tv [untitled] June 6, 2021 1:00pm-1:31pm +03
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big player and we sort of looked after ourselves. i don't remember the children's names, but i'll never forget canada's dark secret on al jazeera. ah, this is al jazeera, ah, hello there, i'm still here. hey, and this is a new line from our headquarters here in doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. i bought a veteran out there. a john. the stuff is a friend to hand off to being beaten and arrested by israeli forces in shapes and occupied it. through visiting us senate has promised $900.00 vaccines to tie one
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after the island accuses china of blocking efforts to secure doses g 7 nations on a minimum tax rates and multinational companies. but campaign to say it doesn't go far enough. and why the skies above paris have become a battle ground between police and drone operations above them into the sport, a crushing blow for gulf john rom. this falls to pull out of the memorial tournament with codes of 19 offers, taking a short lead. ah, now dedira correspondent of arbitrary has left hospital after receiving treatment, the injuries suffered during her arrest by israeli forces. she's revealed that she sustained a fracture in her left hand during the incident, but era was arrested while covering a demonstration and occupied east jerusalem. she's accused of harassing israeli
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forces and not presenting her credentials claims that both she and out a 0 strongly deny will be speaking to her later on this show. but for now hold up. the me has this report the moment give out. there was detained. the even though clearly identified as they just came from everywhere. i don't know why. 2 and they kicked me to the land. what is your idea? i told him, you know me and you know that we got coming and going in many time, overpowered and cornered with their un handcuffs and dragged away. they wrote me to the investigation about just more in less than 6 seconds. my hands is like this to the, to the, to, to, to that soldiers inside. and then they kicked me inside the car in a very bad way,
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handcuff stuff. they were just making like this, like this, getting them tighter, tighter, inside the car. and they were picking me from everywhere in that area. how you had with there in her team were covering a peaceful demonstration organized in solidarity with the families on the threat. of course will eviction inches around in occupied east jerusalem. she has been accredited with israel's government press office for many years. she was held and interrogated at the police station. where would they re says she was treated like a criminal after 7, or if i was, i don't know how much time because they took from me everything they used to take the call from me. they said either at us said or 15 days away from because of the video evidence. yes. yes. we will go to the call because it's because it was a message for all, every of all the juniors we kicked, we put,
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we put our hand so everybody will be afraid and nobody will cover. no, we will cover everything given up. there is one of the most experienced journalists covering events in israel and the palestinian territory. her rest is being seen as an effort to intimidate journalist and has drone globalcom the nation. this is a clear violation of press freedom because the journalist was clearly recognized all as she was wary. and there is a clear will from b, julio for you to prevent journalists from doing their job. and from reporting of the router ordeal, rivera was denied the request to remove her heavy flak jacket. when she came out of the police station, she was visibly shaken, but determined to continue her work. the case of divine where there is not isolated palestinian journalists complain that they are systematically harassed. some of them also detain,
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just carrying out their jobs for the elders era in occupied east jerusalem. while al jazeera dr. arbitrary joins us here. now giovanni, let me start by asking you how are you doing today? i'm saying good to be ok. they broke my hand, i spent all the night in the hospital. my heart and my back hurts me a lot. and he had my hand from the cough and also they hurt so much because so. busy the soldiers and because we're fighting it all the time, i have a headache and my leg i called tool kit very well. and my voice says, you see, it was horrible because not only because i'm a senior, i'm a journalist, i'm covering like all the journalists here. we've covering the yellow on the ground . we go and we are just telling it the whole word what's going on here
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and to know i am under a shock because they didn't see any photos from what happened yesterday because i was shocked when they began to pick me and i was just, you know, i just want to hear something very important yesterday, but especially today i made for life for i'm just, you know, as i was walking through the soldier, the same soldiers for them 25 and they made will can talk 40 with my name and the name of the julietta, i was wearing my best and i was going golf. and coming inside the haitians at law for more than 20 times. so the know me, they know who i am and what's the thing that they know
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after they hit me in a very bad way in the car, they were kicked a lot more than one of the folder that he said. since you voted with the report of the as a v if you don't, if you didn't have my id, how did you know of some of the old criminal show? how did you know? i must say you bought the report of just us and inside the police station it was, it was showing that because of the, you know, it's one of the soldiers told me we will let you shuttle, you all of it off here on the gone, for all the jewel is eunice, will settle if we, let's just be silent. everyone with one of the soldiers and they would give me like criminals to take costs.
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and i told you we are doing the, this is just telling me what's going on on the guns. i'm covered with those are viewed off from 21 years old. one of the soldiers came and told me from how long you are now. i told him, how old are you? he said 20 years. i told him i was just before you were born. so we know our work, we don't like, we don't say anything wrong because they said that i was just saying everything a lot, a lot. i told them no, we don't lie. just give me one incident that we liked. what i'm seeing now on the ground after all these years, this find after all these years. this is the 1st time we see this unbelievable 3. think words join us and especially just after covering all what happened in bed. and i moved to not like the most in guys especially but
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they did, they wanted to come in to be broken up as they broke it yesterday with my colleague . they wanted the microphone to be on the gaunt. but we are telling them that the microphone and the come at all we say, and we will continue. nothing will topless, nothing. we face more than this, and we will continue. devora, i'm so sorry that you've been through that trauma. i see your cost there. can i ask, how did that actually happened to your hands? your, your friends, broken part of your hand? the broken guns from the kicking and because i was kicked from everywhere, i didn't know that even i didn't know that my hand is broken only in the hospital. they discovered that it's broken here. it's from the cops because they were typing
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it because i was shot think i couldn't breathe. i just pulled them. please open the window. they will shake every time i'm saying open the window, they would get kicking me with legs and then tied to the cops. it was a touch a lot, but as i told you, nothing, maybe it's the 1st time i know what's the meaning of being a prison that i have many cents and we covered it. many, many people who were at rest. so the, so it was so new a new thing to know how to be on the other side. so how this piece of jewelry is that about 3 to there are 3 that's very badly inside the body space. and i saw, you know, no kid, they would please like to middle, they didn't do anything and even i won't talk them what's going on. they refused to let me speak with them. you know something so, so silly. i was so tired,
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so i wanted to close my my eyes. he began to kick me with his leg. the soldier inside the police station. don't close your eyes, you know why you are doing like this? if we, if we don't covered with cut mirror, that is the i phone. there are a new generation covering everything. so don't let a new generation coming to cover what we are covering. also driven, you've been reporting funding for my voice. it's absolutely fine job already. you've been reporting, as you say, from shake jara for some time now. i'm curious. what is it been like reporting from the ground and not just for you, but for other journalists. how other john this being treated at the man and you know, i can i don't, you may, i could say that, you know, no one was treated in a good way. all the junior reporters come in. i'm in psalm and
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the people who help us even even is really julia from the left side. they were kicked so they know that this will be that they want everybody to be shuttle everybody. all the join us. when peter, in a bad way in babylon, would in alex in the she's in the and we, and of course what happened with our office in gaza. this is a climb. so it, and all the junior or anybody was just filming, with the, with the i phone. they would also kicks for me. for example, before 2 days i was kicked into one from 4 soldiers with was fixed on my back. and before that, we were kicked many times from the horses in babylon. even the people may say in
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the word, it's nothing know, it's something because it hurts and they want to, you know, we are feeding full, you know, they thought that we will be fired and we will stop and we will not continue. know we are going to continue then if this camera didn't show that come in will show and everybody will, will speak about that. and the most important thing that i know everybody other saying what, how can we help the juniors of jerusalem? because no one can help them because they are under a israeli occupation. it's something so bad towards the journalist in jerusalem. so . so bad the situation. so we hope something now will change. not because you are with the for showed no, i am one of these great people, these jewelers working,
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some of them from 30 years on the gold. i'm one of them. but no, i think everybody, sol, how is i don't want anyone in the world see what's going on on the gaunt? no, they don't won't see. they don't want to show anybody, but everywhere the photos are go, go any going to. so everywhere and we are think about this generation is picked up good generation and changed everything. you said i know that you will go to court. i'm curious what your next steps will be and also just around the press credentials. i know there have been difficulties and obtaining those. do you think that taking steps to go to court will make it easier for other journalists to operate there as well. first of all, as you know, we are going. ringback to the court because the they said that i be to the soldiers, if you made soldiers. and they gave me in the investigation
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a video both 6 seconds and just say my hands is like this. i told the investigator 6 seconds, and the lawyer told me that is 22 minutes a video from, from all the videos that chose the opposite. that sure the opposite. so don't tell me about 6 seconds. so there he is said investigator told me now you have the criminal fi and you have to go, maybe you have to go to the course of data, will go to the court because all of happens with all the teams be 40. 2 days they broke, i would cut into one beta and they throw it on the on the card. i would come middleman. no, they would be very well in very badly in other places. so as we go to the court
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and today over june, said that that is the big things that happened to the june. they are going even to the international law. it's the international criminal court and with the big file, with all the things that shows how and and the occupation of doing with the, with, with join us, especially from the beginning of some of them. because from the 1st day of ramadan, everybody and we were covering from babylon mood, they were kicking people and we just mean they were kicking off. also while you are taking off and we are just filming, we didn't do anything. we have just microphone. we have just camera and we have a wood fence that is that's all what we have. so we're now for short villages. here we go to the court. and from what i have seen,
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even from some israeli channels, they are in a shock for our both. so what do you do? and they said that it's not, it's not acceptable. what happened yesterday, and somebody told me yesterday that it's something the same like what happened in the oldest demonstration demonstrations. all the bad things happen in gather the same like what's your photo? yes. so they, because you were covered and you didn't do anything. and really we were covering and we, they saw, they know off, they wanted to shut up, shut up. that's all of our dairy. they're out there is correspondence. speaking to us now from ramallah. we wish you all the best tomorrow and we're very glad to see you back for united your little girl. thank you. thank you so much. now
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moving on, let's pete the harder for me. she is in occupied east jerusalem. as we've been saying to var was arrested while reporting from shake jara with several palestinian family, the facing force eviction. what is the situation there now? well, actually divine was arrested just not very far from where i'm standing here. now in that same street, behind that checkpoint, that's where do families are facing for the big ones are living. and this morning the journal general security g went to the house of could be and arrested her. she's an interrogation right now. no one else could be. i think she was specifically chosen to be the day because she has become a bit of a symbol of what the, what is going on there. she's become the voice of these families that are facing
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these 4 function. she's very active and social media. she is there each time there is any guy that wrote action so that there did, she was actually last night standing in front of the police station was of our was inside. so going after is specifically is that specific method? because you are actually going up to one of the most prominent activists and occupied east jerusalem at the moment. now she knows very well that the case for the fate of her home is still up in the air we waiting to hear from you. yet you need general, israel's attorney general about his opinion in that case, but i have to tell you that already on a property that is a smaller house. and that house has been already taken over by a settler who's basically become her neighbor. so she very well represent or is the same, but of what is going on. and the voice of those families facing for eviction,
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not only here in jefferson raw, but many. and so when would also look up to her? whatever the 8th is for us from occupied to reason. thank you so much other. well, meanwhile, the palestinian journalist syndicate organized the solidarity radi to show support for each of our a bu dairy need. abraham was that the message here is that they want to show solidarity with journalists who are being, as far as these people are concerned, targeted by the israeli forces. just less than a week ago palestinian jordan is organized the similar but in the neighborhood. so it shows that there is more attacks against journalists. the feeling here by some of the speakers is that israel is deliberately targeting those journalists because they are showing the world the reality of what's been happening on their occupation . we've been speaking to some of them and they say that they feel that israel has been losing the media war because they feel that it's been expose this measures in
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violation. and that's why they're trying to target during high than them. but as we've heard from many of them here, they're not going to be silence. and i've also spoke with giovanni with 80 agitated scores from that, who says that she's not going to be silent. she suffered also a fracture and her left had. and she also showed me her right had, which had ruses. she said that inside the police car that was transferring her to the police station occupied the through sort of the soldiers were trying to tighten the handcuffs on their hands and on her hands. and she said, even though the physical pain was bad enough, what has been even more difficult is emotional thing. she was inside the detention center and she was tired. * she told me she was trying to close her eyes, but she was beaten by the forces there they were telling her you can't do that. so she says that the humiliation she felt and the fact that she couldn't push back against us is what pains her. even more now to some other nears and the u. s. is
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donating 750000 dakota 19 vaccines to tie one of the island accuse china of hindering its efforts to secure doses. a delegation of 3 american senate has made that announcement during a meeting with taiwan, the president saying when thanks to the us for what she called, life saving jobs. as the island struggles to contain of recent rise and infection, the senate has pledged continued us support. last year, a global pandemic came from new hon china that was characterized by a lack of transparency and a lack of international cooperation by the chinese communist party. today. in dramatic contrast, the united states is leading international relief efforts in an open and cooperative spirit with our friends and partners and allies.
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there's plenty more heads here. this is our, including the regional version germany that's seen as an important test for the governing conservatives ahead of a general election. just add water. how of how the proven 1900 vaccine being development. sweden could improve supply chains and the developing wild and roger federal survive the tough a full set contest that the french people have. that story for you could use vs in the german states of sex only on hold casting ballots and a key regional election. it seen as a major test for the ruling c t. u, for the man chosen to lead the party into september. the federal vote longs having chancellor anglo merkel is stepping down and say it needs a decisive when in the state election to ensure confidence in the new party chief
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armand last year. but polls show that the fall, right, a se is running a close 2nd. well, more or less that speech orac bruckner, he's the gentleman a professor at stanford university, and belinda joins us from there now. oh rick, the f d did fairly well here. i recall 5 years ago, but they've been, we can nationally since with several branches, even on the intelligence scrutiny. i recall how do you think milgar this time around? well, the situation, in fact, some on the home is a very special one. we cannot draw too many conclusions for what is happening in september for this true important change for germany after 16 years of having a good. i'm apple. as a chancellor, we have a very popular governor and that's not hired. and it's expected that he's winning, not enough the candidates for the chancellor should in germany, will get any benefit from the outcome. but there's a lot of potential damage that can happen. if that isn't
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a tv for dodge sand is either winning larger number of votes or will support a minority government off the conservative party which will then lead to lead step down off. the governor shaw and east germany has a very different than the graphic to the rest of the country. as you alluded to that, why have we seen so much and immigrant sentiment that is that what's driving the populist movement and that region? well, when we look at explanations why that is something like populism in general and right, being populism in particular. and there are 2 competing explanations. one is about people see themselves either self perception or as of fact as losers of socio economic changes and change has not been always to the bad to the past in this region. they have old industries, they lost a lot of people like young generation who found better jobs in other parts of
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germany. and the situation isn't really gloomy. they're the explanations of our cultural identity issues that's created a period of anti immigrants, anti semitic, and tyre, or is mom a whole big tendencies that allow people to mobilize feelings no matter if they personally have seen any 2 or a muslim in not so densely populated rather, rural region, and that allows to mobilize people sentiments when it comes to whatever that is like right now is about that they don't trust in the vaccination campaign before it was migration. and before that, it was about how germany handled the euro crisis. and you mentioned the vaccination campaign, i'm curious, how much is the curve in 1900 pandemic impacted things. and these election campaigns well, people got really sick and tired to wait until something like the new normal
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return. and the candidate to the dodge land mobilizes this koby fatigue by tapping conspiracy theories and openly claiming that he's not the guinea pig off of explanation campaign in which he would try medication. that is not tested well enough. he believes that a good pregnancy needs 8 years to develop and this one was developed in record time . so he's spreading doubt and his criticizing the government and all in all, this is a group of people who distrust the german democratic system. as such. orient, you mentioned this possible colewell talk of a possible correlation. i remember the talk of that even between the c d u and a if he was enough for someone to lose their job. so how realistic is that? why is it quite so controversial?
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what a lot of controversial controversy in talking is a special theory in that region. but we also see a lot of national trends that's become stronger in a particular part of germany. that is objectively socio economically speaking, not as well off and also doesn't have the same elector rate as the big industrial and service centers like in berlin, are you when you go in humble or ex bruckner, they're the young man, a professor at stanford university. always good, can you expertise with us on out there? thanks for joining us again. all right, thanks for having me. now the g 7 group as advanced economies as reached a landmark deal, making it more difficult for the world's largest companies to avoid paying taxes. members have agreed to set a minimum 15 percent global corporate tax threshold and countries that they
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generate businesses. now that prevents companies from siphoning profits offshore into tax havens. nebraska has moved out from london. tex randy, gets pulses racing. but after 2 days of master mass talks in london, a commitment by g 7, finance ministers to for some of the riches companies in the world into paying their fair share. well, i'm delighted to announce that today of the discussion g 7, finance ministers have reached a historic agreement to reform to global tax system to make it fit for the global digital age. but crucially, to make sure that it's fast, many countries are desperate to plug holes in their finances caused by the code 1900 pandemic. while many nations have been thinking deeper into debt, the pandemic was a windfall for big tech companies such as amazon and google. the raked in huge profit. by the moment companies build on the earnings in the countries where they operate. for this old way of doing things is no longer fit for purpose,
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largely because it's exploited widely by multinational companies that operate in various different competing pack zones. all they need to do is declare their profits where the tax is that its lowest or indeed whether no tax is a tool and it's all completely legal. but g 7 finance been to say now's the time to level the playing field by introducing a flat 15 percent rate on businesses to help pay back and demick debt that global minimum checks within the race to the bottom. corporate taxation and ensure fairness for the middle class and working people in the us and around the world. tex evasion will be more difficult for big companies all over the world. and this is a good message for the people of our countries. and especially the big tech guy and giants who have a 2 page google that's been bracey.
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