tv [untitled] June 10, 2021 4:30pm-5:01pm +03
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situation like victim blaming that is leading to survivors of domestic abuse being separated from their children. how many of those removal do you think were absolutely necessary? probably like 510 percent of the cases that most the abuser needs to be held accountable. not the mother failure to protect on just the latest news as it breaks from a bio relation in many parts of the country. becoming increasingly real with detailed coverage conditions are really clean at all. here, local administrators said that they've already detected several cases of cholera. from around the world, a couple of 100 migrant children have been found places on the mainland to alleviate pressure in theater. ah
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ah. hello again. the top stories on the elders they renew our joe biden is beginning a busy week of diplomacy. after arriving in the u. k for his 1st foreign trip as us president later on thursday by and we'll sit down with the british prime minister board johnson who's hosting the g. 7 leaders meeting. thousands of mourners have filled streets in the occupied by bank city of mean for the funeral of to california intelligence officers favorite killed along with another palestinian during a res by is really forces on thursday. how many leaders have condemned the death? if you can, government is disputing and internal un report on the crisis in the report says, 350000 people. they are living and famine conditions. millions more are needed for
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emergency food, a and other one of the big issues being discussed at the g 7 summit will be climate change. the u. k. government wants to see deep cuts and carbon emissions and big spending on technology to remove carbon from the atmosphere from plymouth. joan, a whole reports on a local project that could help make a global impact. the long snout is seahorse a rare encounter in the waters off plymouth. this tiniest of animals is clinging to strands of sea grass vital for its protection and survival. this is a habitat and also a species on the critical thread. it's only hope the efforts of volunteers from the ocean conservation trust seeding and growing new sea grass meadows re wilding the ocean floor. if you look at them. yeah. that's the see. oh yeah. flowery cloud and there's an added benefit. see grass drawers,
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carbon out of the atmosphere using it to photos, synthesize, providing in nature based defense against climate change, pumps capture carbon for us. and they create this, this complex ecosystem environment for all sorts of wonderful wildlife. so, rather than spending vast amounts of money on, on creating expensive carbon captured techniques that look around in the night in the natural world. and there are organisms all over the face of the planet that will store this carbon for the, just about bike out. now that the tiny green shoots feed legs of an idea with thus potential, the pilot project aims to grow 80000 square meters of new sea grass beds over the next 4 years. it's thought up to 92 percent of u. k. c. grass has been lost to pollution, disease and human disturbance. it's hoped that the success of this project will lead to scaled up versions along coastlines all over the world. but as world
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leaders from the g 7 meet in cold will not far from here and with the u. k. hosting the next big climate conference in november. the message is that so much more still needs to be done. marine biologist, jason hol. spencer says that restoring marine wetland is only a partial solution to the much wider problem of human impact on our oceans. well, we know that there's only about 2.7 percent of the ocean is actually protected from damaging activities and it needs to be more like 30 percent. so that's my key message. the g 7, ministers and leaders, the ocean stores more carbon than anywhere else. and there's more carbon in the sea, but then there is in the atmosphere and trolling that up and releasing it into the c's bunkers. what we need to do is stop those activities and allow the c bed to recover new c gras beds have much to offer small vulnerable species and the environment, but progress here will mean little on its own. jonah whole al jazeera plymouth,
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the canadian developer behind the controversial keystone x l. oil pipeline is ending the project. it comes after president joe biden revoked its permits. the pipeline would have carried oil from canada to the u. s. the cancellation is a major set back for oil producers as well as the canadian government. but it's been hailed as a victory by activists too long are you to pose this threats to the environment. for the 1st time in 20 years, the global efforts to stop child labor have come to a halt and a new report by the united nations children's fund on the international labor organization. so the pen demik will make the problem a lot worse, even before the current of virus outbreak, an estimated 160000000 children had been working globally. that's one out of 10, a large number out of school, most or young boys, and 79000000 children, almost half are employed in dangerous conditions. extreme poverty has forest,
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more children, and sub saharan africa and to work than anywhere else in the world. the pandemic could force 9000000 more into work that's by next year. i think to the yolanda right through the global director for poverty reduction, climate resilience, gender equality and inclusion. let's say the children, she's joining us in london. thanks for your time with us on al jazeera, so these are really pretty good. grim numbers on child labor or countries losing the fight to end child labor. well, that's the big accounting now. since report said that even by the beginning of 2020 . so before it hit, we've actually told our progress, particularly in sub saharan africa, and then we're really fearing that the result of the pan down it will make that even worse. so yeah, because of the increases in poverty that within globally we think that that's going to be at least another additional $9000000.00 children just as a result of the code. and then on top of those already working,
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i'm not in school and not fulfilling that potential. and how has depends m extolled progress and reducing the number of child labor's for the pandemic quoted for help pan down it. but it's also been an economic disaster. but private, pretty much every country in the world. it's certainly been a phenomenal and globally, we both seen and countries that have to go into knocked down people who normally go out to walk daily wage neighborhoods. and they've had to stay at home and, and unlike those of us to better off who may be able to work from home work remotely. and the people who need to go out to work everyday to put food on the table have not in many contexts, not, not been able to do that. and then of course, the, the why directional make contracts and means that wages dropped or an opportunity i've just not been that many people are unemployed and things like tourism that just shrunk massively. that all those families struggling food on the table means
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that basically there's a higher likelihood of children being forced into labor to help their families to cope economically. how can this trend actually be reversed and does the responsibility lie with each individual government to tackle the issue in their countries? there is a range of policy options that we know walk. and we have seen a reduction, as you said before. and the last few years, we have been seeing a consistent reduction and some countries are still managing to tackle the problem from key policies include helping low income households, trying to help stop extreme poverty in particular. so we call those major things like social protection. many countries have things like child grow that help families to cope with the cost of having children. and we also need to pause to encourage job, then an economic opportunities and decent pay. and then there's a lot of other things we should be doing like free education. children should be in school. and we thought the pandemic,
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lots of children having to not go to school because of the parent. because schools are closed. and what we really need to do is make sure those children can get back to school so that we remove the barriers that, that may mean that some of those children that went to school because of the cap and then they don't go back. and so there's a lot of policy options around education around supports the families around and increasing and, and encouraging more economic opportunities. and that can work in combination to try and tackle child labor. thank you so much for speaking to us from london. thank yes. so russian court has outlawed political organizations linked to jail, the opposition leader like the of on the labeling them as extremist. that puts them in the same official category as groups such as al qaeda. it means the vol needs allies are bound from running in parliamentary elections. this year, bernard smith has more from moscow, with russian president vladimir putin main rival, alexia valley in jail. and his anti corruption foundation,
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now declared an extremist organisation, hooton's administration has effectively closed all, almost all avenues of legitimate opposition to his government, to say, to welcome all was bad in the trial. we couldn't even talk about any sort of adversarial system. we quality because we filed some 25 petitions and all of them were rejected. yet the judge didn't want to hear us though we made mincemeat of all the so called evidence both by the prosecution and the authorities now have the full power to jail activists in freezer asset navarro. and his allies had already disbanded that groups in anticipation of this rule. another opposition politician dmitri good coff has gone to ukraine after being warmed by people close to the kremlin that he'd be arrested if he stayed in russia. most prominent anti government activists. and now either in jail on the house arrest or have fled the minneapolis my milk. my aunt is under trouble restriction that they gave me
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a hint that they would put her in jail at any moment. she 60 and not ready for anything like this. this is andre, of, of are of the director of the now defunct open russia, an opposition group linked to exiled oil. ty, cood and crumbling critic may ca hold a cough ski in the kremlin. everyone knew i was going to run for parliament. he said, after being taken off a flight last week that was about to take off a poland from st. petersburg. he suspected of violating legislation on undesirable organizations. the court ruling bands election a voluntary allies from parliamentary elections late to this year, leaving few options for those wanting to take on putins, united russia party. that looks like the final blow to a political network built up over years by alexa and the valley to challenge lot in a position politician supported, they'll still try to use technical voting to undermine support for the program like
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united russia party. but it's me, i'll just 0 moscow demonstrations have been held in columbia capital after protest leaders called on people to take over bobo tough. what started as opposition to a proposed tax reform has now turned into weeks of unrest against inequality. and a report by human rights watch is criticizing the police response after at least 20 protesters were killed. on the center in pity reports from boca time, approach to 7th time been violent, but it didn't tear hundreds from turning out for a 6 week. on wednesday, rallies were sparsely attended. yet the clash of started early as a group of indigenous me sack, tried to topple the statue of christopher columbus. there were stopped by riot police with tear gas and sun grenade. dozens were injured. well, let me suck people. we are performing and insist revitalization of the historical memory of the indigenous population of columbia in the midst of the 21st century.
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this should be no space for racist representations of colonial our marginalizes and excludes our communities. human rights watch says it has documented at least 20 killings as well as illegal beatings, sexual assaults, an arbitrary, the tensions. it accuses the colombian police of the reaches abuses and its calling on the government to take urgent measures to protect people's rights and commit to police reform. it that most likely get my data for intel whenever we are dealing with a police force that lacks basic standards of training and accountability. and that above all, doesn't have the sufficient oversight to act in a manner that ensures the basic receipt of human rights. ill bundle is much trammel president, even duke. he says he will propose changes to policing that include putting body cameras and officers and creating a new human rights director rate that protesters are demanding
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a d military station of the police force. and the officers crimes are placed under the jurisdiction of civilian court. international pressure to do so is growing demonstrate there's have also been staging a protest in front of the celtic and where the leaders of the protests have been meeting with the delegation of the inter american commission on human rights test on investigating the abuses committed during the probe yeah, no, no. okay, this is how much the government is not listening and watching institutions in the country are controlled by the government. criminal complaint fall on deaf ears. that's why we need these national organizations to help us to achieve the safety guarantees. we cannot get internally members of the commission of also spoken to government officials, judges, and civil society organizations doing it 3 day visit. they're expected to release recommendations the next week. in the meantime, negotiations between protesters and the government remain stalled. leaving the
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crisis on the street with no insight, allison, and just with that, salvador has become the 1st country to adopt a crypto currency for everyday transactions. as many well ruffled reports, the success of a beach town appears to have pushed politicians to act. the. this is a sunday no locally as bitcoin beach, this small salvador and tours town is home to variety of small business owners. all have one thing in common crypto currency to do this, i think, and i think there were tourists who didn't bring cash, would come and say they wanted to eat something and they asked if they could pain bitcoin away. i said to myself, this is a good strategy. i'm going to use beck calling. i'm going to start collecting. i downloaded the app, and i started selling a lot more with the success of the big point. beach project has boosted the popularity of crypto currency. salvatore and on wednesday the government and males
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bit point would become legal tender. therefore, the law, of course, is approved supporters of the measure. see the new law represents a vote of confidence in using block chain technology to bring in formal sector workers into a 21st century economy. you know, lisa and banks are not necessarily not the important thing which are the menus of guidance in this country. they cannot use a bank because they're thousands of requirements. el salvador now becomes the 1st country in the world to formally legalize the digital currency. the initiative was led by all salvatore's president. now you book kelly on twitter, he called the passing of the big coin law historic. in the short term, this will generate jobs and help provide financial inclusion, 2000 times the formal economy and in the medium and long term. we hope that this is small decision can help us push humanity, alyssa, tiny bit into the right direction. there are also critics,
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one of the risks of big point price book to asian men. look at the moment. bitcoin becomes a legal currency. problems appear, including in its most basic use, which is a form of exchange. and this is related to the volatility of the price of coin. while some also ward that legalizing and decentralized digital currency could be wielded as a tool for corruption. bitcoin believers in uncertainty and across of salvatore, say the new law will only increase financial inclusion and has the potential to spur economic development. manuel rap, hello al jazeera. the tri becca film festival is underway, new york, following a difficult year for the movie industry. and as gabriel of these on the reports, it's a special year for the festival in more ways than one. it's the hottest ticket in town because it's the 1st ticket in town. tribeca will be the 1st in person film
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festival to take place in all of north america. since the pandemic began over a year ago, it's also a key milestone the 20th anniversary of the festival. the festival was founded shortly after the 911 attacks on the world trade center to help revitalize the devastated nearby tribecken neighborhood as well as the rest of new york city. film critic, allison wilmore says that after covered 1900 hit new york city particularly hard last year, try becker's original message of hope rings truer than ever. now the festival is on its 20th anniversary and it's kind of in the wake of a trauma again. and in this case, you really feel that the festival is trying to coax people back outside, you know, back out to the movies, out to outdoor screenings, and out to this kind of general activity in a city that slowly reopening the festival kicked off. fittingly, perhaps with in the heights in new york,
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that story adapted from lyn manuel miranda's award winning. broadway musical with other highlights include the world premier of steven cider burg. no sudden move hand roadrunner a behind the scenes film about the life of the late new york, chef author and tv host anthony ordain, but it's also a festival where new filmmakers are hoping to make their mark like with this tv docu series incarceration nations about prison. systems around the world director and writer bass tracing or says tri becca is a welcome opportunity. amazing to be a part of any in person event, frankly, as a, as a filmmaker, as an artist, as an activist, to be able to interact with audience as again to do this in person. and it also feels like, you know, not only the eyes of all of new york, but the world is watching. june 19th will be another highlight because that's when
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the radio city music hall will reopen for the 1st time. after being closed for more than a year, because of the corona virus pandemic, it will host the closing night film of tre becca. all of the audience will be fully vaccinated, and masks will be optional. it will be a landmark event, not only for the festival, but for this city hall, gabriel's condo, just in new york, for the head on the officer and who's our tennis action from the french open as repelling aim for a title number 14. ah ah
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hello, we got time for the sports center. thank you very much. and well, the french open is in for a blockbuster, men's semi final with well number one of our joke of it set to face rough on the dum. $5000.00 fans were able to watch a joke of which it take on introduce mateo. very teeny, and the night session with a curfew set at 11 p. m. local time. saw through the opening to set them though are unusual seen. so any one that says that high break before both players had to leave the court to ensure that the sun would exit the venue going out the clearly they weren't too happy about that. the play then to be resumed with joke of it, wrapping up the wind in full set play on
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clay against model in this chord that were in which he has had so many 6 so much success in his career and will be in the final stages of of the grand slam doesn't get bigger than that. so of course, each time we face each other there's, there's that extra ah, tension and expert exploitations and just the vibes are different. you know, walking on the cord with him when it was made to work hard and he's called the final match against argentina. is diego dropping a set for the 1st time this year? storm and the dell is known as the king of clay for a reason. and $19.00 games in a row to feel the victory in full sets. the spaniard is bidding for 14th high for longer than the time before to go have ended the preparations for the european championship on a high note. they hammered israel for now christiano. rinaldo,
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of course, getting himself a goal. stand out, perform, however, was bruno fernandez, meant to say night he saw finding the net twice for to go had been drawn in a tough group with france, germany and hungry, who they faced 1st on tuesday. you told them it kicks off on friday. the phoenix suns that have taken a massive step towards reaching b and b is that western conference finals. they now lead the denver nuggets to, to nothing in the series. chris paul looked unstoppable. getting 17 points and 15, assist without turnover. devon continued his impressive form with 18 points and 10. we bounce tons winning it $12398.00 to look into when the 1st ever and the 8 now the european tours that male and female golfers are competing against each other. and what organizes hope
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can be breakthrough for inclusion in the sport. the scandinavian that mixed ornament is being built as a 1st ever entirely equal pro golf tournament. and there's a come back on the cards for one of the sports biggest thaws. always reports from gothenburg in sweden, the 3rd time i guess. it's 13 years since other concerns swung a club in a pro tournaments on home soil. now perhaps the most famous woman in gulf will be just another player, one of $78.00 women competing with $78.00 men at the scandinavian mixed build as the biggest proton. and yet to feature both genders. there are european top ranking points on offer. and $1200000.00 in prize money the lemme gold mine and if you go fan, you think it's fun to watch that women and men golf and now having them here on the same courses cool. we can compare how they hits, how they play. service time is hosting the tournament alongside fellow sweet
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henrich stansen, hoping that truly famous female gulf has come become the rule rather than the exception. making gulf a more equal game isn't just about men and women playing together. it's about leveling up the rewards on offer. while this torment makes a start, there's a long way to go. look at the money lists on the pga tour shows just how big the pay gap is. the leader for the men is bryce and shown by with more than 5800000 earned in 2021. for the women us opened when you can south side with 1000000. so those trying to earn enough just to keep playing the situation. it's stock down at a 100 in the world pairing delicate has made just over $44000.00. her male counterpart, hudson swafford is much more secure with $985000.00 this season. i laugh at it now because it's ridiculous, right? i mean, we do the exact same work for the exact same scores, pretty much. and still, it's such a huge difference. so my plan is to approach for the next year,
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shouting sponsors for weaving them. but i mean, it's hard. i think it's hard for everyone on tours 21 year old dick should dog is one of india's few female professional golfers in 2019. she became the youngest winner on the lady's european tour and he's hoping a shad stage can push it even further. yes, it's going to be challenging for we see the game and we will learn too much from them and began to bet dog was more teacher than students against men in the program, but the main event will see how much with some of your ups best. continuing to make golf a true competition between the sexes could be to everyone's benefit pull rece outages, era golf back. and that is what for me, we'll have more for you later on including the build up for the european championship which kicks off on friday. but for now i hand you back to darren. ok, thank you. looking forward to it's not thanks for that. and thanks for watching the
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news are on your head on line l g dot com for all the latest information all the days headlines as well. we will take a short break and be back in just a moment to see it. and i each and every one of us have got a responsibility to change outpatient. explain for the better, the more we could do this experiment, any of us could increase just a little bit that would be worth doing. anybody had any idea that it would become a magnet who is incredibly rough. they're asking women to get 50 percent representation in the constituent assembly here in getting this pick up to collect the segregate, to say the reason this is extremely important. service that they provide the city
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we need to take america to try to bring people together trying to deal with people who left behind me. just a world child pirate radio station, radio caroline on 11670 voice and the station radio power line of the english coast has a big road in the baby network combined and within earshot of israel, the voice of peace speeches. here, there's no propaganda for, for change or transient to movement. rebel radio ships on algebra. in the next episode of science in a golden age, i'll be exploring the contributions made by scholars during the medieval atlantic period in the field of engineering. the height of sophistication in mechanics at
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the time was the extravagant elephant clock written around $85080.00. the book contains a range of ingenious inventions and contractions, science and a golden age. with jim alkalinity on al jazeera. ah, president joe biden arrives in the u. k. i had a package we're taking in the g 7 summit, nato meetings, and talks with russia. latimer, ah, you're watching out there a life for my headquarters and hi daddy navigator also ahead. thousands more and after it's really soldiers killed 3 palestinians including 2 security officers during a raid in the.
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