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tv   [untitled]    June 11, 2021 8:00pm-8:31pm +03

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ah ah, play an important role protecting human. ringback face in the g 7 summit opens with host british prime minister bars johnson, declaring they have an opportunity to lead the global pandemic recovery need to make sure that we repeat some of the areas that we doubtless made in the course of the last 18 months or so, ah, came vanelle, this is their law from the law also coming up. molly's crew leader,
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colonel a see me going to appoint you members of his cabinet, will have all the details from the us and mexico are accused of sending unaccompanied migrant children back to their home countries without protection. ah, colbert 19 is dominating the genders g. 7 leaders meet face to face for the 1st time since the pandemic began in opening remarks, the host british prime minister boss johnson, said they must learn from the mistakes that they made and ensure that the economic recovery is fair. so you will be getting through the most wretched pandemic countries have faced for our lifetimes, maybe longer, much more. and i actually think this is a meeting that genuinely needs to happen,
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because we need to make sure that we learn the lessons from the pandemic. we may need to make sure that we don't repeat some of the areas that we doubtless made in the course of the last 18 months or so. and we need to make sure that we now allow our economies to recover. but a g 7 players to donate a 1000000000 vaccine doses to poor countries is quickly being dismissed by activists. as inadequate, they want vaccine patrons waived the more jobs can be produced at a lower cost and climate activist work commitments on that front will also fall short. they say the 2050 deadline to become called neutral is too late. land diplomatic editor james bays is near saint ives in cornwall. close to the summit encompass bay james so far. as johnson says, the g 7 is a chance to learn lessons from the pandemic to not make the same mistakes. how do
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these leaders plan to do that? well certainly there's been criticism of the g 7 in the g 20 for that matter. some would say they've been missing in action over the last year, criticism coming from senior figures, including at one point the un secretary general, who incidentally is here and is about to speak at a news conference in the next few minutes. certainly they want to make the point that they are doing much more and going to do much more bought 1000000000 vaccine doses sounds like an awful lot, but it's not enough according to to most experts in order to get all of acts, you need to stop the spread of the virus, it's going to take many months as well to get the vaccine that they are pledging to the people that need it. there are many people in countries around the world who are ill and old, who still don't have vaccine. and there is a problem that if you don't get the vaccine all around the world, of course this,
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this far as will continue to mutate. and there is the potential, of course, some point for one of those mutations to be a mutation that the vaccine does not protect people from. that is the, the concern, james, what about the other issues that lead is we'll be discussing china, russia, climate change, how aligned, are they all on these big issues? i think they're aligned enough to get a final communicate together on all of these issues. but there are different nuances with these countries, certainly on climate change. the hosts here are the hosts of the big climate change conference call 26 at the end of the year the u. k. they are hoping this will be one stage. the other stage is the g 20 in october this year to try and get the world back on track because they believe that the commitments made in paris and 2015 aren't enough and they're not going to reach them anyway. so want to get the
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well back on track with regard to china and russia. certainly the plan of the pipe didn't ministration on this. his 1st foreign trip is to try and get all of the allies, g 7 partners. and then the nato allies in brussels, who's going to meet on monday and the you on the same page on the problems with china and russia. so there's united front, and there's a very early test on that, not comes when he meets vladimir putin later next week. in geneva, a face to face meeting with the russian leader. right, thank you for that spencer diplomatic editor james base. let's go now to ian bremar, who is the president of your asia group and g 0 media. he's joining us on skype from new york. thank you for your time. out of that same question that i asked james, to you, how harmonious do you think that this summit will be with all of the big issues on the table, china, russia, vaccine, distribution, climate change,
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its mixed very mix. it's certainly friendlier than it was during the trump administration, of course, last year the g 7 didn't meet at all. so that's a low bar. but it really depends on what we're talking about. you didn't ask about tax, for example, but i think the single biggest piece of alignment we've gotten so far from the g 7 has been on this alternative minimum global corporate tax of 15 percent. which is really steering the super tanker in a different direction towards multi lateral coordination and harmonization. 4 on, on economics, and that will help the trade relationship between the united states and the advanced industrial economies on climate. it's more challenging. biden is more aligned with europeans and trump was but his ability to get legislation passed in a very divided house is very constrained on the russia. i. 1 would say there is
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reasonable alignment, you saw that in response to the plane coming down and mince the ryan airplane, the united states, letting the europeans take the lead and coordinating very closely. but on china, there is very little coordination. the americans, democrats and republicans see china as by far the most important national security threat to the u. s. the europeans do not. and indeed the european see the chinese much more transactional and much more economically much more commercially. and you're not going to get a lot of coordination coming on the back of that president biden is, of course, going from the g 7 then to meet with nato and brussels, and then on to geneva to meet with that and put her that long away should face to face meeting, how much will that meeting with pushing the way on his mind? do you think in terms of, of wanting to present a united front and all of the things that he does in the week leading up less than you think by far,
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the most important meeting happening on by the strip is happening right now. it's the g 7. and the reason for that is because by far the most important issue that the world is dealing with both health and economy is corona virus. and the g 7 response. the corona virus, it late, it's not as big as it needs to be, but still the biggest display of leadership from any quarter since the pandemic has started in terms of financing and jobs that really matters when put new and by and meet in geneva next week. literally they can do nothing to respond to corona virus . there is that's not even on the agenda. instead we're going to be talking about things like cyber attacks. things like energy policy, a little bit of climate, certainly human rights and the needles market to be moved very much. and i do understand that this is a much what the patrick meeting the press will make much more. how did i do? did he stared down by him or what was the mood music like in the room?
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the reality is rush is not as important for the united states as china is today. and the summit doesn't deserve the same level of attention that it has been getting in the past week. as you said, covered and coming out of this, pandemic is front and center of the g 7, a commitment to supply 1000000000 vaccine doses to poor nations. do you think that europe resents president biden support for the vaccine patient waiver, which had been put forward by south africa and india? they were angry about it. i heard that from the german government directly on the market, was very displeased that that was announced by biden, and there was no effort to coordinate your inter agency coordination inside the united states. but what about inter us coordination with your friends across the book across the ocean? so yeah, they were pretty angry about it, especially because this intellectual property waiver is going to matter,
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not one whit, in terms of getting back scenes into the arms of humans across this planet. what we need is what we're now finally seeing. we need financing, and when he donations of vaccines, that's where we need to go. this decision by biden was largely a stop to the progressive wing of his own democratic party. it was domestic politics. it did not matter global. a big focus for president biden has been sort of showing america is back ready to step into that pre trump role. how do you think other g, c, g, 70 people actually be viewing that? i'm wondering, do you think biden can really give that sense of stability perhaps and that concerns that trump wasn't really a blip on the radar, but more sign of, of perhaps things to come? well, in terms of american power, the united states doesn't need to be back because it never went anywhere. the role of the u. s. financial system, it's energy production. it's technology prowess,
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its military power, the role of the u. s. dollar. this did not suddenly go away under 4 years of trauma, much as many american allies may have wished it might. and now that biden is, is president. that's not going to change, but you are absolutely right to ask the question, what does it mean in terms of the sense that the united states can be counted on can be relied on? the u. s. says they're doing an iran, the old truck pulls out unilaterally, binding goes back in. what happens if republicans win in 20? $24.00 will be out again. trans pacific partnership. obama makes the announcement b ally, allies get on board. he fails to get it done. trump pulls up so i mean the fact that all of the momentum in the republican party is with the president former. busy president trump and his allies, the fact that most of the momentum in the democratic party is actually with the progressive and as a huge gap between the centers and the progressives. as we see playing out what the debates over this trillion plus many multiple $1000000.00 infrastructure bill that
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isn't moving right now. all of that is being watched by american allies events of january 6 being watched by american allies. i mean, the way i can really answer that question is that the united states today is the most powerful country. the world is also by far the most politically dysfunctional and divided of all of the major democracies in the world. which means that countries like japan and canada and germany have much more legitimacy in talking about leadership and democracy and elections than human rights. and yet they don't have the power the united states does. and that is a really sub optimal way to organize the g 7 summit or have leave it there. thank you so much for your time in brenda. but let's go to some breaking news now from molly where, coolie, the colonel, a c, me course is naming a cabinet. he was warning interim president just days ago after forcing all the
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previous transitional leader. it was the 2nd qu, that he orchestrated interest 9 months. go live now to nicholas hawk in molly's capital. i know nicholas this is very much developing. what more do we know right now? well, a new government that isn't really new to say the least can because all of the ministers that have been named this was an announcement made on national television earlier on just a few hours ago. well, they're familiar name, they're, they're members of the military and the ministry of defense remains colonel camara . the minister of reconciliation remains. colonel war gave them out with of course, administered security, colonel cornell. he was a controversial figure. he was getting russian training up until last year, when in august he came back to bama co on holiday. and during that time, he was part of the military and the orchestrated the crew that led to the downfall
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of k to now he's out of the government. but other key members of the mail it's urgent are very much present. there are new faces to from the m 5, the civil society movement that i've entered the government under the, the prime minister, prime minister ship of chicago. my gum and you faced that has come in is delayed job. he'll be the minister of foreign affairs at the key portfolio because he'll have a tough task to rebuild relationships with international actors. notably, the west african body echo was who has put money mally under sanction, who has suspended molly from the union. but also most importantly, to re establish connections with friends, friends after president mccomb yesterday announced that it was drawing down its troops with the backend operations. the remember can we have 5000 french soldiers
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on the ground? this help most of them. and molly, he wants to see an end to those operations that we had heard last week from the french ministry of defense that the military cooperation between france and molly has been suspended. he's been also very critical of the west african body echo on, on thursday. he said that it was a great, a mistake to recognize as see me go into who was sworn in earlier this this week as the new president of transition. remember the president, the former president of transition bind and the prime minister marked are one came, are currently still under house arrest while the government is being announced. what's interesting is that mood on the streets. the reaction has been pretty muted from molly, as you want to see, just the government move on and reestablish the safety and security that they had promised and have failed to deliver so far. just this year alone, kim, 385000 people have been displaced because of the ongoing fighting between the army
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and the arm groups. and i'm referring to here to the, to affiliate jamal, suddenly slammed mostly mean and the stomach state in the greater sahara that are extending their attacks. not just in the north and the center of the country, but also in the south. despite the presence of the most expensive and biggest un peacekeeping operation costing $1000000000.00 a year. well, despite all of that, the tax keep recurring. also i think for president micro, it's an election year next year. so he wants to send a signal much as to his african partner here on the continent, but also to european partners and also to the french public. the backend operation costs a 1000000000 euros a year. it's a hefty cost, and it's very unpopular here, at least in malia, growing in unpopularity. and also in france, where we've seen a number of french soldiers die, many, many people in france wondering why are there 70 soldiers in france dealing with an
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issue that should be dealt with by the military's on the ground here. and molly came back. thank you for that. nicholas hoc there in bama call. so head on al jazeera, more safety concerns to help workers administering polio vaccines in august on killing of city offices were signed to protect the deforestation. thorns in brazil's amazon rain, despite the president pledging to do more to help. ah hello there, they'll be a slight break from the intense heat across the middle east. as we go into the we can, temperatures are going to dip down slightly over the gulf states, but they will pick back up. but for now don't have sitting at 42 re had coming in
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at 40, and things are looking rather unsettled. we've got a sion mouse wind blowing down that's kicking up quite a lot of dust, a sandstorm or 2. and the seas are pretty rough from among. we've got a southwesterly wind blowing in that's keeping things rather cool. they're kept just going to come down on sunday to the mid thirties. but if there is any rain, it's going to be to the west in areas of saudi arabia and she was potentially for west and yemen. as we move across to the horn of africa. we've got storms brewing across the e, c o, p, and rift valley. those winds being felt across the coast of somalia, but we've got storms as well across the central african republic. cameroon, see some of that wet weather. and as we go into sunday, it will be the western areas of the democratic republic of congo that see those heavy downpours for the south is a pretty fine and dry picture, where there is rain. it is to the east coast of madagascar. we could see some flooding there, but finding dry in south africa with plenty of sunshine,
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ah, the weather bang, energy and change to every part of our universe. more small. to continue the change all around the shape by technology and human ingenuity. we can make it work for you and your oh the me
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you're watching l 0 reminder about health stories. this is private is devoris johnson. his told d. 7, reduce the world must learn from the mistakes of demick and never repeat well beat as meeting himself with england are expected to announce a total of 1000000000 doses support countries. mounting schools leader has st. you cabinet and i seem to go with warning as interim president just days ago, after forcing up the previous transitional lead, the 2nd quarter orchestrated 9 month lives. now we'll take a closer look at the g 7 covered 19 vaccine pledge, and how that stacks up against what the world needs. now, 85 percent of all doses administered so far has been in high and upper middle income countries. just a point 3 percent of the need administered in nations classified as low income africa has the slowest vaccination rate of any continent. and at least 10 countries
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on the one percent of the population has received a single dose. booking, faso, democratic republic of congo, and beneath are the bottom of the list. mama, eunice is a nobel peace prize, laurie and the lead representative of peoples vaccine. lions. he says g 7 the there's a completely lacking a sense of urgency. this is a global crisis. the crisis mode is not in g 7. this is what the big frustrating part of it is. a whole world is having a big crisis. we need discretion that a 4000000000 excellence is needed. now we're talking about 1000000000 and then we have a timeframe. and prime minister, what is johnson said, he has a plan to have all the explanation. so for a 4000000000 vaccination by the end of for 2022, that is missing. what is the plan? was the global plan, country big country production unit production unit. who gets one month by bond.
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this is what we need, is it, is it worth figuration. so we need to work plan that is missing. so i would say i'm, but i didn't want to. and just been eating a certain number. it's not the solution solution is to see the whole world need together because it's a life and death issue. it's not something that we can wait. we have to do it. the more we wait more, we'll have those new videos coming up. so whatever you have that will be counter productive because the variance will take over and you will need the new kinds of directions again. so we need to have this total plan. and 1st thing to do most important could do is to keep waiver once you have removed it. once you install the waiver, then production, the units in all around the world can come into production. it has to be distributed. production is not a centralized production or other correspondent mentioned earlier in the program, france has announced an end to its direct roland operations in africa to hell. the security of the region is as uncertain as the french president has for years
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struggled to convince west and allies to join an international task force against armed groups. their leads, european countries concerned about arise and migrants due to human trafficking. charles traffic reports frances 5100 soldiers stationed across the ser health, a region stretching thousands of kilometers across the southern sahara desert, including molly lakita, facile chatter, french american and european troops, happy years trying to improve security, especially along international borders. for the scale and frequency of attacks by groups affiliated to iceland, clyde are increasing in a region that has become a major transit route for human trafficking and smuggling weapons and illegal drugs . at least a $138.00 men, women and children were killed in an attack on a village in northern became fair. so last week,
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france has repeatedly called western states to help more with security and how. but on thursday, the french president announced a partial withdraw troops and said, the operation must become a broader international mission. simple quality issue to consume shelton county and was not after consulting with our american partners who supported essential since the beginning. and i want to thing them to our european partners, we're going to deeply transform our military presence into the hell with announced a new framework into which to come this transformation will translate into a new model that will and bark on operation funding with leaders of countries across the ser, hell wound prison macaroni in february about the dangers of a fast french troop withdrawal. but since then, trans veteran leader and close our france. it rous debbie has been killed. and last week, france paused military operations in molly,
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after the country suffered its 2nd military coup in 9 months. it is a message that we did all of the french back and operating from the region. it would give a feeling of when winning from the terrorist. and blank service group from that, from that perspective, that we see that, that had defeated actually there, by the time a french operation, macro said the french troop withdrawal will be gradual and details of the new international force will be finalized by the end of june, off the discussions with european and african states, the deteriorating security situation across this impoverished region is a major concern for europe in countries. anxious about a surgeon, migrants and refugees crossing the mediterranean sea, cha, stratford, 0. the latest protest and the flashpoint occupied east jerusalem neighborhood of shakes. you're all have ended without major confrontations. people gathered to show
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support the palestinian families who face being forcibly dispensed from their homes elsewhere and occupied a strong israeli forces, arrested palestinian children. now the alex up most compound, part of israel, so called operation law and order named cracking down on palestinian protest. and the 15 year old palestinian boy has died from gunshot injury sustained during a protest in the occupied west bank. the teenager was one of 11 palestinians wounded as israeli soldiers, 5 live bullets basis south of novice. the soldiers, also 5 gas people without to denounce the establishment of a new israeli settlement outpost. and a 6 month old infant girl suffered oxygen deprivation after israeli forces 5 tear gas at palestinian homes, northeast. and louis was in a home in the neighbourhood in the occupied west bank when it was targeted. she's
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reported to be in a stable condition after receiving treatment, palestinian red crescent deforestation in brazil's amazon rain forest rose for the 3rd consecutive month in may. brazil national space research institute says more than 2 and a half 1000 square kilometers were destroyed. about 3 times the size of new york city, the land was used for cattle branches, farms and logging. president joy both sonata had pledged as an essay summit and april, to double funding for environmental enforcement. but the very next day he flashed spending on the environment help workers administering the polio vaccine. pakistan are on heightened alert. following the killing of 2 police escorts. the officers were coming, vaccinations that going door to door and the northwestern city of mcdonald wednesday. it's the 2nd such attack in a year, and it's a particular problem in the area where armed group see the vaccine. as a conspiracy to sterilize children,
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amnesty international says the us and mexico a forcibly returning tens of thousands of unaccompanied children to the countries that they fled from. throughout may more than 180000 undocumented migrants were intercepted or tried to cross from mexico into the u. s. is the highest number since jo bought him became president. but his administration says the number of unaccompanied mine is, is on the decline. advocate say government on both sides still need to do more to meet the needs minute a pedo hold from mexico city. a major challenge for us and mexico immigration policy has been served in child migration. and in many cases these minors are traveling alone. during the trump administration, in unprecedented, served children in adolescence on the border resulted in policies that according to critics stretched the limits of international law among them, child detention camps and the practice of family separation. whenever let me see a,
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one of the main consequences of family separation is that it's the state that leaves children and adolescence unprotected. in theory, it then becomes the state's responsibility to provide protection for them. a recent us homeland security report suggest that more than $2100.00 children have yet to be reunited with their families. o u. s. president joe biden has promised to undo many of the harsh immigration palsy put in place by his predecessor. but is the approach working? the latest statistics are mixed, though illegal crossings have heated 20 year high child. great numbers are on the decline. one of the biggest ships in micro demographic data from border officials in recent months has not only been a decline in unaccompanied minors, but an increase in migration from mexico mexican migrants now number more than twice as many guatemalan on durant and salvador and migrants put together policy experts say the ever changing dynamics of migration from the region is
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a major challenge for both of us and mexico, especially in the case of minors. to be a little bit startled needles. neither the governments of the united states or mexico count on a system of protection for child and adolescent migrants that can determine their best interest in individual cases. for the most part, what authorities will determine is that the best interest is to return them to their country of origin without even trying to contact their parents wherever they might be. the solution is almost always deportation. though the us and mexico affirmed that bilateral progress is being made in the processing of children and adolescents, migrant rights activists say there's still a long way to go for both countries to fully meet international human rights standards. manuel up a little al jazeera mexico city. ah .

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