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tv   [untitled]    June 1, 2021 3:00am-3:31am +03

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can an upcoming election change anything the people living here where we were getting to join me, john, home and with a full report on our from the preventive of correct. so the battle fields around most of our job is to get to the truth and empower people through knowledge ah, peruse, official code, the death toll more than double as the country admits its been under counting fatality. ah, that i'm the soviet hey, this is algebra from door ha. also coming up, testing the vaccine, the experiment which has seen one brazilian said he cut over deaths by 95 percent
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opponents of israel's prime minister hotel to replace them. but admit they are facing obstacles. and a big shock at the french open as well as number 2. and i was talk a withdrawal from the tournaments in order to protect mental health. ah, well, the government in peru has more than doubled its official corona virus death toll to more than 180000. that means the country now has the world's highest death rate per capita. health officials, they're admit the number of fatalities have been under reported prompting them to change the criteria for carbon 1900 related death, probable cases and now also being counted not just those who have actually tested positive only brazil and mexico have reported to high a tall across latin america. now, while most countries in the region are lagging behind on vaccinations,
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a new report says the global economic recovery depends on people getting inoculated . the o. e. c. d is wanting, but the lack of corona virus jobs will hold back poor nations. but one brazilian neighborhood is bucking the trend. the south eastern city of hannah reported a 95 percent drop in coven, 1900 deaths. once nearly all adults were not killed at their scientists. carrying out a study to test the effectiveness of china. sun of act vaccine will get more on the situation, improve shortly. but 1st want to say, you can reports from a generic view, diginero on that brazilian success story. they decided they would vaccinate 90 percent of the adult population up. they were thinking of 80 percent they'd be able to, they were able to vaccinate more than expected. there were community leaders that were going out and convincing people to get vaccinated. and this is a small town of $45000.00 people that had
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a high rate of infection because they would commute to neighboring, keep it pretty up to which is the larger city to work. and so they started this, they vaccinated, everybody would. they saw a drop in infections in depth after people had gotten the 1st dose, but the real real effect that they noticed was 2 weeks after 90, more than 95 percent of the population had received the 2nd dose. so in this city now, for example, children are back in school, people are feeling safe, they're even small businesses that are moving into the city because they see it as a safer place to invest money in whereas he be, i don't but it the which is very close to say not and which did not do that is right now under locked down, because the number of deaths has really risen over the past 4 months. so this was to prove really that vaccine work. the doctors say it will not eradicate the virus,
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but it will certainly help the health officials control it. well, let's now bring in doctor padaya scalia satellite, he's an assistant professor of medicine at the johns hopkins school of medicine. he joins us now from baltimore. dr. over the course of this pandemic, the johns hopkins numbers of really become the gold standard, say of statistics is where lots of people go to see how countries are doing. i know initially it was very dependent on government reporting. has that changed? how are you counting now? you know, thank you so much for allowing me to be here. we are. so we're allowing the government to be able to supplies with these numbers. so it is the big trucks factor that we have in order to ensure that the public in the world is up to date is a panoramic right. we're all in together. so we really are relying on government trust and transparency to provide those these numbers. so we can all make the right move in order to protect our own country or in our own population. well,
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you say there's a trust factor that we were just talking about the peruvian numbers there. can you various reasons for under counting across different countries? so capacity of those potentially driven by politics i, i recall tons and didn't report any cases for months until present like a truly died. north korea still has no confirmed cases. now given all of this in your mind, what is the best way to actually try to count deaths. ringback and it goes back to, again, to our trust factor. i mean, be the frustration with science as objective as it tried to stay. it's all we impacted by external biasing and college a good place to roll in. and it's frustrating because, right? so every countries move, it's going to be taken into account with what he can do for its own population, but what would it have to do with its own borders? ready as well, and if the neighboring countries are just countries router and not being transparent in the frustration, it's going to be really hard to navigate through the virus and ending this. so from my point, you know, will,
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is the ability to try to have at least the internal site of the public health officials for those, for their own country to continue to collaborate with the share those numbers. but the definition of data from probably 19 it's in there and they haven't changed. and from our, when it really, every country to understand that mother nature is not political. we need these numbers in order to make the most concrete decision for a population. we'll talk to, as you're saying, these numbers really mean something they impact how countries, how the rest of the world makes decisions around how to fight the virus. so in that context, how damaging has the under reporting that we've been seeing? how damaging has that been? it can be incredibly damaging. a couple things break right now. we know to get out of this kingdom if we're going to rely on an intervention that provides us immunity to provide us the ability to start. so we should ever get it the maxine, so the countries are under reporting numbers then their own population is going to say, well, great, i don't get it back. seen it for not having any cases here. and he's,
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individuals are world problems everyone in gauges for the world, right? and so that's going to be what keeps the damage from what for lingering. and so for my point, if you're going to under, so these numbers in order to gain some short term weight from politics, you're going to lose the long term mother. nature is not political. she has her own agenda. if you do this to write about the numbers mother nature, all right, we will utilize the unfortunate cemeteries and the fact that we see throughout the world you cannot hide that. that's over my point, please. doing the right thing. mean, tell me of the actual numbers. well, there's obviously a lack of consistency around the data that we're seeing. so in your mind then, should a body like the w h o say be giving official guidance on exactly how to count and, and actually presenting criteria that states should use. would that change things? i think right now we have to reassess what a universal kind of public health system would look like. because that will help
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the renovation. you know, i'm not sure if the amount of power needs it has in order to kind of implement a, b, and c. but i think recognizing this pandemic and recognizing one country coordinates, is going to impact the rest the world. we need some way to maintain transparency and impact regulation to help a country because we don't want anyone to do that when you all the country seem to get out of the camp. so i do think it will take countries like health organization and other countries from the us or the u. k to canada, etc. to step up and say, let us help you break. there's no shame. in fact, we need to end the dummy and your lag is going to impact us. so i think it says that it's kind of a global action for any country that continues to drag. and i think it's loving. that's what we did with smallpox in order to eradicate it. really isn't early eighties from the few last country sort of somalia. so we need to do this in a doctor and i guess got it off there. and as an assistant professor med center, johns hopkins school of medicine,
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thanks for joining us. talk to him. we wish you all the best with your one. thank you so much. now moving on and israel's opposition need us, as many obstacles still remain before a coalition government can be formed. yeah, in the p as in talks with ultra nationalists, naphtali bennett, to replace benjamin netanyahu. now repeat mandate, a former government expires on wednesday nights and yahoo says an alliance between ideologically different rivals will be what he calls the fraud of the century. israel has faced a 2 year political stalemate after 4 inconclusive elections. hurry force, it has more now from western there have to be various deals sorted out between the constituent parts of this coalition. and there has been already a pretty public argument between 2 of the parties involved over which one is going to get the agriculture ministry. so as with these sorts of negotiations in any situation, they are pretty fraught each side. one thing to get what it can ahead of the
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signing and sealing of the entire deal. he talked about it as the money time, as in this is when people are negotiating. he said that there was still the prospect of getting this done that he wanted to do so as soon as possible before. certainly the wednesday midnight deadline. and he talked again about the prospects of a government that would be quiet that would come to work and do what was necessary for the people of israel. contrasting that with what he called, nathan ya. whose behavior saying that he was increasingly unhinged. and with the breaks off, as he tries to prevent this from taking place. we've also heard from get ansari's another right winger who has a smaller policy but which was also very much devoted to the object of getting rid of benjamin netanyahu. he also talked about there being no certainty that this government would come about, but that he was all he and his other colleagues were working as hard as they could
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to ensure that it did. well. meanwhile, israeli forces are continuing what they call operation law and order, even as a sci fi holds, large scale arrests have been taking place all over israel, as horrible need reports now from jaffa. most of those who've been detained, palestinian israeli. he was on his way to buy some bread, but ended up at the police station, 16 year old. it's subtle, a palestinian israeli. phil doesn't know why in and i'm out of it. the moment he was a was caught on video august. one of them yelled what he ordered me to stop and i did and walking isn't they dragged me and started hitting me each time to asked a question. if they wouldn't let me answer, they would just hit me mohammed las fried a few hours later. his is just one story of many young palestinians living in israel being detained, often randomly in what is called operation law and order. but for the
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palestinians, it's more and opperation of intimidation. just a few days ago. police pro rated here jeff, i giving traffic tickets to palestinians. mostly the point city under suburbs of tel aviv has been on edge ever since protest in support of palestinians, injectors aurora and occupied east jerusalem took place. and in many ways, palestinians here share the same plight with many families also facing forth expulsion. oh, my med was sitting at home when a group of people walked in with restructuring plans and cameras. her hope was sold by the state to a nearby religious school. while she still lived there, know the fact they tell me to get out, they want to kick us out. so my 2 sons were detained because they're defending a whole crime. her sons and now under house arrest. during the 11th day, guys, i was dentures were very high between the 2 communities. and they were riots in several mix cities across the country. that actually took me by surprise here.
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since the government has rounded up more than a $1500.00 people, the vast majority being balancing in some were released within a few hours days. but very few jewish is really were detained for their role in the writing. yadda aloof was among palestinian protesters when police crackdown. she admit that as a jewish citizen, there is a slim chance. she will be a pretended. i've never seen something like that here in the past weeks. i've been constantly in the streets. i didn't see any jewish person being the things in the same sun, those and then you see people on a bike without helmets. and the 3rd jewish, they just go by and if they're 15, you know, they're the thing for the doubles your header that is a concerted effort aimed at palestinians wherever they are. it's a system that is working and, and it's not a political, it's not nathan,
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it's nathan, you know, and it's guns and it's about the court system. it's a synchronized system that it's working against. as israel continues it's wave of arrest in the name of public order these between the 2 communities in places like jaffa will remain precarious. hood that i meet al jazeera jaffa, while in a gyptian delegation led by the country's intelligence chief, has been in gaza. so talks with the laundry promise which controls the strength they discussed reconstruction after the 11 day conflict. israel's bombing campaign killed more than 200 palestinians and destroyed many buildings amass 5 thousands of rockets into israel, killing at least 13 people they're given. the other side has worn out from gaza. so according to her master officials, they have stated that the meeting with the bus cabin and why the head of hammocks movement and golf has discussed for main issues. the 1st of which is the
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obligation of these rarely occupation to the top aggression, to jerusalem. and because the strips and to abide to the resolutions and international resolution towards the policy of course has been subjected to the rights of refugees to return to their homeland. and this, if this is done, then this is going to be the major step for a very long call to build a t between israel and gaza. the 2nd was the reconstruction process and the need to expedited to chart with with, with this process as soon as possible because of the amount of. 6 devastation that the people of the god, the strip of living through these times after the destruction that has affected their homes and mos promise to contribute and support the process as much as
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possible. also the discuss bilateral relations between egypt and gaza. and a firm that does the, the why of the prisoners exchange will not be part of the reconstruction file. and it will not be mixed together because this, this is a file of prisoners who, where hostages of wars and not civilians. and it will not be mixed with the reconstruction process off the gods. distress are still ahead here on out there in the long journey to justice, 60 years on the young, white and black american civil rights activists who pushed for change despite the where i live. i, i, it's time for the journey with sponsored by cut on airways.
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we're starting this one in the philippines where we have dante, it has intensified into a tropical storm. okay, there's 2 things going on here. we have 2 tracks. i think this track rate here is a more probable one. that is to say, dante should always remain about 250 kilometers away from the land. but still look at the lashing that the philippines is getting some very heavy rain. and we know the ocean is being picked up is while wave heights about 5 meters with this storm where a cross se, asia, the rain is falling, where it should sumatra, malaysia and through borneo. but indo china is catching a bit of a break over the next few days. so bangkok look at your temperatures, plenty of sun, high humidity, those. so it's going to feel in the low to mid forties over the next several days. and are plum brains really dropping a lot of rain in particular on taiwan, which, you know, we were warning about, look at this over 2 days, 173 millimeters. this is a 2 hour drive south of type pay. and i think on tuesday,
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type pay could get swiped with anywhere from $15.00 to $30.00 millimeters of rain. air quality will deteriorate in beijing over the days ahead as well. and you know, for india or southwest monsoon really intensify. and so on tuesday, we have very heavy rain in store along the western gods. go up a height of 35 sponsored cattle airways. i be the refugee mean starting a game for 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 to be granted an american visa from their personal sacrifices to the families, triumph. meet the syrian on al jazeera. ah
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ah, hello again, i'm home. let's remind you about top stories, the salad, the government and peru has more than doubled its official corona virus. death told him more than 180000 health officials. they're admit, the number of fatalities have been under reported prompting them to change the criteria. the curb in 1900 related death. meanwhile, the new report says the economies in some countries are going to recover falster from the mix and all this. but a lack of vaccines will hold back for a nation. intervals, opposition need us as many obstacles remain before a coalition. government can be formed in the p t, as in talks with ultra national nestali bennett, replace benjamin netanyahu deadline to secure
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a deal is wednesday. now in china government as relaxing family planning restrictions to allow 3 people, 3 children per couple existing limit is just to there has been a decline in birth in the world's most populous country. katrina, you reports from beijing as thousands of children participate in passivity across china. to celebrate the country's children stay, its leaders announced a policy shift encouraging families to have more of them. chinese couples can now have up to 3 children. it comes just weeks after national center results pointed to the slowest population growth in decades. the workforce is also rapidly shrinking with roughly 20 percent of people. now over the age of 60 and analysts say this could hom, china's economic growth be to go to india. this will lead to the chinese economy losing its vitality. there is an aging problem with threat has not only china's economy, but his defense and foreign policy. previously, the chinese government,
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predicted economy would be double in 2035 compare with 2020, but that will be mission impossible. now the jing ended its decades long one child policy in 2016, raising the child limit to the dis, failed to significantly boost the number of children being born. china's birth rate has fallen for the 4th year in a row. 12000000 babies born in 2020 short of government expectations. chinese social media pages are full of comments about the new 3 child limit. many a critical or ridicule the governments dramatic policy turnaround from the 1980 until 2016 millions of women were subject to find and even forced abortion and sterilization of having one child and 2014 liberty film directed young remove was find more than $1000000.00 for having 3 children. though these penalties no longer apply, china's rising cost of living remains
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a barrier for families. many i'm able to afford having more than one child. increasingly educated women are also putting off all foregoing having children together, largely because of workplace discrimination. if the state really wants the birth rate, the crude rate to increase, it has to produce more welfare. the government will delay the retirement age and offer support to families who have more children, but to earn a living democratic crisis. some say it may be too little, too late. katrina, you all to 0 paging. now the number of potential presidential candidates hoping to run in nicaragua is election is quickly being whistled down. but the united nations was said a new electoral know that undermines the prospect of a free and fed balance latin america editor lucy newman. explain with presidential elections just 5 months off. opponents of niggers was president daniel,
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lord taylor and his wife ross. i knew moody you the vice president are dropping like flies. wow. recent weeks to opposition parties were dissolved and 2 candidates put under house arrest and renew electoral reform measure that the un high commissioner of human rights says will impede fair and pre election. now the standard to moral the most competitive opposition candidate is being accused of money laundering and other crimes that would make her ineligible to run to the doctor. a former president lead such a moral who beat ortega in elections back in 1990. look at that. this is not about attacking me. it's about attacking the rise of nicaraguans to a fair free and transparent election. they want to eliminate all of us to frighten us all, so we won't participate. leaving the general prosecutor's office to motor said her lawyers were also being threatened. nicaragua was pro government prosecutor says
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that the literature, moral foundation, that she leads and which receives donations from abroad to support independent journalism is being investigated for money laundering. over the weekend, the vice president confirmed that the foundations accountant and its finance manager had been arrested and will remain imprisoned for up to 90 days while they're investigated. the government has not responded to al jazeera as request your comment, but vice president moody, you says opposition. leaders are guilty of organized crime. but that's not all. at least a dozen journalists, including the a f p correspondent, had been detained, questioned or charged with possible complicity. it'll be really, the gallo corresponded to the us based spanish language network. you division says her bank accounts have also been frozen. i want to let you know,
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because i asked the prosecutor what crime was being investigated for. and he said he would be told that information. how am i supposed to defend myself? the office of the independent, huge organization, confidential has also been rated and shut down, its director cabinets with none. the chair, moral is christiana tomatoes, brother, several more. we journey practice journalism, not treason. they just stood everything to call our equipment and arrested a camera man. they're trying to crush any voice, it challenges the dictatorship. in our case, journalists who hold power to account. president ortega, who controls all of nicaragua institutions and who has the support of cuba and venezuela is running for a 4th consecutive terms. and just like in venezuela, opposition will soon have to decide whether to compete at all actions that they say have already been decided to see a human al jazeera. when are 60 years ago,
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hundreds of young activists supported buses bound for the southern united states to challenge segregation. they became known as the freedom riders. many of them were beaten and arrested on arrival in a campaign that's still resonates today. kristen, sending the reports now from you. their arrests were seen as political statements at the time. now their mug shots have become iconic. symbols of the civil rights movement of the 1900 sixty's, the freedom riders as they became known, travelled on buses throughout the summer of 9900. 61 to parts of the southern united states were segregation was still being enforced. the writers were often met with outright hostility in the form of violent attacks by mobs and the ku klux klan . they also face to rest and many spend weeks in county jails. one of whom was 19 year old new yorker louis dockman. i was shackled, taken from one from the county jail, walking along with other prisoners, and the judge who had, sends me so i me and spit,
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ami the judge. so you began to realize how frightening it was. a bustle proceeded by a half dozen highway patrol. watching the 1st group of freedom rides is lavonne brown from jackson, mississippi. at just 16, he was inspired to join the movement, which would later bring some frightening moments. declan came after us one night with the help of the local police. and you know, as we saw of escape by jumping off the roof of building next to us, declared came up the stairs. the front door were musket kill, burned with the freedom riders. treatment by local authorities sparked a national outcry, eventually forcing the federal government to act and inspiring the wider civil rights fight for the rest of the decade of one. and i have been together what all this stuff forever. zach men and brown became friends, lou and i know each other so well that we could go out and they could tell my story . i feel is both zach men and brown regularly appear together to talk about their
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experiences to a new generation. one still grappling with issues of systemic racism. everybody wants to know the bay explosion, and i mean, they can be as simple as putting your arm around somebody that can be a revolutionary depending on where you are. even at 79, zach man is still helping minorities through his organization scar harbor which supports disadvantage children in new york. one of the special things about the freedom right is to put together young people, white, african american, male, female throughout america. it was a unique moment where we came together as a country division and i a moment that still resonates 60 years later. kristen salumi al jazeera new york. when u. s. president turbine has urged americans to reflect on what he's called, the country's deep roots of racial tara, on the 100 down
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a vast array of the tulsa race massacre. the ceremony is to remember the victims are being held in the city in the state of oklahoma. back in 1921. white rice has destroyed the tulsa district of greenwood. hundreds were killed. thousands left her now firefighters and sri lanka continued to find a chemical fire on board a cargo ship, which is now burning for a 12 day. police have begun questioning crew members over just what caused the incident. the ship was carrying $25.00 tons of nitric acid and a large amount of plastic will materials, much of which has now fallen overboard. women's tennis well, number tonight me a soccer has withdrawn from the french open, citing mental health concerns. the japanese style was fined and threatened with expulsion after she refused to talk to media following her 1st round that on sunday . then on monday she said she was pulling out of the event as it was best for the
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tournament. the other pears and her being a soccer says she's been suffering from long bouts of depression and intends to take some time away from course we. we share the best and the quickest possible recovery. and we look forward to having now me, you know, tournaments next year, we remain very committed to all athletes well being. and to continually improving every aspect of players experience, you know, tournaments including with the media. ah, or that this is al jazeera, these are the headlines. the government in peru has more than doubled its official corona virus death toll. to more than 180000 health officials, they're admit the number of fatalities have been under reported prompting them to change the criteria for curve in 1900 related deaths. meanwhile,
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city and southeast in brazil has recorded a 95 percent drop.

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