot of different companies and extractive is projects around me i see and now i asked my role to communicate to people that indigenous philosophy is not only for indigenous peoples anybody can embody that philosophy of reciprocity that anybody can have a connection with mother nature i think that indigenous communities are not only being neglect there but also this respect that and that is really everything and when you see in our industries that are perpetuating the climate crisis actually going to indigenous communities to put their infrastructure up you can see that with fracking with pipelines with waste sites with all sorts of polluting infrastructure so that is why the fight for the dignity of indigenous communities
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is the same as a fight for climate justice when you lose your forest you lose part of your culture and when you lose your culture you lose your identity and it's our duty to tell people you have to. you have reset understanding and connect with mother earth you have to realize that right now we're living in a world that has lost its power and we need to recover that and there are people who now the way. the area surrounding the south who could do a mountain range in the heart of brazil is home to a unique ecosystem where d.m. isn't rain forest meets the tropical so then out of this is how do. they survive and this aren't indigenous people who have been living here for over 500 years this territory is sacred to them. when their homeland is under threat climate change is impacting the landscape and illegal invasions like mine so i plenty sions
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encounter rangers are common occurrences here. it's the same story all over brazil the indigenous land is being seized by profiteers enabled led government focused on short term gain at the cost of the environment but there indigenous people remain nature flourishes. i'm on my way to meet incest or guardians of this land. there are $18.00 inch of odds and $1500.00 of them they've here. through our file i kept him at the bar was a. becky for it could. be. i'm went through what the baby what's my eyes or just saw. visual on the. 4th of.
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this is the harbor killer. takes me to see you know tops which around 40 years ago was occupied by a group of 20 farmers. and what this was ever invited g.m. on this all the must. be obscured. by you was all she would simply ask and are more going to move you also opened. the door as you are through. with buddha you are. a bug you. do that by learning i did or what to do all of to look cool of the pool while i was all in during wartime. training. or just saw. a sob
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something you. picked up on this and said i kill floor with snack you'll want to move he. will ask you miss with my ear. math invasion such as the one in this house for satish event is to fight for the rights to their land from the 1966 onwards or maybe this is st you know i saw. a quote i knew out of the makah so it's more. than just simple. was he was. there a scene same game i use with someone but for libel veron. was not biased prosecutable demarco one of the people instrumental in this process was a matter should luna who was voted in as brazil's 1st indigenous congressman in 1902 and so. in the article or in the middle of the moment visiting at the
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me from port bertha seems the only. place i thought so was using the as it to his sybil history all in 1988 a new constitution was passed which recognized indigenous people as the 1st occupants of brazil disha venters were given the legal rights to their land an area of more than 328000 hectares the despite this deemed asians continue in 2019 there were 8 in demento boys over the past 2 decades the seventy's have lost 800000 hectares of their territory. the dow too is one of the coach responsible for guarding the border get south and get a significant where we see a lot of the locks on the warning. while more known to the operator by adding the whole wad it off the lot for not even the most awkward by the title and watch
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it go up how about new york thought on their walk women are set. their walk or walk you know what you are human or see i will not only all wear not the one who looks you i will see your mother thought i was about i'm a mom. recently the seventy's were given to use food to buy a visitor which has enhanced their surveillance capacity the drones. do a monument to. the little bit of what we will the. women will be or does if it will be a hood in the home of. this drone this year winters are able to what you were an area of 600 hectares at one time. west a pick north years it's been
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a moment steve it was only so far now i say thank you. for you sue important you know who your school would be such a decision won't it be minto boys and i've seen how the shipment is there protecting nature we're trying to keep introduce out. my next stop is the village of hiba where the community is preserving by the versity using seeds. they didn't do. the job already is a traditional expedition and strange today the whole village is going to get your seat and i'll join you there. 000000 the bracelets necklace and paint which is made from. charcoal are believed to have protective properties 00000000000000000
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mama mama and the thought so i seen this in a man on the law and a leak by high men and what they want power i want that on naomi to roll in the. ground. i think you. know what a family was you and he granda new same age and didn't die. as they mention and wouldn't you the one for. losing the competition here. just. got a few and they are quite fierce with the booty cheap. but the more they were going to have put in warm water for one day and they think they have it for breakfast big part of the food supply of the village.
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back the seeds are weighed and sorted. so budged. they did all all right 5 the right alone did he who in one of the is it a dire. need that he wouldn't be. mine and mine and my little nose. will do that. last thursday. one another how do you know who's right or who's there nothing imminently. so they take the food. and then you have all the seeds you boil it feed a family. it's like a seed bank is real go. more than 600 kilograms of seeds are collected
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by the community 80 pounds every year some or so the local fairs to prove indigenous and non-indigenous communities and others representing 52 species from this unique ecosystem are planted and pillaged land. phrase there is a good range is into it algae he said lends a lot of the idea but we really do should you care to patients proteges are canary but in my work with the evolve about i'll be after the forest the. chief from an asp land instead of each in d.c. dot the community can help to preserve the areas reach where they versity. nasserist revolution house minister could handle mama for it actually then though the side sell h. as enough support to. the model but are you.
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during my time here i've gained a real understanding of how intricately connected issue hunters way of life is with the world around them and how deep their knowledge of it runs. your true defenders of nature and their rights to remain here serving as its guardians must be a friend to. receive . the most a. listers. this. meatless and you know suitable is a must in the littlest under way or the other mother will be the only the best person to be. honest if there are better in this is the. sure to. have a man there is. in a school many of them there some of them endorsing for free in
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a sort of embrace them with our having leaders that are family or if they must be and i know by most that immediate you know one when they had again that this we've . gotta remember that yes i'm on this to be the only thing that from here on any that. e.m.i. say to another man that they didn't matter anyway starting in the quad while you're by the usa you've been in the end the idea. that you know little old any. of this stuff but i see the one of this about a similar silverstone to the subject that example in my way out of this is that made. him in fact if you know your daddy yeah but him in a minute that he. leave that is the alice it is betting mr kid no must look at you know must. is the muslim in the bin in the better look in the last universes he has received word that the year that he didn't the good thing is it's . just to let him take it in if i'm already know it it was
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a good idea to be struck by the young black. list but it's a let me tell you just a bit but a little in a. lot of evil. a life and death struggle for racial equality in a deeply on equal society fortunately that was a spy for the apartheid regime but in their good they've been very close friends like a family living together over 50 years after his torture and death in police custody i just your world tells the remarkable story of anti apartheid campaigner and. south africa demanding 4th apartheid are not just. the world of high frequency shared trading exposed by this engine that was basically trading a kind of last $30000000.00 it was a terrifying experience how artificial intelligence was raised the stakes and risks
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on the money markets as markets go faster and faster we are opening up the possibility for instability for no. money box on al-jazeera. this is al-jazeera. hello there on how he's even this is the news live from doha and coming up in the next 60 minutes people right on the streets of the occupied west bank as preparations begin for the funerals of victims of this really violence. in. israel.
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