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tv   [untitled]    June 3, 2021 6:00pm-6:31pm +03

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me ah this is al jazeera ah, the time is 1500 hours gmc hello, on come on santa maria. welcome to the news our from al jazeera. israel's can take a prime minister benjamin netanyahu lashes acid, a new unity coalition that could unseat him. also in the news, the russia contain an environmental catastrophe. salvage cruise, stating with a cargo ship thinking of sri lanka.
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the protest isn't sedans, capital demands justice, but dozens of people killed in a government crackdown 2 years ago. and officials in nigeria, faith in negotiating with kidnappers to release dozens of school children abducted last week. and i'm thought hire to have your qualifying matches for the 2020 c football walcott resume in south america. and the growing uncertainty because of corona virus and the civil unrest. ah hello everyone. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has accused his rival nastily bennett a sailing out after the announcement of a new coalition agreement. late on wednesday, the far right ultra nationalist bennett could soon succeed netanyahu, but 1st the coalition will need to pass the vote. in these ready parliament the condenser that could take up to a week. if approved i palestinian is ready party. the united arab list will be part
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of the governing coalition for the 1st time in israel's history. but that would only be one of 8 parties in that coalition, leading to questions about how stable this future government will be. also how it would deal with the palestinians. bennett, hold some very strong anti palestinian views. he once said, quote, i have killed a lot of arabs in my life and there's no problem with that and quotes. so let's stop with harry fulton correspond. joining us from western them on the news out. so the vote went to the people and went to the people 4 times, didn't it? but finally, it goes to the connected. is there any indication at this stage of how that vote will go or do we just wait and say well, i mean the question is how much nothing. yeah. who can try to peel away some of these right wing as a who for now at least remain part of the coalition in, in utero. is it was that trying to put it together?
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and also the, the question is when this will take place now, the head of the, of the opposition law paid, who has formed this coalition and is decided to step aside and allow natalie bennett to go 1st as prime minister. he wants to try to unseat the current very netanyahu friendly speaker of the house and have a vote on monday to replace that speaker with an opposition speaker. who would then facilitate this vote more quickly and restrict the amount of time that benjamin netanyahu has to try to get in the way of the coalition being formed? there are questions now as to whether natalie bennett's party is entirely up to that there is at least one member of his party who has expressed unwillingness to do that. so even that part of the 1st step towards getting this vote through looks in question. so there is certainly still plenty to playful for benjamin netanyahu, and he's been doing all he can to try to put russians between the, between the constituent parts of this coalition already as potential coalition,
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as i mentioned, 8 members in it. and then again, the idea of there being a, a shared prime minister ship 2 years for natalie bennett, and then 2 years for paid. i mean, 1st of all, that 2nd part of thing we've, we've seen that movie before, have we and it didn't happen with netanyahu and dance, and just the idea of a party's. the only thing that binds them is that they don't like nathan, yahoo! yes. i mean, it's pretty extraordinary. i mean, i think there is that point that they, they want to get rid of nothing. you know, it's not all necessarily personal. a great deal of it is a lot of people involved in this, especially on the right. people who had to think has been very badly by their relations with netanyahu. people have been very close to him in the past, but also i think there is a will to try to just end this constant sort of division and disruption and stasis within the israeli political process. and try and get on with the governing in a pragmatic way. i mean, as you say, all of these parties are very different from each other. they have very different ideologies. the idea of this is to try to get them to just do relatively low level
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old fashioned governing and set aside some of the more ambitious ideological targets that each might have in its own political projects. so that's the idea, of course nothing. you know, if this goes through will be in opposition to be very powerful, opposition figure trying everything he can to splinter the right. especially. however, there is another argument that perhaps his very presence and his very attempts to do that might keep things going. a bit longer than they otherwise might, but i think few people in israel a currently betting on this government, seeing out its full 4 year term, even the i lobbied, getting round to his prime minister ship. as you say, you know, when his comments today accusing them of being of selling out the israeli, does it the negative to the arab parties? he's trying to diligence him, eyes already the very party legitimized in the eyes of the right that has allowed them to try to cooperate with them in this way. that could just be another count
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down to another election, couldn't that? thank you, harry, full sit in west teresa and let's hear from sammy boucher hi there. who is the leader of the ballade party, just a member of the joint place to says netanyahu's removal far as the palestinians are concerned. it's not going to change the reality for palestinians radius. the new government being led by a very famous, subtler, or a supporter of settlement, the enough tale, bennett and his colleagues in this government, people who are carrying the danger, thoughts of transferring the palestinian from their homeland like lieberman or dawn, saw with his right wing very extreme ideologies. so i'm thinking that what we need is a change in the rally policy is not in the personality. the situation was very bad before and you know, on the long run into the one that's on fall isn't going to continue. also being that after net anyhow,
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this is why we oppose the government. i wish we had partners that would think leave agree with that on the basis. what we are struggling for here is equality and justice for all. i wish we had part is those partners and the other one is, what is the issue is that there's a contradiction between the jewish state and democracy. we cannot believe and we see jewish democracy oxy warren. what we are struggling for is to do a serious june that will make is read from areas just entity into a democracy. we call it the state of all citizens. we want to up a political regime which is built on the just the equality for all of the arabs and jews together. unfortunately, this way of democratic thing do not have partners was in the riley political map nowadays maybe in the future will be more far away from all the politics. and the only crossing point between egypt and the gaza strip is being reopened. to allow,
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in construction equipment, was to clear all the debris following the 11 day israeli, on barton's, your mouth that has more now from the ra, crossing the heavy duty machinery to enter gaza strip and starved right away. in removing the rubble and the destroyed and partly destroyed homes and starts with this removal because it is very much looking a lot of trees in the god. the strip which is making it very difficult for the movement of cars in most areas and even people. and this, this process has been postponed to so many for oldest times to cease fire by the ministry of work. because it's that, that it's like the old equipment and machinery to start with the removal of the rubble. so basically this is the 1st thing that the ministry of works is going to be doing in, in assessing the damages that have been happening. also,
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that has happened in the restructure and the roads as well, but it will start, as it has stated by removing the rubble, which is the biggest problem so that it can also pave the road to the reconstruction process, which it needs desperately to start. as soon as possible, all most 9 minutes past this news hour. here is what coming up ensuring a delivery into syria of o'clock takes on a delivery system meant to help and opposition held area. also looking at what the united nation takes, we need to do right now to avoid a global environmental disaster, the sport, the women's world tennis number one, the latest to the big name sports to pull out of the french open. ah, let's look at the ship off the coast of sri lanka now where authorities uprights for a possible oil spill from that funk and vessel is laden with chemicals and plastic
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pellets. it's already called the country's worst manmade environmental disaster. it is now fear $350.00 tons of oil stored on that singapore registered ship could also leak out. attempts to salvage the ship were abandoned on wednesday when its rear howl reapply of the whole touched the sea floor. let's have a look at it all on the map. we're talking about this part of sri lanka, the southwestern part between the gumbo and columbia is a close up. you can see it's about 30 kilometers between now gumbo and colombo. they're the ship approximately here. but there is now, excuse me, a restriction on fishing, which extends ac kilometers and this is only $28.00. so you looking at a, a further 20 or 30 or so in each direction. here's a quick look at marine traffic dot com as well, which shows this is the ship. he can see plenty of other marine traffic in the area, the port colombo down here, which is quite busy and the relief efforts which are happening in the lagoon here
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in a gumbo heading out to the ship. but to from address helwig, who is a senior lecturer in engineering at the university southern queen simon says this disaster is part of a much bigger global problem. the long term concern, he says supplies picks break up so i can remove them from the beach or from the see is infected, will in impact on the food chain right from father point them and do a blanket. and then the actual live bio many moraine species that form the basis of the whole food chain and then from the concentration can occur. the disaster is actually been going probably for a lot longer than people realize, decades. this is just a long line of problems that have occurred as we have used plastics. very durable plastics for a use industrially and domestic use. but unfortunately, we're not recycling these plastics at the right. we can keep them out of the sea
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ways. and the water weiss so yes, it is a very obvious incident, but it's part of a much bigger problem. the density of most plastics is light in the water, which means i tend to flight not sink and this is where moraine life can absorb them as, as part of the food shine. so main removing the as many of the plastics from the beach and also from the immediate area is one of the priorities in a disaster like this set. the problem is we're leaking plastics through our weiss, water through our industrial use of plastics that end up in the waterways blow randall around the world. officials in the nigeria, se they on negotiating with kidnapping to release a 148 school children abducted last sunday. the students were taken during an during an armed right on the school in geena in new jersey state. and jerry is central governments ruled out paying a ransom however, $700.00 children have been kidnapped by criminal groups in nigeria since december
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alliance. let's hear from our med address is outside the school in again, and his parents fear these negotiations could drag on the mode in tech. you know, right now we start to concern it's that a resignation is lack of grief, grief in the sense that to parents, mothers, in fact, succumb to illnesses, to the shock of the missing or they're missing children. funeral have been held here to mothers have been buried already. 148 children have been taken from this school and the oldest of them according to the teacher of this institution. it's just 14 years. many of them are under the age of 10. and the condition they are in is a source of worry not only to the school authority, but also to parents. we met parents in their multitudes waiting outside the school, waiting for days. now this is the 5th day waiting for any information about their missing children. they was asking if the government cont,
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intervene quickly to save their children, because a lot of them cannot withstand the pressure of being away or be kept in a very, very dangerous situation. they moved to the forest. and although the authorities are insistent but other security since the security person allowed top of the situation, there are concerns. yeah. but that may not be enough to save the children. meanwhile, the run some demand from the kidnappers has gone up. initially they were asking 425-0000 us dollars, and we understand that that demand has up today this morning has doubled and the parents and the school authority award that this could drug on for a very long time. security forces in sudan of closed up all major roads, leading to government and military headquarters in the capital cartoon. the activists organized marches around the country on thursday to commemorate the 2nd anniversary
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of a massacre in 2019 a peaceful protest. during a pro democracy fit him, demonstrated demanding justice and accountability will be at least $120.00 people killed in that violent crack down. let's talk to him morgan now and call him about this. the government must be worried, i guess if the marches are being organized and they've decided to shut off all these rights, they must be anticipating something. yes indeed. come all. that's because when the protest has come on the rates of the anniversary in terms of islamic calendar, just about 2 or 3 weeks ago to port test says were killed when they access the military headquarters. this is not the 1st time that protesters are taking to the st, demanding that just to be served as well as accountability by the transitional government since that day on june. 3rd, 2 years ago when at dawn, security and 4th open fire at a protein walker and sitting in front of the army headquarters, killing more than 100 processes and enduring over 700 others while doesn't went
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missing. but protest of the thing that the government response has been very slow. now the government did respond just hours for today's protest, saying that they do understand the frustration of the protesters and that then that the investigations are ongoing. and they do not want to interfere in the judicial process that is going on in terms of investigation. they also describe the relationship between them and the military component of this transitional government as a very complex and therefore it needs to be worked on. let's remember that following the attack on the 2 sets in front of the joseph attack on the 2nd 2 years ago, the 2 sides of the government. and now now government, which is a military and civilian component, went into negotiations and formed a power sharing government which is currently running. but the country protest, however, saying that the statements coming from the government in terms of promising to deliberate justice in terms of promising to deliver better services to the people. people, something they say has been very, the government has been very slow in doing is something they've heard over and over
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again, and they want to see action not worth from the government. so they say that by come america, the 2nd anniversary of the, of the june. 3rd, mastercard, they reminding the government that they want accountability, that they haven't forgotten. that those who are responsible for the crimes committed onto a 3rd should be held to account and should be brought to justice. thank you. have a morgan for that update for me from cartoon. now there has been an explosion in the african capital campbell. a small van was targeted with improvised explosive police say at least 4 people been killed and 4 others injure it. a united nations, a delivery system that's meant to ensure help reaches an opposition held province in the syria, will expire next month unless the russians allowed to continue. moscow, of course, and ally of the searing president material outside wants all age to be routed through his government, years and bastard to the you and visited syrian refugees living along the turkey, syria border to assure them that that will not happen. a full story now with us and
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basset to the united nations, meets a workers at the turkey border with syria. and they tell her about what's described as life saving assistance. they are giving to people in syria. in a few weeks, linda saw mas greenfield will confront russian resistance to renew the cross border mechanism on the ground that it violates serious sovereignty. when i get back to new york, i will be briefing members of the security council of what i've seen here. and i will be appealing to my colleagues, to the court, the continuation of this operation, and to reopen the 2 other border crossings that were close. civil, how is the only entry point for the u. n. to bring aid into the opposition held northwest? it's also the last, the for international crossing points that have been closed because of russia serious ally. we need as much access as possible. in fact,
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what we need at the moment is more access, not less. we need to scale up the response because the 8th that we're providing is simply not enough. this is, you know, the biggest displacement crisis of the 21st century. nearly 4000000 people live in the northwest. many are internally displaced by the conflict. 80 percent rely on aid brought from turkey. the un currently sends more than $1000.00 trucks carrying aid every month. you know, a young buddy at the moment, the 8 is not enough even for one foot off the population. if the you can't use the border, they'll be feminine. local and international n g o cannot fill the gap as hunger and malnutrition grow. a worker say the infrastructure set up in turkey to run the operation can't be easily replaced. the un is the largest actor in the humanitarian response. the home of them at the you and gives more than 50 percent of all wait,
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that stops him or the death sentence to the people. russia was un operations we routed through damascus, but human rights and age groups warned against this. they accused the syrian government of using aid as a weapon by keeping it from its opponents and using it to benefit those who are loyal for months now, we have seen behind the scenes negotiations primarily between the united nations and between damascus to try to achieve one single cross line delivery from damascus to live until now those negotiations have led to nothing. the biden administration has been vocal in its criticism of how damascus handles a deliveries. and now with the u. s. envoys visit the stage is set for what will likely be an intense period of negotiations to keep open the gate to serious opposition held the areas that are elsewhere. theater. look in environmental issues . now it's a pretty big statement. humans are destroying the foundations of our survival at an
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alarming rate. the united nations saying that and also that an intense restoration effort must get under way to address pollution, climate change and loss of nature. at the moment we're taking more than nature can provide sustainably about 1.6 times as much. and you un reports as we've passed the point where conservation efforts alone can prevent large scale collapse of ecosystems and by diversity. so what is needed is a generation restoration that would restore more than a 1000000000 hector of land over the next decade. how big that roughly decides to china. and if it can be pulled off, it may help avoid nearly 2 thirds of expected by diversity extinction. and increased food security for more than a 1000000000 people. we spoke to in guy anderson about the executive director of the u. n's environment program, which is ecosystem. restoration is essential for climate and food production. the
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world has decided that the united nations that they want to really focus this coming 10 years on restoration 1000000000. the heck test that we have over exploded, be graded through our human activity. we need to put it back into working order. why? because we still need to feed the world, we still need to ensure that we can't live as humanity. and we can't do that if we continue to degrade the very land that sustains us. so the opportunities, yes, we protect what has not yet been interfered with. what we put back into working landscape that which we have degraded and it is so very doable each one of us know it from our back god. and if we give that all from the fields where we work, if we give nature half a chance, it will bounce back. it just needs a little helping hand. so this is an initiative where we are working with the finance sector. obviously, we need to have farming on board and government science and communities to move on
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restoration, but it would be essential for food and for climate. government have tended to look at short termism, but small governments look longer term because once land becomes 3rd time again, once land can sustain a population, once people do not have to migrate from the places you get healthy, a better and more stable and less insecure. society's tomorrow we will be launching with the government to pakistan the restoration decade and in pakistan there's been a huge effort on restoration under the 10000000000 teresa nami and other countries to costa rica and many other countries. in mexico, avocado gro, is fighting back against criminal gangs, trying to muscle in on the lucrative business, the 1st worth around $2000000000.00 a year. i mean truck and state is the half of the industry. john holman reports now
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from paragon on the difficulties confronting the avocado farmers through green gold . that's what they call this fruit, mitchell county, southwest mexico. in recent years, some have given the crop with different names, blood because those both are partly true. the industry here is worth billions exporting to the us, but it's so lucrative, the criminal groups a trying to muscle in we hear impaired by with the have a car, the farmers fighting back. the town who set up its own self defense force. this is a drill session before they head out on patrol. some of these 3 brothers, a part of the force and own this grow. they don't want us to show their identity. they say they're up against one of the most powerful groups in mexico. c o 28 years ago the least new generation cartel came in
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here and wanted to take our land. so we had to take up arms and defend our home. there were places close to our village where they took groves, and they killed the families elementary. the men can have called the industry is worth upwards of $2000000000.00 a year. and the police go cartel isn't the 1st criminal group go off to it. the firm has battled another card so called the knights templar before them. do you feel frightened or fear about what you're doing because you go to farmers and you suddenly become like a suit of smooth all me getting them with this and then with all the years that we've been fighting now we're not scared of anyone. we're ready to give our lives, we're not scared anymore, and there are other because producing towns in the region, we've also had to defend themselves. the farmers here. so there are more than 2000 people in their force in several cells after practice. it's this group turns her
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head out. i talk to one of the brothers we've met earlier. now in battle dress. why you guys doing this? why isn't the police or another force of security doing it? when we want to come over, the government ignores us. they sold themselves and they turn a blind eye. so it's up to us to come out and petrol the area because the national guard just petrol in tones where there is no risk. they admit that not everyone's happy with them being the dominant force in town. a group of men with lots of guns and little accountability carries obvious risks. but it doesn't seem to be a lot of choice in a region in which farms factories may tie production chains or in the sites of nar coast. i mean with, with the finding
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the traffic in the books and everything for now the, the pharmacy they've been kept out of parable and away from the green gold john home. and how does it a pretty bad that's the short story. you can watch john home and whole new special, the full reports living in mexico kills on $1630.00 gmc on friday on out to be on the fuse out of the house the rest in nicaragua. why prominent opposition leader has been detained by the police. got hiler in thailand were 2 ancient artifact, haven't returned from the united states where they were on display. cultural officials are hoping that this sends a message to museum around the world and in sport, france impressive. ahead of the euro's, but it wasn't a good night for all their players. sandra has your little the
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hello there. it's a hot, dry picture for much of the middle east. those temperatures across the gulf states continuing to climb above average for this time of year. and if we look at the temperature in queue weight, we're going to be edging up into the fifty's. by the time we go into the weekend because i'm a story across iran temperatures continuing to climb and the heat is on across iraq . but things are cooling down in the south must get seen temperatures nestling in the mid thirties. one of africa, we've got showers across the open rift valley, but things looking relatively fine and dry for kenya. and you gander some of the heavy storms we have to go to nigeria, by the time you get to the weekend lay goss, we'll be seeing some of those particularly heavy thunder, re showers, kicking in their democratic republic of congo, thinks,
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and showers as well as we go into the weekend. much of the wet weather though, is in southern parts of africa, the eastern coast of south africa, seeing a weather system that's bringing a bit of wet and windy weather there. that's affecting southern parts of mozambique . we could see some flooding here, but that clears as we go into saturday and tape tom. we'll see some of the sunshine at 24 degrees. the june 9676 days that redrew the map of the middle east record, a victim of the early army in that war was the greatest custody of 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 contact 3 different countries. and it was clear that all this was to know the rule in june
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. worked out there english since it's long should as a principal present and as a correspondent with any breaking the story we want to hear from those people who would normally not get heard on the international news channel. one moment i'll be very proud of. when we covered the napoleon wake of 2015, a terrible natural and a story that needed to be told from the hall of the affected area to be there to tell the people story was very important at the time. ah ah you're on the news on here it onto the right and these are the top.

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