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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  May 30, 2021 12:00am-1:01am +03

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fear here again, i am power and passion. we tell your story. we are your voice. your new, your net out here. ah, this is al jazeera. ah, hello, i'm mario new mazda. you're watching the news hour life from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. molly's crew leader and interim president will face regional west african leaders act an emergency summit on sunday. tens of thousands fleet homes in eastern democratic republic of congo, and it fears of more volcanic eruptions. vigilant, the justice who meet nom group,
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which says it's protecting a mexican town from a powerful drug cartel plus sustaining thousands of species, south korea, the global recognition for the mud flaps unique to it coastline. i'm devin ashwin. sports at chelsea have beaten manchester city. it took the champions league for the 2nd time, and it was the record finding. i have a good his 1st goal in the competition on a pre to be the different. ah, welcome to the news, our top story, west african leaders of scrambling to respond to the political crisis unfolding. and molly asked the colonel behind military coup this week was name the new in term president. i see me going to take over from bond to door who was arrested and then released on says they only off. do you agree to resign? now kind of going to says elections will take place next year. we'll attend
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a meeting of the regional block of 15 countries known as co us on sunday. our portent nicholas hock is in bama co with more on the story. before attending this meeting, surely he'll also announce, and you prime minister, he's asked the, the opposition, the end 5 movement, the civil society movement. there was behind the protest movement that led to the downfall of president k to in august to, to, to, to find a prime minister in certain names are being announced such as sho, get my go with the one of the leader of the 5. but of course, add that meeting, he's also accountable to the west african countries because there are soldiers on the ground from togo, banana, i be co, senegal, that are doing the jobs of the molly and soldiers dying on the front. there's many charges, soldiers that have died trying to protect them all in state from arm group, so he's accountable to them. and since 2012 there's been 6000 people that died half
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a 1000000 people display. so be the new military. you don't see me go into has a lot of work on it's not only to protect the sovereignty of molly, but also organized election. there was a french military and intervention in the central african republic. and we've seen a stepping down to a french present and a stepping up of russian presidents just over the weekend. $600.00 additional russian military advisors were sent to the central african republic. and, and that has given that is in bold, in the military to into, to look at other partners to work with in trying to reestablish the sovereignty of molly. oh, adama guy is a former director of information at the economic community of west african state. he says molly was 1st confronted security challenges before seeing any return to democracy. mister goods may be tempting to leave power when you're done and could be or so attractive to cling onto power because you can
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say that the see begins data, but you see is realistic, you know, the into the general community is not nice to the current region they are not very keen on the military go. and on the other hand, he has been obliged to be speaking to those who in the 1st place, made money go through this transition. the m 5 movement do do fight movement. that's why is called, i believe, right? mr. show going to mega will use one of the for the bearer of the movement, read the tradition. as the new prime minister. we do enter that there will be somehow a little missy burne by the civilian. but i think that at the end of the day, mister low would have to leave. but i think we have to give him a chance to make sure the money addresses. it's called pro today, which is not democrats, it's
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a security and other risk related challenges. if that is fixed, the democratic and we've been in the long run, but instead of dreaming out loud and believing that the money you can bring you back to democratic overnight, that is not possible. and the african leaders were meeting and among the many civilian leaders who are not respecting democracy, the need to understand that money should be given a chance to come his own pass. a new way of doing things. you know that we don't include democrats when addressing the long term program that is confronted with, including sufficient, that is almost doing what you cannot. we is the support we of france and other programs as a country, thousands of people continue to abandon their homes. now africa's most active volcano because of fears, it could erupt again. not nero gone, go in the democratic republic of congo road back to life a week ago, killing thousands of people early at the authorities or to be evacuation of parts
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of the city, a coma saying a 2nd option was imminent. it has to revise that saying it was a false alarm. some 400000 people have already fled the area of many of them today bring rwanda. well, desert malcolm web has more out from gama. what we can see right here is exactly what those thousands of people fled from in, in that direction. it's a bit easy, but not direction is mountain you're going or it's just outside the city, city of millions of people. and just under a week ago, it from the split in a side and then lava came gushing out in a river which cut through into the city here. and that's what we're looking at these black rock, some of them still smoldering and smoking. these were red glowing, liquid rock just just a few days ago. i'm standing on the top of the remains of a lucky building that just myth being destroyed. and on the other side, you can see the suburbs of the city of goma, the everything in between,
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everything that's on the now this black volcanic rock has been completely destroyed . when those centers where the displace people concentrated, then saw k, the town of saw k hearing congo. so the town of minova that we understand so far that there's very little support. and indeed, people are sleeping in churches sleeping in school, some sleeping out in the open. others are staying with relative the military governor for north key because at the moment there's a, it's called a state to see here. basically, the government declared martial law of the armies in control of everything. that's because of unrest by a conflict between the groups and the government further to the north of here. and so the military is in charge. the military governance spokes person said that they are yesterday said that they are trying to bring more supplies to those people who have been displaced. thousands of people who, who are seeking shelter an urgent need food and water or robin george andrews is
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a vulcan nautilus vulcan. knowledge is faced here in london, he's also the author of the book super volcanoes and joined us now. so how high then is the risk of a 2nd interruption on mount mirror congo? and it's really difficult to tell. obviously, the risk is, you know, high enough the, it's warrant to deal with these evacuation. but the difficult here is that it might not be actually on the volcano where another option takes place. radar systems that are used to track the shape of the ground have kind of detected an injection of magnetic kind of under the city itself. and around the urban i show the light which brings, you know, the risk of really unpredictable kind of explain robson's when the macro mixes of water and as well. and potentially the unleashing of some of the knocks of gases in like itself, which connects x 6 people. so magnetic can also just know a rough it can often inject on the ground places and no rustic cause down loses
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buoyancy. but it might, so just, all that risk alone is worrying enough that it's cause you know, up of a 1000000 people evacuating. tell us more about why this is one of the most dangerous volcanoes in africa and the world. yes, so it was because of the geologic fang of this volcano. some interesting things happen in the region. this is paul of africa is actually slowly buffering every day being split into into different directions, and then 20000000 years they'll be in your neck. i'm probably because i'm probably because you have this pulling, put him admit of material from deep within the you get from any way chemistry is for the lava here and the love is incredibly fluid. it lacks a lot of think of silica. we're taxes, a skeleton for a lot of love to give that kind of like a framework. so this stuff is coming out of bikes and right now, and the brakeman has peninsula doesn't have that much silly room. you could still
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out, walk it on a flat surface, whereas the level that comes near going. so fluid the, it's been seen kind of going down hill up to 40 miles an hour. maybe a little bit more. so it's very run into how what does that mean to this silica this stuff that's in the law. this is the stuff that makes it more goofy. and if there isn't enough of that in it, it can shoot down the law of iraq and it shoots down at a very quick pace. does that mean that if there is another option that the city of goma could be at risk? yes, that is indeed the case in the 19772002 while the damage was done because of these extremely fast moving lava plays. and you know, even if there is some wanting, that option was is going to happen. which in the case of this one, there was been loving kind of amber's people ready. so i think into that i went to the law of a, destroy them about 5th of the entire city. but since then the population is
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actually double. so there's actually a lot of people at risk now, but the real risk in this case actually it's kind of unpredictable explosions that happened along the lake shore work has been done. looking at these things, when the mac mix is with the water, that it's just the acts of the mixing with the water. it can create these again, like i'm pretty sure that i know bombs going off on the ground. so that really unpredictable. you know, they tend to get off warning funds before we begin happening. so yeah, that's, that's the real warrior. i think. thank you very much. appreciate your analysis on this robin, george andrew's author of the book super volcanoes. thanks still have for you. all this news out from london been a week of firing garza now, but there are problems of a different kind, emerging with water or electricity and thousands homeless. the remains of more than $200.00 indigenous children are found on the site of a former boarding school in canada. we'll have that story, one ah,
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l schools and universities across 16 provinces in afghanistan will close for the next 2 weeks to cut the spread of covered 19. the health ministry reported at least $977.00 new cases on friday. this is the biggest surgeon a 24 hour period since the outbreak began. and that's concerned that the real figure is probably much higher than that because of limited public health for sources. and according meanwhile, india is registered its lowest recorded daily rise in covert 19 infections in 45 days. it reported nearly 875000 new cases on saturday. but this is down from a peak of more than $400000.00 a day earlier this month. and they say the infection rate is going in the right direction. they want about economic fallout from all this getting worse. the crisis was already pushed millions of people deeper into poverty. as elizabeth problem
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reports from you, danny. for the past month, ship pele, and his wife. v to have been selling coconut water to earn a living. it is a new endeavor for the couple who are expecting their 1st child in september. she had been working in the car show room near by. when delhi regional government imposed a lockdown which forced all shop southern non essential items to close. i may be away from somebody who doesn't compared to what i own earlier, but the company will give the salary and we have to down the hall and take care of our daily expenses. you can imagine how cash strapped that my wife to help me in a condition she have used to earn $275.00 a month. now his earnings depend on how many coconuts he sells. this is the kids take a honey, a n g o which has been helping ship and votes with food rations and many others have lost their jobs. research by one of india is leading universities as in frame
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g. found that locked down from the past. you have pushed more than $230000000.00 indians into poverty, which is defined as earning less than $5.00 a day. but this is restrictions are unlike the nationwide locked down last year, which saw a complete shutdown of all industries. factories in many states have been allowed to remain open this year with limited staff. this clothing export business has been operating with 65 percent of its workforce. we have the label, and i mean the secure that they have the job because of the partial long don't. it has been really helpful that we are still maintaining everything. the orders, the are executing, the getting would orders. economists say india's government should focus on helping those who need it the most to have been doing not to have the
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business find the 1st. and the most important thing is to ensure that the people are the more or the most badly affected need to be given away out my delivering or any kind. and also been doing some gas to ship and be to hope she will be rehired when the car shot real soon. but for now they in millions of others like them a doing whatever they can to survive. elizabeth per on them al jazeera, you daddy and other developments. any variance of covered 19 as reports have been detected in vietnam. health ministers saying it's a hybrid of the indian and u. k. mutations of the virus and spreads quickly by air, vietnam, and successfully contain infections for most of last year. but it is now battling a new ways. and then protests have been taking place in brazil against the government handling of the pandemic. their thousands have been calling for the
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impeachment of president gyre both scenarios. he's been why the criticize for repeatedly downplaying the risk of covered 19 and is now being investigated by senate commission, the opposition party. the call for the demonstrations also off, protest is to show up at the rallies with mosques. illegal miners in brazil's amazon has attacked police and indigenous people this week. this is the latest in an escalation of violence in the remote northern region. thousands of mine as a defying law and supreme court orders to exploit what are supposed to be protected lands and is wanna kiana kiev reports that becoming increasingly confident after receiving what appears to be tacit support from the brazilian president reduce. indigenous tribe have been fighting the legal miners for decades until recently, with the help of government institutions created to protect them and the amazon ring. but not anymore. he is supposed to natalie you after
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president both and i was elected everything change. he dismantled the institutions that protected us. wildcat miners are feeling so empowered that they are now attacking our homes and even the federal police to the $14000.00 people feel they're on the wrong. this week, the house of luke, who activist, was burned to the ground in the legal miners, then tried to burn the helicopter. the police would come to the gate. the miners said they had a right to make a living. and with continued their illegal activity. once the police were gone and they said it is wildcat, miners are giving alcohol, cell phones, and the young members of our tribes to gain their they've already contaminated, our rivers are fish and our bodies with mercury. now they're dividing us and waiting conflict. it's not just about gold mining, it's also about drug and arms trafficking. thousands of illegal gold miners are
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also believed to have a tax. again, no money people on the line. because the 19 pandemic is one reason behind the rights of the legal mining. in the amazon, almost 15000000 brazilians are currently unemployed. the brazilian reality has lost its value, and gold prices are to record high. but there's more to the deforestation rate, which this year is expected to beat last year's records and his sod much about the main reason for the increase in our station is the government m. p environment policy in, in peter exam, the brazil's environment who is being investigated by the federal police and then legal export product, restrict, miners, loggers, and farmers also trying to get new law. the proved in congress, making it easier for them to exploit the amazon rain forest. and in did this land. monica nice is all just 0 rear diginero. are we calling from the sea fire and
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people injured in the israel bombardment of garza now being moved hospitals in the occupied by spank many others facing severe shortages of electricity and water? thousands are also still homeless. human i said has more now from gaza. the minister came with her with the medical delegation, new to actually also operate on the when did hear due to the israeli war. and now only one case has been so far, transparent to down the law medical center. and, but the main jury said that all the west bank hospitals are open to receive the when did, but she will be doing a fraser effort to be able to receive these and transferred these winded to the west bank and to, to the hospitals of the west. bank so, so far until now,
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this is how it's been going. of course the a some a came in with them in regarding hospitals because of the shortage in medications. that's the hospitals of god that has been suffering from now to afghanistan, a roadside bomb is killed at least 4 people on board and many boss which was carrying university lecturers and students. 13 more people are being treated in hospital after the attack in the town of cherry car, which is 50 kilometers north of the capital. cobble of no claims of responsibility . libyan wall of $25.00 held a military parade in the city of ben gauzy a year after his 14 month offensive to see seas tripoli collapsed. the parade. have to said he regret the damage cause to civilians and tripoli, but that his militias will continue to fight libby as government of national unity was born into office in march,
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taking over from the 2 rival administrations that had run the country for years after his be a national army still hold parts of eastern libya. now the remains of $215.00 indigenous children have been found the site of a former boarding school in british columbia. the canadian prime minister just intruder has called the discovery heartbreaking tore gates and b has more. these are some of the 150000 indigenous children who attended so called residential schools in canada. between the 18 forties and 19 nineties, many were forcibly taken from their parents and there was widespread abuse. some lived here at the kamloops indian residential school in british columbia, where the remains of 215 children have just been discovered. some of the children who died were as young as 3. there's nothing more painful in life and the child. my heartbreaks today thinking of all the loving parents who never saw their children
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return home and who were never granted the dignity of knowing what happened. it's a discovery that kennedy's prime minister has described as a painful reminder of a shameful chapter. in his country's history, the canadian government formerly apologized for the peace at the schools in 2008 and years later, an official inquiry by the truth and reconciliation commission into the residential school system concluded it amounted to cultural genocide against indigenous communities. the residential schools were opened with the full purpose of removing the indian from the child. it was to assimilate indigenous people in canada. and essentially, in the words of one of the superintendent at the time, was to get rid of the indian problem. members of kennedy's indigenous communities say they are in touch with the coroner and a contacting families of children who attended the school. for now though they say
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they still have more questions than answers victoria gate and be al jazeera. we can now speak to tricia logan. she has the research and engagement team at british columbia university indian residential school history and dialogue, santa. she joined us now from vancouver. i don't know you said the community always knew that children were buried at this school. what's been the reaction to this news? there's been an incredible reaction here in british columbia and across canada, the tech, to come loops and to chicago on communities who conducted the ground penetrating radar research and made this discovery have been supported locally. and i think nationwide by survivors and by other communities who are holding vigils and holding ceremony to honor the children that passed away. is it possible that more bodies are likely to be found in
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that location? it's, it's hard to say definitively how many more or? and if there are other locations of unmarked burials, but there are, there were approximately 150 residential schools across canada and throughout british columbia. so they're typically we're cemeteries or unmarked burial sites at almost nearly every residential school in canada. so this does draw a lot of attention to schools in and around bridge, colombia, and across canada as well. obviously you have spoken to community representatives, you are engaged in conversations with them. have you learned any more about what took place about the level of abuse and neglect and suffering inside of the school? your school is open for over 80 or for 88 years. and so i know that there
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were approximately 30 to 35 different communities that children would have been taken from and the communities nearby, the to come loops to ship um community that conducted this research and has, has done a lot of this work and who knew who knew about the site for, for a long time, for, for possibly as long as the school was open. they're doing this kind of work with a lot of different communities in mind. knowing that children were taken from very far away, sometimes to be taken to the school and it was a very large school and operated for for over 80 years. and so the rates of abuse, physical, sexual abuse, as well as diseases and malnutrition and neglect that contributed to the the death of pupils is definitely something that community members and survivors and communities across canada are really taking on another look at. and also taking
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a bigger look at the trauma and the, the devastation that comes with more truth and learning more about what really happened at the schools. and that's crucial. if you say trauma, it's often passed from one generation to another. how has that legacy affected people in indigenous communities today? yes, and i think that's something a lot of canadians are a lot of people still are learning or don't understand about the history. residential schools is for people who attended the schools and then their children, and grandchildren, great grandchildren. there are a number of different intergenerational impacts that ripple through the community and, and tie the histories of the residential schools to a lot of other histories of colonialism and settler colonialism in canada. and how a lot of those impacts are tied together. how the, the history of a schools that operated for over
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a 150 years here in canada right up until round 1996. how that, that history impacts indigenous communities today? well, thank you very much for joining us. i appreciate it. trisha logan. you watching the news, our life from london still live 100 years after the u. s. it was rice massacre and survivors are still fighting for justice. anti tobacco messaging is going up in smoke with more young people than ever turning to cigarettes. and for the 1st time in 74, brentwood, a heading to the top flight of english triple one that later with john martin for a hello. it's warming up nicely now across much of western europe. last class got big
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area of high pressure building and that means like when highest is a little the atmosphere. so skies clear, warm sunshine coming through and it's going to be pretty good as we go through the next. there's a little bit of crowd over towards the west, but that's not gonna be a problem. once it runs into a high and it gets squeezed out of the way, figured out over towards eastern parts and lived, she was there just around ukraine. western russia down was the the black sea for the balkans easing over towards bulgaria might catch a shower to the southern part of italy wanted to shout to the southern areas of france. but even these will peter out as we go on into monday, wanted to share with erica spain by monday, some showers continued down toward the southeast corner, a little dryer over towards the west side of russia in moscow, around 16 celsius, but the temperatures there on the rise across western path, getting up into the low twenty's could even touch the mid twenties in the u. k. as we go on through the next couple of days. because he $25.00 celsius there in london
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by the middle of the week just in time for the start of the year. the test cricket between new zealand and england at law is fine and try to be 20 sal across certain northern parts of africa with plenty of showers right across west africa. the in the next episode of science in the golden age, i'll be exploring the contributions made by scholars during the medieval period in the field of astronomy. copernicus owes this day to these medieval astronomers from the golden age. actually in many ways with the computers of the day, you can use it to find time you navigate science in a golden age with jim and sally on a jazz either it's all familiar, innocent lives ended in an instant then great anger and the debate around
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firearms but for survivors and families of the fallen reality often changes forever. phone lines investigates the long lansing trauma inflicted on communities the aftermath, my shootings in america on al jazeera. oh, i welcome back a look at the main stories. now, the cano behind molly's military cou, i seen the goiter is named the new in term president, and will attend to meeting of west african leaders on sunday. thousands of people continue to abandoned their homes in africa, most active volcano,
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but to report to the possible 2nd option, been a false alarm and the remains of hundreds of indigenous children have been found at the sight of a former boarding schools and push columbia canadian prime minister just intruder hold the discovery breaking. now the state of michigan is at the center of a tough war between a powerful drug cartel and vigilante defense groups. the state will vote in mexico's elections next month, but at least 80 candidates have been killed during campaigning. and his 2nd report from mich can. john holman, looks at how residents who say they've been abandoned by the government and now defending themselves. a hillside bunker in the town of po, cut to pick south with mexico. sequels, and the trench across the ridge. it's made for action, but it is not filled with the army or police. this is a century point operated by the town, so called self defense group. yes, i go,
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i think he's shooting and you know, i take position i shoot and then the next person comes up to shoot is just one of their fortifications. currently they're fighting the lease, go new generation cartel and they are on high alert. i've actually never seen a check point lighted by agree, mr. utilize. and she came up that hall going down. there you go, checking all the cars. the group of us are coders as well. they've got people waiting in the hills around this knife is as well looking down and you can see all of the tires with the as well to go full it self defense groups became synonymous. we've met to 8 years ago when people rose up against rapacious gangs after authorities couldn't or wouldn't defend them. but this is the problem. a lot of people say that over the years of fight and criminals,
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many of them have gone rotten to come on the she had has given us the tool. i asked him about the accusations. i expected him to deny them. he surprised me. yes, we move drugs, of course everyone's free. if i want to buy a kilos, coke, put it inside the battery of a truck and send it to the u. s. my business crime, the cartels. they rob, you the kidnap you take stuart you. they kill you. that's different. if someone to pick a says the self defense groups extort them, that's not true. that doesn't exist. he sees no contradiction between a legitimate self defense group and a drug trafficking ring or an operating both using illegal guns. media. you know, personally, i buy them in the united states. i've got friends and acquaintances there who buy them. so you crossover with guns other people, but obviously with them hidden. some have got their deals with customs as well, like the money that i am river running from the u. s. is one of the prime drive is
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a violent to mexico, but neither local, no federal authorities have dismantled the defense force. their authority shake it best in a region long left to its own devices. many of to po, cut the picks, towns, people support or least put up with the fighters. they faced extortion and tara before the now at least the town is peaceful. nobody does support the group, will enormous local power able to search and detain. will they suspect that this young man is a highly school cartel. soldier. he was gone up when they find a small amount of drugs on him. he's arrested. they told us to be sent to a rehab center before then this, the souvenir and testament to their authority. to me, it also notes uncomfortably like the photo is posted by cartels across the country . and that's the paradox in the region where the government is just
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a bit player and the forces of law and order include drug trafficking, powerful vigilantes, john home. and i'll just have to poke out to pick the washing premier of john holman's new special. the full report living in mexico's kill zone at 1930 gmc on sunday. rahman occur as co founder of the north political research group, specializing and organized crime in which you can state and says, gangs of being allowed to act with impunity. violence is not new, but it's become what i think is a very, very central political resource in mexico. right now. violence is a political tool. basically, you can use it to threaten competitors, you can use it to eliminate competitors, you can use it to have way in the, in the election. here, i think the issue is the level of impunity in mexico. you can kill a candidate without any type of consequences. you can threaten arrival. nothing is
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going to happen to you in judicial turn. so when violence becomes cheap to use, it becomes very attractive to many people organize crime, which ones who have influence local politics, political parties as well, which one to secure an actual when by eliminating rivals, local venture printers once more power. so again, violence is a political tool and in turns elections to a life and the best for, for, for candidates today. violence doesn't really care bozer than in, in mexico. we don't hear a proper correlation between participation and violence. and that in that sense. but me, truck, i need to extract the importance in terms of politics and mexico. it's the land of the main opposition parties. historically, it's a land of tough political rivalries in history. and in the past 2030 years. and it's the land of political violence for decades. columbia as president, is sending thousands of soldiers to the western city of cali as tensions rise. after is 13 people were killed during mass protests friday,
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marked among since nationwide demonstrations. first started against government tax reform, pans which have now been scraps. but the protests have expanded to cover all the social problems. i was under a be su, reports to us from ball guitar. another day of violence in columbus, anti governments protest one month after they began videos widely shared on the internet, show civilians shooting live round and protesters in the city of kindly with the police, apparently doing nothing to stop them found on this. i'm an attorney general's investigator on his day off allegedly shot and killed 2 protesters. there was an attack in lynched by demonstrators similar scenes in the city of pope. i am with fires and repeated explosions. president, the duke traveled to carly friday evening and announced that for military station of the city, by most act we're acting in defense of all people's rights. and starting tonight,
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we begin the maximum deployment of military assistance to the national police. and in the city of colleague, had demonstrators were my 2 months of protest that is royal and the country causing shortages and further hurting an economy. estimated by the corona virus spend demick, a bio and police response that a skill doesn't as only help fuel the demonstration. yet, despite the violence rallies elsewhere, were people like in the capital, where concerts and cultural acts mark the day, the not the home. i do that as a columbia has some deep and serious structural problems of the quality that are getting worse and the goes to bell violence. past is back again. we won't change, the government is not listening to the people. and so we remain getting on the streets, negotiations between the government and protest. leaders have made little progress and least ideal ivy. less politics might be the reason why is christ. i'm with manual
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a felix here on the 1st. we are one year from the elections and the government's party has sunk in the poles. they think that if these intermittent protests continue, they will convince, middle, and upper class colombians to vote for them again. so the government doesn't want to negotiate a 2nd. there is a growing split between the union and the people on the streets who don't recognize them as leaders. and 3rd, there's the clear deterioration of the situation with police abuses and growing violent acts in the streets that make negotiations difficult. violence escalation in many parts of the country becoming increasingly real. and neither the government nor the leaders of the protest seems to have an easy solution of hence, we're at right this 2nd for there's fire out of control that i'm the united states as mocking the $100.00 anniversary of what thought to be the worst incident of racial violence in american history. 300 people were killed in tulsa, oklahoma,
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in 1921. when white people destroyed the nation's most prosperous black own business district, survivors have taken part in commemoration rally, but a big event has been cancelled. job retention is in tulsa, and explains why, for the last 3 survivors of what's now called the tulsa race massacre of 1921. still fighting for justice after a 100 years of not being compensated for all that they lost, when a white mob backed by city and state authorities burnt down the black greenwood neighborhood of tulsa now in a battle over an attempt to cash in on the atrocity of this week they achieved a victory. the cancellation of a commemorative concert headlined by grimy award winning john legend at this baseball field built on land where once black houses and businesses stood. a concert was organized by the tulsa centennial commission for its collaboration,
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entitled, greenwood rising. it is sought no input from the survivors. what it has sought is millions of dollars of corporate sponsorship, $30000000.00 alone for a museum documenting the massacre. and the commission is clear. its goal is the general education of greenwood and the areas repurposing as a site of what it calls cultural tourism. but the commission is supported by city and state officials has refused financially to compensate or even some port. reparations for the massacres, survivors, it is not about making also look good. it is not about culture. tourism is about the people and the justice. they have been waiting on for 100 years. the greenwood district of tulsa was known in the early 20th century as the black wolf, st. teaming with prosperous homes and businesses, a place where the cities black community could live without fear. but over the course of may 31st and june, the 1st white mall, but the neighborhood down, killing some 300 residents and forcing thousands to flee,
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encouraged by city and state authorities, eager to redevelop the land. memories are still vivid for those who remain. i remember read a outside of our house, i guess it wasn't guarantee said i see are see today and my mind 100 years later for decades. what's thought to be the u. s. is worse racist. massacre wasn't taught in schools or even mentioned as part of a cover up. but since the 19th that has been growing awareness of the crime now bras, plaques, lined the streets of a former black neighbourhood, showing what was lost. now the survivors what nothing to do with the corporate greenwood rising commemoration, they have a lot more than $30000000.00 and they use to share any
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were made with me. are they going to show buyers? they have news my name to their on really go without my permission. a group called justice for greenwood has organized its own commemorative events like this march with the survivors. they had long argued that the official ceremonies were being overseen by the direct descendants of those who burned down black wall street in the 1st place. but i was fighting for justice for greenwood. this combination has vividly demonstrated just how little has changed in the 100 years and a white mom back suffice to the authorities looted its black population. she ever times the al jazeera, tulsa oklahoma. well, we had for you on the news out. we look at the healing power of mud. why these won't be fans so important to the wild and the fight to have them protected. and no
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joking, they will not to the french open by winning a title in her homes. petite, coming in for ah, a warning drug. cartels on vigilante groups of population corps in the middle was your reason to thing and make sure why do you want this territory? i'm reporting from an episode of mixed violence to investigate the content upcoming election. change anything for people living here? so we're getting ready to join me john, home and for the full report on our o. welcome to portal your gateway to the very best to volunteer or an online content that you may have met. a new program that this for our platforms makes the connections and present digestible,
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seen each the award winning online content for our on their audience. portal with me founder gotten on to 0 me o a the number of smokers around the world is reached an old time high. a study published in the long st medical journal found the 1100000000 people smoked in 2019 population growth, and young people picking up the habit. have outstripped efforts to reduce the overall number in the same year. smoking killed almost 8000000 people. 10 countries
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make up 2 thirds of the world smokers, including china, india, indonesia, the united states, russia and turkey. a 3rd of all smokers or about 341000000 people are in china. dr. oscar allan is a public health official based in washington d. c. and says in the u. s. tobacco from spend about a $1000000.00 an hour marketing their products, smoking, the traditional cigarette has kind of fallen out of favor. but we've seen the rise and other tobacco products that we estimate has really taken the turn with why folks to really been using more of these tobacco products in a and then alarm and fashion, whether they be electronic cigarettes, of course e, cigars heated tobacco products. 4 there's so many different aspects of folks know, go to right now for smoking, which unfortunately we're seeing this unremarkable right. we really don't want to
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go into that direction. we're still seeing a reduction in some cases, but an increase in the adolescent in the teen population. but i think another instance point that it's very important to realize just in the us alone, 2019 found about $8200000000.00, but by tobacco companies to market their products. $8200000000.00, which is roughly about $22500000.00 each day, roughly a $1000000.00 per hour. so imagine the friends of the impact of that marketing campaign on a community, as you mentioned, where not much money is spent to counter these effects. so there are several mitigated factors that we're seeing actually in high income population. really we have to meet these populations. and these demographics, where they're most highly influence. and what has been shown from this study is really that if you're able to get them before they hit the mid twenties,
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they're less likely to take up smoking the 1st time. jared's head out was full and an exciting day. well, there's any one place to thought ready? mariam that is in puerto, where chelsea half beaten manchester city to win the champions league for the 2nd time. city went into the bat to many people favorite, but the primary champions, 11 no down. just before half time chelsea's reco signing chi habits scoring his 1st goal in the competition and what a time to do it. so if you have to play the last half an hour without one of the key players and kept him for the night, kevin bruna, he went off in did and they couldn't break down the chelsea defense as they held on to win the title for the 1st time since 2012 and for head coach thomas people, he was losing finalist with power as far as my last year. and he could now celebrate lifting the trophy. well, let's get straight to poor taylor for reaction from our reporter poor race. so poor chelsea upset the old what a good for it i think you have to say they weren't. you have
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it. yes. as you say, they certainly weren't the favorites going into this final, but they pulled off a sort of too cool. special result since he he took over from took over at chelsea 4 months ago. a, a will know when city out that john says they had, they had a penalty penalty shouts against rece. james, that was confirmed is currently not a penalty by they are, but it was, it was chelsea look to force in front of goal recently who had the cool head in front of go the move starting monday at the back. the cho amount to chi habits surrounding edison to make it will nail. and of course it stated that habits one of the trio very expensive signings who really struggled and the former coach frank lampart much maligned. but now habits is in the chelsea history books. why don't thomas sequel then he took over the club in january,
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just the talk about his impact. chelsea since he became coach it's been pretty impressive of the yeah, it's been incredible really. i mean, he had a great start going on a along unbeaten run after taking over from frank pod, i suppose there anything going into this much. they had lost 3 out of their 4. so it looked like they might be on a bit of bits of shaky ground. couldn't really, couldn't really get the goals. but they really had the, that perfect performance here in the final, as you said, to call on the losing side with power. you sounds you my last season. i'm the turnaround that he's and he's made from the, from the law. paul, there has been incredible f cup finalists getting into next season's champions league before this final and now a huge upset over manchester city. so yes, thomas, so cool, is he going to be the new pac guardiola while he made a pretty good start?
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haven't date and just looking at a bit as this might be a good if you like, dress rehearsal for how to deal with fans with your raise with regards to perhaps like have it considerations and testing i think that's a bit of a yes and no. as a, as a football fan, it's been good to say lots of friends here, enjoying themselves and getting that misfire back around football that you'd expect . on the other hand. and i think we've talked to forward to getting people where they think it was just a bit too much. you know, the original idea was for the funds to come in on charter flights. be taken to the stadium, be taken back afterwards and go back to england as it was we've had holds and holds of english funds generally very well behaved, joyce same, but in huge crowds together. no difference and it's all, no marks. i don't think that has gone down very well with locals who are still
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living with restrictions. so i think lessons to be learned ahead of the yours is yes. try and get funds. but really try and control control that movement and try and keep those restrictions in place as much as possible. absolutely, a few lessons will no doubt be learned, as you mentioned as thank you very much for that pull. that wasn't just a chelsea funds that was celebrating on saturday run for funds were as while the last time this side are in the top flight of english football was 74 years ago. back then a bottle of coke cost $0.05 on that. i was bored and for our he started production of best sports cars, while the statistic won't apply as of next seasons, valenze and club off to any promotion to the premier league, they beat from the to now and the championship play. i'll find that wembley goals came from ivan. tony mimi on a ma, hondas, bread and fit, had failed in that previous 9 attempts in the playoffs. this one, a long time coming for them, they'll be the 50th club to join us primarily in some ways empty
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for emotions. just day after the final whistle. of course i was very emotional and very there was tears in my eyes. and in a lot of the staff and a lot of the players because it's so big and also especially the way you do it. i think, i think it doesn't to, you know, if you could probably get promoter than that somebody will achievement. but, but the thing we're so close out last year the french opens dance on sunday. and topsy, no joke of it is warmed up by winning the belgrade ofen, the wild number one played so vacuum. alex motion in the final 254 places below him . in the rankings and the 800 time grant champion, it came through in straight sets, 6463. so when his 1st title on home soil for 10 years, joe cavellas were now make his way to paris, ready for his opening, match it right on congress against american tennis. angry yeah, it's been
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a while since i last played here in front of the crowd. did we did play sort of in here a month ago, but was no crowd so completely different feeling to be holding a trophy once again after after 10 years, really special. and i couldn't be a better lead up to rolling out australian open champion at amier soccer opens play on center court on sunday. fresh from closing a status week with media boycott. she says she'll be boycotts into media due to mental health concerns. while well, number one, ashby party doesn't agree with soccer, and neither does 13 on french open when at rough found a doubt. probably where will not be the vacillates that we add today. we don't want to have the, the recognition that we have around the walt and we will not be that bubble at now . so i understand her in the hand i, i have my,
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my point of view that the me, the ice, they employ them by the sports to iowa. that is all your for after a very busy saturday with chelsea, that winning the champions league facing my good. thank you very much, jemma want to go to mud flaps now. mud flats. our home is 2 tiny species that produce so much oxygen as well, actually as much oxygen as trees and they enhance the environment. we live in activists in south korea, saying this is crucial to our ecosystem. it's not getting enough recognition. they're asking for them on flats to be recognized as a world heritage site. i'll just there is rama bride has this report now from chatam county. it's a distinctive coastal feature of this corner of the korean peninsula. river's rich in sediment flow into the shallow yellow sea producing over thousands of years,
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expansive stretches of mud. they sustain a remarkable bio diversity with thousands of species, which in turn provides a livelihood for coastal communities. e think i wouldn't own a livelihood depend on preserving the co system at these months. let's like having our farm to work. and my boy, each tied result say, i'll turn that environments full land and see species living side by side. the mud acts as a natural filter to cleanse the ocean. while the abundance of microscopic organisms is reckoned to produce as much oxygen as if the same area was planted with trees compared to other coastal environments like salt marshal mangrove mudflats have been somewhat overlooked. but there is a growing awareness of that life sustaining value. and that south korea has some of
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the best examples of this unique environment anywhere in the world. a fact that would be conferred with you nefco recognition with the largest mud flats in south korea. she non county is pushing hardest for inclusion on the world heritage list. this area lies along the east asian fly away for my great re water bird species. some of them endangered. and it's teeming with new arrivals right now. on the summit migration north kept body one antonio with all these much flux, are not an infinite resource. our focus should be to preserve them for future generations. so we can enjoy the benefits they provide each one in the natural benefits the tower enjoyed along the shores and also far beyond them. rob mcbride al jazeera, she and i'm county south korea to continue the news out. but i will be back in a moment with more of the day's news. a football isn't coming up at 2200 gmc,
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which is in just a couple of minutes. ah, i news news. news. news. i see the refugee means starting a game. but building a new life in a new country is no easy to let him drive. the witness follows one of the last refugee families from syria and to be granted an american visa from their personal sacrifices to the families priam meet the syrian on al
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jazeera. june $96076.00 days that redrew the map of the middle east. this record as victory up the army in the war was the greatest tragedy in the history of his 50 years later, i'll just explore the events leading to the war and its consequences. which had still felt today, but we tried everything we went to the united nations. we tried mediations, contacts, 3 different countries, and it was clear that all this was to know the rule. in june for ramirez, i medina, families, the pain is unbearable for of their relatives. were killed last week, doing a military operation ordered by the venezuelan government. security forces accused him of being part of a colombian rebel group and said they died and come, but the neighbors and family members in session, they were innocent,
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taken from their homes and executed under pressure venezuela's, defense minister by the me to do, you know, said the forces were obliged to defend the country from irregular groups that added the human rights needed to be respected and that the events at the border would be investigated. ah, molly's coolly during the interim president will face regional west african lead. is that an emergency summit on sunday? ah, hello, i'm mary. i'm demising in london. you're watching al jazeera, also coming up on the program. tens of thousands of people flee their homes in the eastern democratic republic of congo. i mean fears of more volcanic eruptions, but javante justice, we meet normed group which says it's.

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