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tv   [untitled]    June 8, 2021 12:00am-12:31am +03

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in su, mom by assumed by we've got you in for a high of 33 degrees on tuesday. the what's most important to me is talking to people understanding what they're going through here. it does either. we believe everyone has a story worth hearing. oh, this is al jazeera ah no retainer. this is the news i live from london coming up. do not come. do not come. the simple message to would be central. american migraine could rule 4000000000 dollars of age. stop the flow. assuming grew up pretty darn did not show the colonel becomes president,
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the man who's overthrown 2 leaders and 9 months promises elections as he takes charge in molly's us. investigators claim victory against the crypto criminals behind a pipeline hack. recovering millions of dollars worth of bitcoin and we go night patrol with the french police trying to stop the growing number of people making the risky see crossing to the u. k. i'm devin nash, with support for the vice president hit south that national football coach g telling him you can resign. that joke of it survive the scare? wall teenager cocoa fail 3. make it to the quarter finals of the french open. ah . in a blond message named anyone heading north through central america, the us vice president told guatemalans simply do not come. come on harris's on her 1st foreign trip in office. talk with lowering the flow of migration that
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a sword since she and joe barton entered the white house, immigration arrests and detentions rose to nearly 180000 din april the highest in more than 20 years. around 10 percent of those were children who were traveling without their parents, when the 80 percent of those migrants were from mexico and was referred to as the northern triangle, guatemala, honduras, and el salvador. a white house correspondent, kimberly how cute is in guatemala city and can be a stop message from harris. yeah, there's no question that there was a desire to convey a message in a clear and profound way in order to try and stop the flow of migrants. and as you pointed out, have been searching since the biden administration took office, largely because it is perceived this being more welcoming than the previous. donald trump administration, which was accused of having more draconian,
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an anti immigrant policies. but in terms of what people find when they arrive at the border, the policies in many cases are not dramatically different. in fact, the u. s. has been say for some time that they will send people back, but that has not stopped the search. now there is an acknowledgement from cala harris as she spoke alongside the guatemala president at the national palace that she believes. the reason people are making the desperate journey is because they feel they need to really harm or they can't satisfy basic needs. and that's why both leaders work in their bilateral meeting to discuss how they believe that they can encourage people to stay where they are in their homeland. they announce that there would be an effort to combat not only human trafficking is smuggling, but also the corruption that many are facing. that is really hurting their economic opportunities. and also there was this message that was repeated very loudly and
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very clearly from the u. s. vice president in terms of those that are undeterred and still want to make the track to the united states. take a listen to what you had to say. the goal of our work is to help while i'm on the find, hope at home. at the same time, i want to be clear to folks in this region who are thinking about making that dangerous track for the united states. mexico border do not come do not come. the united states will continue to enforce dialogue and secure our border. and kimberly a lot of questions today about corruption. how did the vice president handle those well, in terms of handling corruption, both leaders have committed to working to combat it. and to that,
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and the united states, setting up a task force that would involve the justice department, the department and the treasury to make sure that the money bit is earmarked some $4000000000.00 of or 4 years actually goes to the people that need it. most because according to government report, a recent one hasn't been the case in the past 10 years. in fact, 1600000000 and really very little to show and measurable improvements when it comes to violence. poverty. * or even economic opportunity and so the united states wants to change that. but to that, and in addition to a half worth fight corruption, they also recognize that in addition to people meeting jobs, they need to be safe to be able to go to work. and so there's also an effort to go about violence. and also, the united states continuing its effort to shirts, surplus of coven 19 vaccines, because this is a country that lags behind when it comes to vaccinations in order for people to be able to go to work and then to, to move freely in the community. so this is
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a sort of a multi pronged approach. in addition, the u. s. vice president also meeting on tuesday with the president of mexico because, well, they recognize that this is in some ways a u. s. problem. they can only be solved in collaboration with central american leaders. kimberly, how could thank you very much indeed. was kimberly alluded to the u. s. government is trying to focus on the root causes of migration from the central america and the white house plan of those $4000000000.00 for you cannot make assistance, but there's money, rapid reports, minutes, you know, everyone is convinced that foreign aid is enough. the mendez family are doing chores around their home. the water for the meals are having this evening arrived directly to their home thanks to a community water project funded in part by the united states agency for international aid and development or usa id running water has been a life changing upgrade for the family would have to come up with me,
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i think life has changed because we now have water. we still have to go all the way down to the hint collected. but all, thanks to god, we now have our own water. across guatemala, impoverished communities have received billions of dollars in aid from the united states over the years. money aimed at improving economic conditions and discouraging migration from the country. despite these efforts, poverty has only worse and stuff in it than mingles. an expert on economic development says the solution isn't as simple as pouring more money if the problem is telephone nielsen by the truth is the united states is the country that provides the most support to what model in the 3 countries of northern central america, the problem is that no international cooperation is going to substitute the need to establish functional public institutions for the development of democracy. that is a task that is ultimately up to the guatemalan government program. so some critics argue that international aid has fallen short of creating true economic stability.
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it doesn't mean that development projects have failed from this central water tank . 95 percent of halt in 5 different indigenous communities now have access to clean water. the hope of development workers is that projects like these can be replicated across all of guatemala, in the village of lp santa community leaders to see the key to making international development projects like these successful is to make them sustainable. so we've received training on sustainability by usa id so that people can be more autonomy because one day the donors will leave our community. now we know how to maintain a healthy water supply. us president joe biden has pledged $4000000000.00 to the government to water molla honduras, anto salvador to expand on programs like that. the so the community water project, it shows they are the positive impact the program is having on the health and livelihoods of residence. is clear what's uncertain is if the bite and strategy will succeed, where previous plans have fallen short and create the economic conditions necessary
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for central america's poorest families to truly thrive. manuel drop a little al jazeera, elsie sat, guatemala, the man who ever through molly's civilian government, twice in less than a year, has been sworn in as transitional president. going to see me go to has promised to own a regional and international commitments and hold credible and transparent collections . the security situation remains precarious, because hawk has more from the capital by michael. while the former president of molly is held under house arrest, june, the leader, i see me going in full military regard. yeah. it's warning as molly's new head of state, in what critics call another bloodless que, outside the venue, special forces secure the area. the mood of the ceremony is somber. intense. there are no heads of state and few ambassadors, and some members of people society shuns the ceremony, calling it a sham and illegitimate, and go to the 1st public address. since last month's qu,
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he sought to unite mullins until the world presidential elections will be held. i would like to reassure the regional and international community in general that molly will omar, all of its commitments for and in the best interests of the nation. truly, after new prime minister was an ounce shogun, my god from the civil society movement and find the west african body echoes in the african union suspended molly after the military took over and called for a return to a civilian lead. transition is concerned about how the instability and molly will effect the security situation for the region. our groups operating from inside molly are launching attacks and they bring new share and burkina faso where more than a 160 people were killed on saturday. it's in this building, whereas me going to was born in that in 2015 a piece of chord was signed between the molly and state and arm group. now many millions fear that the agreement is now in jeopardy,
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fearing the security situation of the theory even further. france with $5000.00 troops in this health region, which includes news year became foster child, and molly has suspended military cooperation with a 1000000 army. armed groups will profit from this crisis in this political instability. there is a vacuum of power in an absence of the state and which arm groups will try to fill, making it difficult for the peace agreement to stand on. stuff in good wants is envoy. good luck, jonathan is expected to meet molly's new head of state as see me go it on tuesday. go. it says there is an opportunity to drive molly's transition towards the aspiration of the 1000000 people. it is a promise money and leaders has made before. but have so far not fulfilled. nicholas hawk al jazeera bumpo as much more had on the under their news. our including its program is galloping forward. us warning that iran is heading towards
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a nuclear weapon if no new deal can be made. a photo finish and peruse election sees the 2 candidates for president separated just thousands of votes and ukraine's jersey for the european championship causes and diplomatic spots with russia on that story inform. ah, us drug regulators have approved the country's 1st treatment to address an underlying cause of our time as disease. i do can mab is designed to remove sticky deposits of a protein from the brain of patients in early stages of the disease. it's intended to stave off effects including memory loss, but the approval doesn't come without controversy as summed up to say the clinical trials were inconsistent with more proof of the drugs benefit needed. when are joined by professor johnson short of a chief medical officer of alzheimer's research,
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u. k. thanks very much indeed for being with us. it is the 1st f d, a approval of a new drug route, so as a needy to decades. and yet, there is a controversy and panel of experts making strong strong objections. what, what's your, what do you make of it? well, so the 1st thing is to say that it is a remarkable thing to have a new drug route find this disease after 2020 years are waiting. but if you say this particular drug has been the subject of considerable control, the see it was trials for several years and then was halted and then was rejuvenated. and there's been a very sort of a mixed response to the clinical trial. the today's announcement came in somewhat of a surprise and the way that the drug has been license has been under a slightly unusual mechanism which is that the, the main mechanism that's been, it's been licensed under is as you say, the removal of the sticky amyloid plaques which we think are
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a cor feature of our time is disease. and the license is to remove those plants and it will be longer term surveillance off the truck, it is put into the wild. the water is given to people that will assess whether, whether this is efficacious, in terms of what we want to do, which is to prevent or slow, the development of more cognitive symptom. yes, i mean if they've asked for further trials, how difficult is it to then recruit people trials when a drug is out there that they think think might work even if they don't know it works, does it make it more difficult and that people will be less you know, happy to just take a placebo and we part of a trial where they may or may not get the drug. so early days, and we really only have these announcements within the last few hours for the way that it looks like he's been this will be that will be possible to prescribe this drunk in the united states. we don't know yet about the united kingdom and then what was it like to happen is the individuals who will give them the drug as part of everything practice will then be followed to see what is going to happen to them
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. so it's a little bit like we've had with vaccinations that i talk a little bit back seems a license and then it's when you, when you put them into large numbers of people that you will see what happens in a long term. and you can pick up the facts and, and test the efficacy in, in real life. because again, it is a controversial way of licensing and something that i think we weren't, we weren't expecting. and so, and hence the, the diverging opinions from, from those who feel that this is diverging problem at the original trial. that was designed from those who point to the fact that we have a desperately need for alzheimer's disease drugs and that we were facing potentially a move away from investing in alzheimer trial from big pharma and. and this may well rejuvenate the, the field of clinical trials and such has been new treatments which are so
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desperately needed. and there's a focus on the, the, that particular area that the plaque sort of like we want to call them is that, is that the right direction for out? so i'm is given how much time has been spent on not ready. so one thing it's concern is that this drug, if it works, he's not going to be the panacea. one of my colleagues describe this as the end of the beginning, rather than the beginning of the end. and it's likely that we're going to need different drugs that again to affect different aspects of the out i'mma process at different stages. many of us believe that the amyloid proteins are a core and very early feature of our times disease. and if that may work, the stroke may work better when given very early, but there are over 150 different drugs for outlining disease in clinical trials. and we have family research u k. believe the huge mouth more research is done, but this is hopefully a bit of a turning point and also will change public perceptions. but now the time this
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disease is not a is not, this is, this is an illness which can be addressed and potentially treated like to be the perfect shot. thank you very much for dana and talk to us. thank you. thank you. owe us x ray estate has warned that the time iran needs to develop a single nuclear weapon could shrink to weeks if no new deal is made. and unable, again says it remains unclear whether iran is ready to resume compliance with a 2015 pack. its program is galloping forward. it has lifted restraints imposed on it by the agreement, including the amount of rich material that it has. material that's now in some cases, enriched up to 20 percent and even a small amount to 60 percent. it has started to deploy some more advanced centrifuges. the longer this goes on, the more their breakout time gets down the agreement. it pushed it to a year or more. it's now down by published reports to
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a few months at best. and if this continues, it will get down to a matter of weeks exactly what we sought to avoid and what the agreement stopped. the youth justice department says it has recovered millions of dollars paid by an energy supplier in a ransomware attack last month. fuel supplies along the countries east coast were severely disrupted by their talk on the colonial pipeline. already say originated in russia. the justice department says its computer expert have retrieved $2300000.00 worth of bitcoin from an account used by the cyber criminal group dockside. today we turned the tables on dark side by going after the entire ecosystem that fuels ransomware and digital extortion attacks, including criminal proceeds in the form of digital currency. we will continue to use all of our tools and all of our resources to increase the cough and the
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consequences of ransomware attacks and other cyber enabled attacks. so she advertise in washington dc, so it appears to be a, when this low enforcement on this particular occasion, it does, and it's a different story than that we, than the one we have concurrently with this. this extortion, this extortion attempt at the time we were told, look of the head of corn, your pipeline just felt he had no, no option. he just, there was just nothing else he could do, but pay the ransom $4400000.00 in the form of $75.00 bitcoin. now we know that in fact, colonial pipeline had alerted the f b. i very, very early into that extortion attempt to be working with colonial pipeline as they paid that ransom. and that's helped lead to the f b i in the year j, recovering that money early. $63.00 bitcoin because bitcoin is plummeted in values and throughout the original ransom was pay. that's not when he was $2300000.00.
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remember $75.00 bitcoin, when the rent was paid was with $4.00. now 63.7. bitcoin this morning when they retrieved the money was anyway, 2.32.3000000. but you get the sense of a certain amount of luck and happens down in the sense that the dear jay said this morning or just just involved out that they had been monitoring dock side for some time the best part of a year. and that seems to have contributed to the ability down off the f b i to trace the money to where it went. and then whether eventually ended up this, this money was recovered from a different account. so that seems to be me. that seems to be a bit of luck. perhaps we certainly didn't get the impression from that press conference was held that they were saying we've done it. we cannot trace bitcoin transactions and sees the money from the various active. the message was very much, look, this is a message to companies who are being ran symptoms as far as we are aware reloads, the company's been groundsmen just pay very quietly. don't even necessarily tell the f b. i say they're all instances where we can help. so get in touch with us that seem
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to be the main message from the d. j. an hour or 2 ago she returns you. thank you very much indeed. pretty from a subarus, johnson and french president, him and my whole have discussed the issue of migrants crossing the channel into the u. k. one of those who die and making the crossing was 18 months old. out in iran, in police police in norway identified him on monday after his body washed up on the weekend coach last year. the toddler died along with his kurdish iranian family when their boat sank. in the channel while trying to reach britain in october was you make the risky trip say they're looking for a better life, and they have no choice but to try france and britain working together to discourage the treacherous journey. natasha butler reports from kelly. the french police officers patrol of beacon night near kelly on a mission to prevent migrants and refugees from trying to cross the english channel
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to reach the u. k. by boat. they've crossed the mediterranean and survived many danger. so when they arrive here and see the last 30 or so kilometers, seems like nothing. people, smugglers charge migrants thousands of dollars for a place on a boat. they often use old bond because like this one, so hide material with them. so we've found both and life jackets here in the past, and what happens is the migrants wait in the tombs over there, the smugglers retrieve the material, and they all go out to. they were nearly $10000.00 attempted crossings last year. at least 6 people died. police of both stood security along the coast of britain helping to fund patrol that now take place around the clock with some offices on motor bikes. them and get us in. it's a recent phenomenon. it's been on the rise since 2019 because security has been tightened on ferries and in the ports. it's much harder to reach the u. k. by classic means and migrants and now trying to log on inflatable boats from hey,
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you can just about say the person case line through the hays. it is less than 40 kilometers away. and for the migrants and refugees that are trying to cross the english channel. the goal isn't necessarily to reach the line the puts the n c u k waters, about half way. because at that point they have effectively reached britain. many of the migrants from eritrea, serv, dawn, iraq, or afghanistan, stuck in squalid conditions in cali. some say that the police harassed them, we saw officers clear hundreds of people from a camp. this group of young afghans say that their risk of both crossing for a decent life. most say they have friends or family in england will allow them to go to lead up. i have one friend who made it by see we have to take a risk by both scared or not. there's no choice. we have to make it god. but if i don't care about the risk, because i lifted sure enough, gone to them. and now it's dangerous to stay here for exits in the pandemic. haven't dissuaded some from trying to reach person or ended dreams of the thought
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of safety. the many take for granted. so some people continue to risk their life for opportunities, they believe lie on the horizon. natasha butler al jazeera kelly. the ruse presidential election is on a knife edge around 94 percent of ballots have been counted. showing former teacher federal cost you just ahead with 50.2 percent of the vote, but conservative partition take her who g. maury is just behind with around 49.8 percent. byron sanchez is in the capital, the method to close to cool. what is the projection now present to the new thing. number gaming the. 2 5
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very both 100004 sure. the for the very. 2 beginning thirds of those both, we're going to help since the morning, however far the trend abroad is that one 3rd of the vote is favoring morton from the rural area. these are very for less than 3 for sense area. know me throughout the rule area and the rule, both master mark maybe 80 percent, 85 percent,
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75 percent numbers that we're not see for sure. it is a plan that is not favorable for monday, and that may be well be nice if the trend that we have seen, i think doesn't look like it will change my social thank you very much. to trains have collided in southern pakistan's, fin providence killing at least 51 people. thousands were injured and trapped in the wreckage. next year brian report heavy machinery works to lift the mangled wreckage at the 2 train and cause a path to rescue survivors. cruise toil in the blazing summer heat, offering any support they can to those still track the but it took hours for the equipment to get to the hockey in a remote part of pakistan and province where fields turned and to make shift.
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hospitals and bodies were lined up on the soil. it has to pretend to say, my bizarre devonjay. no, you can see that the rescue operation is going on. soldiers from the military rangers, district administration, personnel and health tombs are taking part on. the accident happened after the coaches of a northbound train derailed and fell across the opposite track. a packed south bound train plowed into them. the driver of that train told local media he'd seen the derailed cars and tried to break but couldn't. when ya, in the train was going towards point jug collapsed and the tranquil side that was coming from punjab collided with it. 7 to 8 rail carriages were destroyed. many passengers still trapped. huge crowds of people gathered around the cottage, some climbing on top to reach survivors and body. thousands of people were taken to hospital many and the critical condition. prime minister iran, kansas. he shocked by the accident and promised
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a full inquiry into what happened. so final authorities haven't ruled anything out including sabotage, but railway accidents, a common and pakistan with a network, same decades of decline, blamed on corruption mismanagement, and a lack of investment. at least 75 people died when a train caught fire while traveling from karachi to rome. kennedy, 2 years ago, the 19 people died in 2016 when a passenger train crashed into it could do that extreme mismanagement, and this extreme mismanagement management back. people who have no knowledge of what they're managing. not david, this are taking what things did will not have when this started with thank then even the structure goes down, everything goes down. the information ministers tweeted fee as a plan for a revamped rail system and that it's
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a priority for the government. alex here brian al jazeera watching the out. their news are still ahead. very difficult day for us, the painful memories and a long wait for justice victims relatives go to court over the downing of malaysia airlines flight and make 17 swamp bright if you'll vaccinations versus singles that targeted. but how much should anyone be nudged to get the job and full time and pick champion most far as running out of time to quantify for to, to 2020. but he isn't giving up without a fight. that story coming up with german. ah . hello su. we've had some rock and storms for central areas of europe spreading into the bulk. and so i want to show this scene into croatia, eastern crecia,
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and just the torrent of water here. mix them with them, debris. it's flooded out about 30 homes in the village. there so we look where the energy is on tuesday. we can see a lot of rain filling in through areas of germany, switzerland right through into italy. and that rain that we had through the balkans is starting to push further east to the black sea region. we're gonna get swipe with some rain for ukraine and russia as well in the days to come. you know, we do have smooth sailing for the very end peninsula. we've got spells of sunshine madrid. this is a temperature that you would typically see in july. so you're about a month early here with a high of $33.00 degrees. take you to the mediterranean, and we have seen some activity toward the north of fries that's now spilling into turkey. we're not going to get a whole lot of brain, but it's going to introduce more cloud cover for is stumble, slight chance of a shower, or even a thunderstorm as well. across north africa, we do have our heavy rains as we check out the gulf of guinea.

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