tv [untitled] June 8, 2021 5:00am-5:31am +03
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the who's ah, do not come. do not come. a promise to help central americans find hope at home as the us tries to curve the flow of migrants at the mexican border. ah, the cloud, this is our life and how is it coming up? us? recovers millions of dollars in crypto currency paid to have because of a major pipeline. peruse president is too close to call and left
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a school teacher and it's like when rival is separated by a razor thin margin, australia boasted massive discovery, a new dinosaur species and lived in 1900000000 years ago is recognized. the country's biggest ah say the united states is called on central americans considering traveling north in search of a better life to stay at home. common harris is in guatemala, where she met with its leader to address the spike in migration. white house correspondent, kimberly, how could reports now from guatemala city to come on in guatemala national palace. us vice president comma le harris issued a blank message to central american migrants looking to travel to the united states . i want to be clear to folks in this region who are thinking about making that
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dangerous track for the united states. mexico border do not come. do not come. harris was tasked in march by president joe biden to help stem the record flow of migrants that have surged along the southern board of the united states and mexico. since he took office, a majority from guatemala remote will standing next to harris in remarks to the press. what i'm all i'm president alejandro g m a k said the solution is increased economic opportunity so migrants will choose to stay in their homeland. you can look around a hamper people leave due to a lack of opportunity, going to municipalities that are areas of greater migration side with the areas where poverty is greater. so we need to fight poverty. but corruption is another challenge. the united states has given guatemala more than 1600000000 and aid over the past decade to fight economic instability and violence. residents of this
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struggling neighborhood in guatemala city, say that money rarely reaches those that need it by east. what am all is in an economic crisis and the country doesn't produce a lot of jobs, you turn to violence. the binder ministration has already committed descending 310000000 to the region. it's part of a 4000000004 year plan to improve the economy and central america. still other residents are skeptical. harris's diplomatic visit will result in any real change where no, i feel it would be good if she came to visit us to help the kid to help my neighbor . we need to help here. it's criticism harris is also facing back in the united states. republicans argue harris needs to visit the us mexico border to see the problem of migration 1st hand. but harris insists that's not necessary. i came here
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to be here on the ground, to speak with the leader of the nation. around what we can do in a way that is significant is tangible and has real results and i will continue to be focused on that kind of work. as opposed to grand gesture. the 3rd of migrants from central america to the united states is a problem that has been years in the making and will not be solved with just one meeting. that's why the vice president on tuesday will also be meeting with the president of mexico. as a leaders continue to collaborate and find a solution. kimberly healthcare al jazeera, guatemala city. the us justice department says it's recovered more than half of the rents, and that was paid to hackers who attacked the country's largest fuel pipeline. last month. rent and warehouse full sees more than $2000000.00 in bitcoin for an account used by russia based group at cyber tech, on colonial pipeline,
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disrupted supplies along the east coast. 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 consequences of ransomware attacks and other cyber enabled attacks. she returns, he has more now from washington at the time the impression that we got was it was a matter of a co pipeline. we're working through themselves and just felt, but just simply had no choice but to pay. but it now turns out that they did bring the d j the f b i into the, the ransom attempt early on in the process. and it seems that the f b, i had already been monitoring this the group dock side dockside is, is the,
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is the organization that, that produce the software that hackers would then lease or get hold off and then, and then run some companies and then they would give it a cut to a cup to dock side. it seems that they were ready monitoring dog side for about a year. so this was quite a nice sort of confluence of events and inference. we seem to be being encouraged to take was that as a result of their having a great deal of detail about dogs, i'd already, they were finally able to trace that around some money, not in the initial account where it had been deposited, but in another account i'm this morning monday morning, us time. they were able to get a court order, then sees that money, the bad news for colonial pipelines and sure is the f. b, i is the, the, the, the, the value of bitcoin has declined so precipitously in the last few weeks that initially, colonial pipelines insurance paid 75, bitcoin to pay the ransom, the deer, j,
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f. b. i have recovered 63.7 bitcoin. but we're 75. bitcoin was initially with $4400000.00 today. $63.00 bit going is only with $2300000.00. well matthew gets, is the founder and ceo block tower capital. and he says the case highlights how government agencies are putting more and more resources into understand the encrypted currency. it's an interesting story coming to the spotlight and i think highlights a few important points that might be kind of counterintuitive for people. you know, people see these ransoms, they see these events and they might naturally ascribe some negativity to it. but what i think that's actually highlights is the traceability and the new wealth of information that's available to people, including regulators and folks like the f, b i who are looking into criminal investigations to trace transactions that occur within the public ledgers,
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the public distributed ledgers on which crypto currency sit and within those block chains, i actually think cash is easier to hide. i mean, you can't trace, you know, dollars that cross the border from the united states to mexico or vice versa. but you can triangulate and trace these crypto currencies and you're going to see more examples of this. i think this is just one peak that's become public. but beneath the surface these, these companies and government agencies are incredibly busy. a good point here is, this is why you're seeing the world in parallel to the stories around big coin. the world in general is shifting towards as central bank digital currencies. taking your local sovereign fee off denominated currency and tokenize in creating a crypto currency version of the dollar, the euro, the yen, et cetera. because it then replaces that untraceable cache with traceable transparent ledgers that hold these crypto dollars. for example, the result of peruse presidential election run off remains unclear to 2 kinds of its neck and neck. with most of the votes counted left his candidate petrocca thea
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has to have it served to keep money as more of the outstanding boats come in from rural areas and those rates tend to favor castillo tight result could lead to days of uncertainty intention. marianna sanchez is mona from lima. we are now at about 998.66 percent of the vote. and now there's no castillo has pulled the head 580-9000 volts. that is very different number from this morning when he was just 4000 or 5000 beef it before cake of you, marty, and then pulling rafia head. but now the trend is clear to you is getting this rural volt that people have voted massively for him. in the and this in some areas . 6 even 80 percent of the vote in favor of you there is a huge anti food you money vote in this country. half of the country who have
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a decided that they would never vote for giggles if you want, no matter what, even if against there is a new comer of person who has never been in public office. and because that is because case, marty is accused of corruption. she faces 30 years in prison. and in fact in the last 5 years, she has called the greatest political instability in the country. so she controlled comes congress with the largest number of congressmen and they unseated to crested and they made force and resignation of court, more cabinets and many ministers. so she is perceived as a person who has these stabilize the country, and many people simply will never vote for her. i still had here and algebra us regulators approved the 1st new out time is drug nearly 20 years, but not everybody's celebrated. schools in mexico have finally been allowed to
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reopen after closing during the pandemic. so why are many of the doors still shop? ah, ah, it's time for the journey to winter sponsored by kettle airways. hello r, plum rains are working in synergy with post tropical disturbance, troy wang and it has just dropped incredible amounts of rain in taiwan is south of type pay 221 millimeters of rain is a catch $22.00 reservoirs are starting to fill up but of course we're dealing with devastating flooding. our usual pon brain start to fragment a bit, so we get into some dry spells as we head toward the gang sue river valley will hon to shanghai. we're also dealing with dry conditions for south korea. and as we head toward tissue, but a bit of scattered showers per honshu, just outside of tokyo,
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after se asia under heaviest rein, really, r monsoon rains toward me and more western portion of thailand and a pretty heavy bachelor brained toward the western portion of borneo and the north as well. and the philippines pretty much blanketed in rain from the south devil rate up as we hit toward the north, the manila $29.00. but that's going to feel about $42.00 off to india in our minds to rein southwest. really dying down. but still some showers towards the western guys, but really active will be as we head toward me and march. so young gone $32.00 degrees with plenty of rain in the forecasts. hot and dry for pockets. don karachi, a high of 35 on tuesday sponsored power cut on airways. the demand for low price. clover is accelerating the high speed. that's absolutely great by 2030, the industry will expand by an additional 60 percent. i'll just take a detailed look at disposal fashion. we handle our calculating date
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at closing the hidden human and environmental costs. why was a company give free water to you? never know about it, said boss fashion, all knowledge of you. oh, the me again, what you are mind about top stories is and vice president commer harris is born migrants central america, who are considering the thing to try to united states not to come. she's met guatemala as president and other leaders to address the root causes of migration. the us justice department says this recovered millions of dollars paid by energy
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supply colonial pipeline to run some way demand last month. already say the cyber attack originated in russia. why the cyber crime dogs, whatever, peruse presidential election run off remains unclear with both kinds of its neck and neck. that's just kind of the picture. christy has edge the head of conservative cake. more as more of the on sunday votes come in for us, regulators have approved a new drug for people without time. it's best to spite an advisory committee concluding, there's not enough evidence to support i do. can patients to studies had conflicting inclusions on whether the treatment slows down cognitive impairment caused by the disease. it is the 1st time as drug to be approved in any 20 years and will be need to be studied further. thought dr. jenkins shot is the chief medical officer about simon's research, u. k. and he says he, us regulated acceleration program to get the drug on the market. could be
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a turning point. and finally, finding an effect to treatment for alzheimer's. we possible to prescribe this drug in the united states. we don't know yet about the united kingdom. and then what was it like people happen is the individuals who will give them the drug as part of their routine practice will then be followed to see what is going to happen to them . so it's a little bit like we've had with covey vaccinations that i talk in the k backseat 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 side effects and, and test the efficacy. and in real life, this is, again, it is a controversial way of licensing and something that i think we want, we weren't expecting. and so, and hence the, the diverging opinions from, from those who feel that this is diverging from the original trial that it was design from those who point to the fact that we have a desperately need for alzheimer's disease drugs. and that we were facing
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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 so she's been new treatments which are so desperately needed. many of us believe that the amyloid proteins are a core and very early feature of our time is disease. and if that may work, the stroke may work better when given very early. but there are over 150 different drugs for outline disease in clinical trials, and we have family research u k. i believe that huge amounts, more research is done, but this is hopefully a bit of a turning point and also will change public perceptions about time. this disease is not a is not, this is, this is an illness which can be addressed and potentially treated like other to be the nato secretary general jens dolton burke has met with us present. joe biden
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biden will attend to nato summit and brussels next week. as he works to re establish ties cut by predisposed to donald trump, i've got his don rusher and cyber tech for among points of discussion between biden's talking about washington dc on monday. but china appeared to dominate talks that don't share over the values in the way they cranked down on democratic protests in, in, in hong kong holiday. david, my notice is that we use how they course neighbors and how that set up. so we need span of space national border police in the canadian province of ontario said truck attack that killed full members of the muslim family was a crime. the driver of a pick up ran down 5 pedestrians in the city of london, killing 3 generations of the same family. dandy survivors and 9 year old boy please have as evidence. the family was targeted because of its islamic faith. a 20 year
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old man has been arrested and charged with murder. please say he was wearing a device similar to body alma the man dubbed the butcher of bows near is set to find out later on tuesday, the outcome of his appeal, the un call to the netherlands, is expected to hand down its final verdict for former posting and subbing command rep can relate it 26 years after the initial warrant for his arrest was issued. he was sentenced to lie for genocide and for war crimes, including the 1995 river. and it's a massacre that massive reports now from the lake. almost 3 decades after the war. the name radco maddie, chill causes reactions of horror and night. me as for the relatives of the 8000 muslim men and boys killed in the super anytime massacre their bodies scattered in more than 100 mass grace, not many are still missing. well, how much of each continues to look for the remainder of his father, who was the principal of the school? he disappeared in 1995 after he was handed over to buffy and serve military forces . watching as some criminal can be held responsible for the doings and can be
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punished. but this doesn't mean they'll be justice because it's impossible to bring back all these lives. 4 years ago, the former yugoslavia tribunal found milady guilty of genocide and cerebral editor and of war crimes. most notably, ethnic cleansing in bosnia from 1992 to 1995, a criminal in the eyes of his victims. but perhaps unbelievably too many actually seen as a hero to others. and east boston street is named after melodic and mural scary. his face, the local syrup community believes he defended orthodox serbs in the war that began after boston. yeah, declared independence from the former yugoslavia. amiga did, we will not abandon him as long as we live, pinned him, save him, but we will. we created a republic together and nobody will deny it to us. under the command does that man, the glorification of war criminals in former yugoslavia has become a source of concern for international justice. so decades ago not many could
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imagine that someone as powerful as have come loud each could ever be conflicted and imprisoned. here in the hague, what after the verdict, the success of the former yugoslavia tribunal served as a reminder that international justice is possible. but so my question, if purpose, if it fails to determine and prevent similar prophecies from happening again, an expert on more studies even focus each says despite its shortcomings the former yugoslavia tribunal plays a crucial role. and not only in taking criminal's off the street getting beyond that, knowing what happened in the past is crucial for the both conflicts stability. but there are so many other things that go in this recipe. so to say much of it is domestic. i think the former yugoslavia, the leaders and the former yugoslavia especially important had her fails, have really failed to bring the country to a healthier place for relatives of the 1600 children killed in sarajevo, the celebration of convicted war criminals, wrapped,
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sold in their still painful wounds fitted couple v child who lost his 11 year old daughter in the seat of the city once had stopped. i said, don't know what's going on with it. and i need to pass the necessary laws to ban the glorification of criminals and the promotion of them as heroes. they really are not because people like managing should simply go down in history as one of the greatest criminals ever milady chessie night, the genocide in triple anita ever took place and downplayed his role during the war . mister melodic, if you, during his appeal to now 78 year old, sad, he was a victim of natal experts to final verdict on tuesday as crucial for the future of international justice that fastened elgin's era. the hake people in democratic republic of congo who had to evacuate goma after a volcanic eruption have received the greed like to get return home. and the government has begun phasing in their return with 400000 people for the city of the
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month near our congo, erupt to 2 weeks ago. at least 31 people died and many others lost a new dinosaurs species discovered in southwest queensland has officially been recognized as a largest ever found in australia. and among the biggest on us, australia, titan, or southern title dates back to more than 90000000 years ago. the long neck planned heating, so report was up to 6 meters high. at the hip intelligence found the fossilized skeleton back in 2007 and nicknamed at cooper. it took pains to he escalations and the use of new digital technology to scan and, and compare his massive bones with those of a species. fascinating. so let's take it on. we can begin scrub hutner, his opinion told us that queens the museum and joins us live now from a mango australia where the di and so was discovered. so it's got the 900000000 years old. it is just colossal. it sounds like an incredible discovery. yeah,
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you can say the collection behind me, so i can to donna, so by and so it's been a long time coming, but we're really, really proud to showcase australia's largest bond association. it was found in 2007 . so why we need really hearing about it now was it's a long process. each byron has to be removed from the in training matrix. the rock that actually surrounds the barnes. and that's takes a long time, and then each bind needs to be needs to be prepared and compared to all the dinosaurs from around the world and in, in queens and in particular. and so we use digital 3 d technology to stand by and so that i can go and compare them in different museums and different collections. very difficult when you have a 200 kilo donna. so by like the ones behind me that are, that he kind of simply just putting a, you know, in a car and take them to another museum. psych, digitizing them using this new technology has taken many years to accumulate. and those comparisons have been done. and so over those many years we've been able to
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figure out not only yes, is it, it is different, but it's a strategy is largest donna. so stage is incredible. and what do we know about cooper this report and how it lived and what it's habitat was life or you know, it was a planting, dyna so, so it had a very long neck very long tile. that sort of typical braun to sort. so bracky this or as look to it, but it was enormous. it was a titanic story and, and most of the strolling sort of buds from around this time period 95900000000 years ago. the titanic story. and when we looked at the binds, we realized that there are more closely related to the strategy and the other streaming spaces that i've worked on. i've many use them to any other dinosaurs in the world. that sort of means that one big, happy family. but what's really interesting is that the layer rock they come from and be up to a 1000 meters. so that means that the dinosaurs we find all across central queensland come in potentially come from different time period. so understanding
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what these animals where and how they lived eyes and just started even though it's taken 14 years for this part of south west brain, going to get their 1st big dyna. so it's just the start of some really amazing discoveries and understand this is a real community efforts and the owners of the property on which this done as was found, they set up their music, which i guess is where you are right now. yeah, that's right. i'm here at the mangan natural history museum, and this wouldn't have happened. we wouldn't be able to announce a new gigantic dinosaur spaces without them. and this is what's fantastic about west in queensland, these regional museums that a set up by a not for profit organization, that's the community building these collections by the people for the people. and it allows research to ok. they had to make sure that the collection was scientifically bona fide. and that's why queens i museum who has 150 year old rec order of dinosaurs and muscles in our collection. we're able to lend the hand and
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as a pilot, ologist to when he was a kid was told you'll never study dinosaurs and australia. this crowning achievement, which is basically new big dinosaurs, all through western queensland really shows it for styling kids. they can dinosaurs . right? yeah, well laid is, this is the best one that we can put into the largest dinosaur. and scott very briefly is not the end of it. is it because understand there's another one called george and he's even bigger. that's right. george is a much bigger donna. so and the back and there's monty and there's a whole range of new dot said there's all these dinosaurs were found that. ready will take a long time to but yeah, they'll all hold secrets to an ancient land last george monday and said, well, we look forward to hear you. what about them as well as talking to you appreciate that. thanks a lot. my pleasure. now schools in mexico had been shot for nearly the entire duration of the crew of ours. pandemic district measure meant to curb infections ended on monday. but despite schools opening,
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nobody seemed to want to go to a home and report sna from mexico city. monday was supposed to be the grand reopening of mexican schools, but many remained shut. parents and teachers were still worried about coded. i'm not you that might have been a surprise to the president. he thought people wanted to go back last way lies, gum was wounded, that the school is a 2nd home and the boys and girls want to see each other in the classroom. so do the teachers the president could be forgiven for thinking that when bars, restaurants and cinema was open before school, there were plenty of complaints from parents across the country. the, when the moment came, when they could find me, put the children back into school. many parents echoed the bananas concerns. no, this is did i look to see that? well, yes, we're desperate because we left many things to take care about children. but safety 1st, we don't have the safety measures and the children are going to go in and hook and
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transmit infection. in the no one was forced to go back. returning to school was a waste voluntary, both the children and teachers and university students to some of whom took to the streets together to protest the right to isolate at home. so must be the and we are asking that if they haven't got everyone vaccinated delayed, they return to classes. that may not be too far away, mich cruise, but to nation campaign is now moving relatively swiftly and cases down. this school year only has a few weeks left in it anyway. by the time the next one rolls around, the parents and students we taught to told us they'd be ready to return to class in your home and i would use it. a metro city. hungary is delaying plans to build a chinese unit in budapest, after thousands of protests as joined a math rally against it as senior officials at the proposal to build a $2000000000.00 campus of food on university to be put to
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a referendum in 2 years. if the project does go ahead, it would be the 1st to charge us the campus in europe. thousands of hungarian protest has defied a band on public gatherings on friday, accusing the government of cozying up to beijing. so that's a problem right now. my problem is not that we have to confirm it's relations with china or russia. the problem is that it is all very one sided in front of the government is fighting the west. but at the same time, it will make virtually any business deal with the new israel's parliament is set to vote on whether to approve a new government. by june, the 14th speaker of the class, it told members of the session will be held in the next 7 days. they'll decide on a cross party coalition, lead by far, right, politician, natalie bennett. it brings together 8 parties from across the political spectrum. if approved, it will bring an end to 12 years past the prime minister benjamin netanyahu. well, in an interview with al serra, the palestinian prime minister haven't chatted, says a new israeli government cannot bring an end to the conflict while its military occupation
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of palestine continues. of in this land any ho while i've been it. well for us, it doesn't matter. nathan, yahoo, bennett or anyone else. what matters to us the most is that there is an occupation on the ground and it is time for the occupation to end across all of our lands. time to live the seizure because time to end the suffering of our people in jerusalem, occupation must end period. and then we need to have a talk about a palestinian state without the steps. the conflict between palestinians and israelis will continue until occupations and countries in the midst of recap and headlines. turn on to your and vice president. come la harris is warned. migrants from central america considering the dangerous tract to the united states, not to come. she's met guatemala as president and mother leaders to discuss the spike and migration. and next stop is mexico can be helicopters more from guatemala
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