tv The Stream Al Jazeera May 22, 2021 5:30am-6:01am +03
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re is predicting a sharp slow down in price growth, but at the moment the only people who appear to be thriving, those already on the property, lead up $1900000.00. appreciate the offerings so welcoming wayne. hey, al jazeera oakland on sunday in the 2nd part of our series, we take a look at housing in light, cheerier, while some struggle to put food on the table, the capital, and seeing a boom in the luxury home market. ah, what's going on there with lisa who rama reminder of our top stories, thousands of palestinians in gaza, a returning to what's left of their homes after 11 days of israeli bombardment, counselor officials, they, the violence will cost a $100000000.00 to rebuild the damage to industry power and agriculture. meanwhile, tension has remained high a coffee occupied with bank almost 100 palestinians were injured in skirmishes with israeli forces near an illegal settlement close to ramallah us. president joe biden
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says a 2 state solution is the only way to solve the conflict by and said they wouldn't be peace or less. regional leaders acknowledged israel's right to exist as an independent jewish state. we still need a 2 state solution. it is the only answer, the only answer. and what i'm convinced of is that we can now move as i had did even before whereas i was able to negotiate wash. and before the fire was to go shade that i made it clear that i spoke with president of the boss. we were going to make sure that we are going to provide for security in the west bank. and recently we renewed the security commitment as well as economic commitment to the people on the west bank. i also indicated to the israelis and i thought i was very important that they stopped in jerusalem this inter, communal fighting. that is why extremes on both sides. it has to end until the
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region says unequivocally they acknowledge the right of israel to exist. as an independent jewish state, there will be no peace. the world health organization says the global death toll from covered 19 could be 2 to 3 times higher than the official count. they show 3400000 people have died from chrome to virus since the start of the pandemic. but the w h, i estimate the true number of deaths is between 6 and 8000000 people, military sources and nigeria say the head of the army has been killed in a plane crash. lieutenant general ibrahim, i totally plain reported. he came down on an official visit to the state of contina . the air force has confirmed i was a crash close to the airport. an investigation is underway. those were the headlines. nick clark will have more news here in half now to stay with us. the stream is next. oh,
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welcome to portal. your gateway to the very best advantage there. an online content that you may have met. a new program that this for our platforms makes the connections and presents a digestible, seeing each the award winning online content on their audience portal with me sound gatlin coming soon on out there. ah, i am you. okay. our today's bonus edition of the stream, south africa's num zombie batter, you and hcr, goodwill ambassador. and one of the stars of coming to america is coming to this stream. it is such a great interview. make sure you stick around right to the end to see it. we take a close look at the audio at comp house and ask whether the free reading conversations that promotes could be dangerous in countries that restrict free
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sprints. and there has been multiple reports of content from palestinians, just disappearing on line. the stream brought together 3 expert who had no doubt that some of the biggest social media platforms in the world are suppressing palestinian voices. we are not paranoid, we are not paranoid about what happens on flushing media over the past. let's say, 78 years. we've seen evidence clear evidence of censorship, of accounts being taken down of double standards in the way facebook or twitter deals with the city news page, and then history and the propaganda military page. for example, we've seen those double times seen the evidence over the past years. when we say there are issues and there are problems they can be dismissed as technical issues or the censorship is really because we know the evidence is there and it's always changing and changing and shifting. but we're not paranoid. the censorship is
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always there, palestinian activist and journalists and users of social media have been decrying the discrimination that they're facing on the, on those platforms for years. but i personally someone who has worked and wrote a lot about this topic. i have not seen anything of the scale. so brazen at this point and so incredible i it's beyond censorship. it's, it's digital repression. social media companies are actively suppressing the narrative of palace pinions and their allies for sharing solid, their contents with what's happening in palestine or documenting human rights violations and war crimes. there are like us to metric 1st to silence palestinians on the online space. that is, the government is trying with all its power to silence palestinians, either through the voluntary dig down where the israel cyber unit is sending greek west to request an equal to the ocean media company, for example,
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and 2019. and they had made like 19000 request to the social media companies regarding the content take down the content, dig down and in 2020. then i'm but only continue to write everything he saw just there was broadcast live, but they were more revelations to come about the digital battle polish teens are current a fighting on line, so case the conversation that allow mo mona and i had behind the scenes of the episodes ad the, is there any intelligence service they were, they were checking and making activists in jerusalem and they were telling them that we will hold you accountable later on. so they were threatening the activists either who's going to dr. mosque. and by using the gps so that they're just using g p. s to spy on people and then they send, they send them
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a short message that we are going to hold you accountable later on. and there is other cases where the intelligence service, they, they send messages to people calling them look for things on social media. and by doing them, they are threatening that i should need the activists and the human rights defenders. janie and box service introduced this new system during the corporate crisis to track every mobile phone held by everybody is not even new in every every mobile phone held by anyone and associating the number with chip with an id card with a name and the tracking location the tracking system is it's always been there, of course, but it was list amazed by the connected but as the parliament and it came, it became law and the services were using. it's an abusing it's over the, during the course period. and we believe that introducing such a method, such
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a measure of for pandemic purposes is, is really, it would be really easy to abused by this back services, which we do want to intimidate and track people. and that's probably the source of such a messaging. what worries me the most is that, you know, it's not just take down, they are modeling users. you are being modeled with that knowing you're being muzzled and that you know, the, the, the tip of power you can function as a non transparent company. i'm like here users, even though they have made many public commitments to uphold human rights to they even facebook, especially they had a huge corporate human rights policy issued a couple of months ago in march. but when you see their commitments versus the actual action, it's 2 different story. and i'm glad,
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because finally, we can say with full confidence that you are discriminant, you're bad, and you are suppressing the hottest thing in there. there's no other way, you know, there is no one but can say, well, you know, it's just a bunch of our towns. it's a technical glitch. and i want to add to this is that, you know, for social media, it's not, you know, it hasn't only just helped us penetrate into mainstream media. and the palestinian narrative actually forget about the policy and narrative to fact from the ground. the, the the fact of a part high, the fact of genocide, the fact of ethnic cleansing, they are finally breaking through and people are talking about publicly without fear. and it's also saving people's lives. it said the people in general and elsewhere from being evicted from their homes without, you know,
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there's so much that can happen in the bark and having social media and live streaming and documenting has helped in that sense. it's really disappointing and i would say disgraceful. and discussing that as social media companies, even though they, they claim that they're the voice of all people. they're actively suppressing people who need those platforms. the most. we stay in the digital well, to unpack how the audio chat platform clubhouse is being used globally. once it's loaded onto your son, you can browse through thousands of rooms looking at the conversations to listen in to take parting or even moderate during the shower gas in the gall motors, avi melissa child mark o n. jones talks about the difficulties of using an app that promote free speech in countries. they don't encourage open dialogue of the broadcast. i asked them traditional some of the best conversations that they listened in tea. welcome to overheard inc of house. not going to get us started the conversation i had
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was it was, it's very interesting discussion about gender roles and sexuality in gulf countries . and i thought that was kind of fascinating because, i mean, i'm going to, i'm a sort of professor and we do talk about this in class and a very kind of private space where after a time, when people feel space, but the head people talking in chinese experiences from the gulf on clubhouse in what is a very open for i'm really kind of i thought was really nice. it was refreshing. how much do i want? i want to offer more detail here now. well, i think it was, i think we talking about the sex education, we were talking about sexuality. what, what, give me rights, which talk about in the middle east. right. you know, it is the red line in most countries overheard in comp house. melissa, the one story that stands out for you,
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i think it does have to go back to what's happening and she jen and the engagement between weaker than han chinese and there was one moment where han chinese woman, i don't remember if she was in china or out what she said, i want to tell everyone in this room that i feel heartbroken over what my government is doing to to you. we girls who are listening and i wish there was something i could do to change it. and i think a lot of wiggers true gone through so much trauma, needed to hear that from an ethnic chinese. it was really intense. and he and you heard, you know, come talking teacher, i just remember that and i could go on, but yeah, mega as a hurting club house. well, i would also say and has to do with the me to conversation. there's been him need to move, moment sort of a new movement over the past couple of years,
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year or so that started on twitter. but then with it was mostly, you know, anonymous account. a lot of he says, she said, we're not sure how can we trust this, but then suddenly clubhouse came in. there were these rooms of hours and hours of discussion and people will just drop in their own name, their own voice, and start telling stories of these me to issues about celebrity prominent musicians, artists that would just mind blowing mind blowing, and it wasn't at all possible on twitter and it wasn't possible with media because the media is very careful when it comes to me to a story for legal reasons or they don't want to be sued. they don't want to just put people on air to talk about these things, but it seems like club house gave a platform to a lot of iranian women and a new found courage because you would see various, with tim drop into a room. and each of them talking about the issue would give cars to someone else
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coming up saying i'd been living with this for 10 years, but now that i heard so and so talk about it and hear her voice shake or her quiet . whatever i want to talk about it too, so it's been really groundbreaking when it comes to the me to move months in iran. i am going to give us all 30 seconds to do this. and today i was on camp house and i spoke on clubhouse. i had so much and they, they, me, they wrote me out, then i got to tool and they were like, and now we're kicking me back to you williams, because you'll to chassis and it was so much. i loved it all, but it was for research and i had, i had a block to reasons. i look a lot more. i had spoken of what was that like? yes, i spoke, but because i was invited to a panel. i've been too afraid to volunteer my perspectives in a random room. it's just the scary movies that have you have. have you spoken? yeah, i have although in the rooms that i described,
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i was silent because i didn't think it was my place. i was reporter, really sort of listening in on these conversation, but i spoken on more panel like stuff in more official stuff. i ran a room one, writing hard and i still going to panels. and sometimes when i go into the rooms, they try to bring me up and i don't have anything to us. so i keep rejecting. i just feel so bad and i eventually have to leave the room because they just do it so many times. but yeah, it's been an interesting experience and now for something employee different. so la geo engineering is a very nice area of climate science that has scientists arguing with each other to the plates. so this is the theory, this is how it works. you release into the stratosphere material that reflects sunlight back up into the stratosphere and so energy as well, which means that theoretically download the of we could be much cooler despite
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global warming. this is a theory. the research is not exactly sure what the repercussions of solar g u engineering might be, for instance, how do you control the cooley who get to make those decisions? and right at the end of the debate which we had on the stream, andrew schwabl hogan brought up another major issue. so i think i've been talking to for people to know that be followed you engineering kind of, he's been dominated by a group of institution that is based in the globe is not so the only a constructive we call would on this is to establish an international governance, mackenzie, that is decided to international participation. so that's why we ended the live discussion with an assertion that scientists in the global north, i tried to make decisions that could harm people in the global south. that's the conversation i had to finish. actually continued her point after the broadcast. so, i mean, i think it's a really interesting time to have this conversation about solo do engineering as we
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are sort of going to a little bit of time to make that highlights the diesel communities that are located in the south. i mean, it's sort of highlights the fact that a majority of the population that's based in a little bit how needs already had the multi existence and there isn't enough the capacity to join them all. so i mean, we do need to be thinking these uncertainties and risks that affect the community of morphine. so when it comes to code, you are engineering in all of this and he thought that is happening all of the uncertainties and discs shouldn't be discussed. it should be highlighted, i mean, we should not be gushing them in discussions and in default. so with that in mind, it is important to create community. we are able to have open and critical conversations about their lives in. so you engineering. so to that extent, it is really important to have more voices on, on, on this issue like we need to have more work system than you will be,
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need to have more young people invoice in the conversation. we need to have been involved in this conversation. i need to keep going. i'm guessing we all 100 percent agree. i mean, kelly and i both been involved in an organization that has tried to fund research across the global south. i've been involved now for 20 years, trying to reach out to people. i think my 1st trip to india was on his topic was more than 10 years ago. so that's, that's exactly what needs to happen. every single thing that address that is right . i think maybe one thing to say is that the fact is solar to return research is more or less the same as a climate science. very similar and climate science is unjustly contrary to the rich countries. and so it's not surprising that that's what's happening here. and what we need to do is find ways to get voices from the poor countries legitimately into this conversation in a way that matters. well. i wanted to say in silver lining, we recently launched global youth initiative, which focuses on young climate professionals from around the world and particularly
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the goal of south so that we could try to get them engaged directly with the experts that we deal with both in the policy fear and the science here, but ultimately to enjoy his point about or her analogy which chronic virus. one of the, one of the realities of the situation is that the rich countries have resources to accelerate innovation and science quickly against some of these big systemic problems. and so for us, the question is, how do we leverage some of those rich country resources to make things, to innovate and, and help make things available to the rest of the world, particularly where we have a serious safety crisis that's emerging, that's going to hit the developing world harder. so we were hopeful that there's a possibility for rich countries to invest resources in a way that it are his open and accessible to others and then allows them to
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participate in the decision about what ultimately to do. i realized that a tricky line to walk that, that that's how we think. and now to one of my favorite conversations from the streams instagram life series, south african actin nazare on batter said to my colleague, just rushing recently about her korea and the story behind landing a major role in the film coming to america. while view on instagram life said this is a beautiful interview. i have to say, i completely agree. take a look. did you go for a number of american movies before you landed coming to america? no. my 1st one. it was my and i had just some people walk through life, charmed so many other edition, teach and had gone so many go fees. and so many meetings with coffee director and my thought was gone. and then it just happened. and you know, i was an,
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i would be shooting some content for the human. and i got a call from my agent and it was like, you gotta get like this for coming to america. this is the role, you know, you can send a tape, but i would say be in the room. so you're on set remaking. classic comedy you're with one of the largest stars in the world. and you mentioned, you had a bit of, of imposter syndrome then to acted. i did talk about it, i never thought that i would be able, i would experience it, you know, and that's a new and i, and i'm grateful that i've been able to be honest about it and speak out about it because i guess because about it, you know everybody puts on the confidence suit and for me i guess i just, it was a crew of almost 300 people. coughing, crew of almost 300 people. yes. shooting at the tyler perry studios, which has just been, you know, opened last week and all the biggest hollywood world had been in attendance. and
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then you also rounded by, you know, hollywood royalty itself. that has been relevant for over 3 decades. longer than i've been on and you have been passed to bring to to be a part of this and, and bring all the time and bring all attendant and, and believe that you deserve to be there. that's a lot of responsibility. and i remember just having a conversation with myself at the end of this particular day that we were shooting . it was one of the days of she is actually the 2nd day and it was eddie murphy. and so i go to my trailer and i'm changing and it's the end of the day and i'm changing, i think it's my fault. why do you feel like this? why anyone who would be in your shoes would feel so all in one would be here? would feel so grateful and be floating and be boasting about it. why are you
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playing small? why do you diminishing yourself like this? and, and it was just on my mind and i thought the question, i guess when it comes to syndrome is why me and i guess the retaliation of the fight in yeah. should be, why not? you isn't who and she, but the following day, sherry had b who played queen lisa she pulled me to the side because we're doing some group picture and i was just like in the back. like if you just put me on the side and she doesn't but my shoulder, i have been where you are, you're playing small. don't do that. do that. and i remember just like
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boiling my i said anything, but clearly there was something that she felt in my energy and i didn't bold my eyebrows and she said you're playing small, stop playing small. i've been way you are. you deserve to be. you deserve to be here. 100. you don't pay anything. i can tell that wisdom. yeah. but you don't need to anything i can tell. so i know that you are you in goodwill, ambassador, you've done a lot of work in africa. the refugee camps in malawi, i've been to many refugee camps myself, reporting all over the world, particularly at least and i often found myself scratching my head on a lie. i've been so lucky in my life. maybe someone there hasn't and trying to understand how our lives have the same value we're we are experiencing the same existence on earth, but you know,
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the existence of living in l. a. when everything is going right. and the existence of living in the syrian refugee camp couldn't be more different, almost as if there are different lives on different planets. and i don't think i've ever fully reconciled it. i don't think i fully understood it, but i know that kind of go through this journey of being a journalist and thinking about it's one of the things i'm i'm always trying to reconcile and always trying to understand how do you reconcile that and let the dispatcher i should speak about it in my head. talk about the us that exist, right. but i don't, i don't think i i to have gotten to the point to reconcile with it. i remember the one time it must have been february and i had just been to south sudan, which is, you know, still a very much water country and with all the tensions that they are, this is 20181900, i think. and i had just and you know,
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i had gone to my bon in, involved done, which is the most remote refugee camp in the entire world, most remote. and i just come back and as i landing on landing in cape town, and i'm supposed to host the huge polo event with the most elite. now you cannot even imagine a contrast of it all. i had a lump in my throat throughout the entire day hosting. just looking hosting and having everybody ready to send pay ladies and gentlemen. but something was in here and something was right here, just the heavy burden. and this i could guilt stupid guilt after guilt. having experienced what i had experienced and see what's coming up for you with projects. what's coming up with a project i'm working on
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a documentary currently, i guess with all the work that i've been doing with you and hcr. i think this is the time now to put together documentary. all my people get up met and even not, you know, again, for me, i don't believe it's one in 15000000 refugees, one and 8000000 refugees. it's one refugee 8000000 time. and so how do we know that into, into the lens? and so i'm working on really excited about about to get on fits with a very, very awesome job from then who've done a lot of kicked films for decades. and i get to be seen cod mouthful, a lot of that. i take the lead on a film that's about what about finances in the next couple of days or probably next week. so i'm really excited about that and i just continue to do the work. i continue to do the work non damo bassa and josh rushing and non i did mention she
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had a major film project coming up and just tried to get that information out. or when he got an extra, even with all of his 4 guys experience, it couldn't point the information out of non amo. but we promise you when we have a will put it on our screen social media platforms. and that is a show for the day. thanks for watching. ah, talk to al jazeera, we are in the army who were attacking ringer, and now they're attacking everyone in me on my do you regret? well, it's like, gosh, we listen. absolutely. nigeria with a woman presses, it would be great. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on algae sera. a father should be protector who. ready forgot tara, he was her tormentor, ah,
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betrayed for years she carries the evidence inside her that will be enough to find justice in afghanistan. patriarchal society, a 1000 guards blank me. a witness documentary announces era. the latest news, as it breaks over half of the coal mines by separatists, is re labeled as washing coal and transported out to markets in asia and europe with detail coverage before. inter withdrawl is underway and will be completed after the may 1st deadline from around the world. will these demonstrate to change your mind the british government of the new laws designed to cattail people's rights of assembly damage? the country's democracy i care about helping us engages with the rest of the world . i cover foreign policy, national security. this is
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a political impact here. the pamphlets are we telling the good story. we're really interested in taking you to a place that you might not visit otherwise. it's actually feel as if you were there . ah, palestinians returns was left of their homes. if she's far between israel and the mass, holt and dog, we still need a 2 state solution. it is the only has 3 buttons as the 2 state solution is the only way to peace in the middle east. if you pledges to organize, help to rebuild. ah, i don't o'clock.
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