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tv   [untitled]    June 13, 2021 10:30am-11:01am +03

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been one mill gentleman nationwide to be that f reporter that he was a christian that except himself that gave is giving liked to explain that said, please go on play that game. ericsson is 29 years old, and plays for the italian champions into milan into the team. physician has said eric's and never contract had copied 19, has no medical conditions that he's aware of. and his past every medical exams, it's joining from tottenham in january last year. erickson remains in hospital and it's undergoing tests. david stokes out his era. ah, let's take you through the headlines here now just here and now it's the 3rd and final day of the g 7 summit in the hours ahead. 7 world leaders are expected to outline plans to tackle climate change. on saturday, they agreed on a global infrastructure plan to compete with china's belton road initiative. jenna
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hall has more from cornwall. these leaders will here on sunday from the environments with david and bro, who will warn them that they face making some of the most important decisions in human history in the coming months. and to that end, we expect them to reaffirm commitments to keeping global warming to no more than one and a half degrees celsius. they'll be big commitments on emissions pledging to harv emissions by 2030 as opposed as opposed to 2010 levels, including phasing out petrol and diesel cars, facing out government support for the fossil fuel industry. though also the big pledges on the environment of protecting up to 30 percent of land and sea by 2030 is there any politicians will hold a vote of confidence on a new government that could unseat benjamin netanyahu. after 12 years in power, it's an alliance of a party that includes the right the left and for the 1st time the palestinian
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israeli party. algeria is electro commission says just over 30 percent of voters took part in parliamentary elections. the pro democracy movement known as head arc, has called for a boycott. the birches underway in the philippines. the 2 missing crew members is cargo ship called firewall refueling in the capitol sinclair, what caused the blaze which burned for 7 hours? at least 6 people were injured. 11 players from venezuela and bolivia have tested positive for corona virus ahead of the corporate america football tournament in brazil. a number of coaching staff from both teams were also infected for the 10 nation event is going ahead. regardless so the headlines, the news continues here on al jazeera, after inside story. on june 18th,
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iran was told the presidential election was paid sound on his place. put a conservative candidate to succeed, the moderately death, and what impact with his power on national and global politics. join us the latest results analysis of the iran addiction on algebra will elections in algeria leads to real change. the opposition groups are called for a boycott, yet the government says the vote will build a new g area. is that possible in the country where the army has the potential into? once this is inside story ah, ah, ah hello and welcome to the program. i'm peter w. algeria has held its 1st parliamentary elections since mass protest force president abdel aziz. but if we go to step down 2 years ago,
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the votes. busy was initially scheduled to take place next year, but it was moved up in response to recent demonstrations. the protest movement says supporters to boycott, the vote it once and overhauled the political system and an end to the military's influence in politics. the protest movement leaders say, until that happens, elections won't change much. we'll bring in our guest in a moment. first, this report from hash m o barra. a crucial test for the legitimacy of president of the machine to boone who was elected after mass protests forced out president of the last 2 years ago. his government has been asking people to show up in huge numbers for saturdays parliamentary vote is biggest concern. a low, we're turn out that could the deep and the country's political crisis. algerians
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remain widely skeptical about reforms promised by the president. the protest movement that galvanized the nation into 1019 against the ruling class is now calling for a boycott. lindsay, who, unless there's some people or party is trying to impose their dictates on us without us knowing who they represent. not just one person to or groups can impose . there are dictates on 45000000 algerians. the people wanted elections. and today, we see the turn out for them as 80 to boons. those pressing task is to revive an economy battered by a declining oil revenues. corruption and cove with 19 he wants to restore confidence in a government tarnished by decades of corruption from the country to keep going and to improve our situation. we have to help each other with good deeds. algeria, president recent, he told al jazeera his come,
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she was run for many is but what he called a left talk rossi. but despite his assurances to crack down on the management, many on the streets still insist the ruling elite should go opposition. party, such as the secular socialist forces, front, or the 5th, and the valley for culture and democracy. boycotting the election. both parties are popular in the northern kabibi region, a focal point of the sens. the decades long governing parties, the national liberation front, f l n, and national democratic riley allen de could lose support the conservative ben up party and the movement of society for peace or m. s b brace to expand the political influence according to analysts. but whether comes to power with face, the daunting task of convincing algerians that change has come. hush my bottle al
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jazeera. ah, there we are. here we go. let's get going with our guest in rebecca, we have new fall, our board director of the nordic center. if a conflict transformation in london, we have tin han on l. coffee and associate fellow in the middle east and north africa program at chatham house and in montgomery, alabama. we have rusty louis an independent middle east, and algeria analyst, a warm welcome to all of you. new file aboard in rebec coming to 1st. if these elections won't change anything, if these elections won't improve anything, what will the question is basically whether the regime and the system may not, julia union reforms, or rather as a just submit mechanism for change the key indicator to answer this question, question the key indicator, is to look up the previous reform,
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the for interviews after the election of the president and, and including also the referendum that the constitution have led to any changes. or if they can, they could be considered as having a bald be demand in the process of the iraq in the question to this is know the answer to it is no with the idea that actually iraq hazardous you it with force and trying to even with challenges to come to the corporate mine team. and then my answer would be basically that these elections are coming up as a way to divert, again the are getting people from meaningful reform. and the regime has been known by the people that use 2 different kind of diverse, one into one into use and so the reforms,
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elections and so forth like that. but also external reforms by escalation, conflicts outside julia, especially with neighboring country like for example, morocco receipt. okay. allow me to post the news. i will, will come back to that point in a moment, 10 on l. cardie in london to boons credibility here is clearly on the line that's what everyone is saying to day the theme not know that or does he not care about that i think it's rather the 2nd option his credibility was already severely challenged after the presidential elections of a 2019 we saw about these elections had the lowest turn out in a jury of history for a presidential election. and so he's the president without any significant social base, the present and election had he come tested of the time. rog,
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purposes, where on the streets confessing the election which was argued decided by the military and not the time warmer chief of staff gates. and after that we sold in 2020 the regime decided to move forward with a new constitution. the constitution did not emanate from the people that was no cause to trend assembly or process that suki to account the voices of the jury and people. the process was very much top down to she was drafted by some of the same ex says, who drafted constitutions under us era. and so the vote was also heavy, but we only registered 20 percent participation rate, among which only 13 percent of our durians approved the new constitution. so it's extremely low race. and so boon is already suffering from an extreme lack of
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legitimacy. and it's very likely that today's eligible elections will result in a similar outcome. and the legitimacy is not set to, to resolve to this parliamentary election. rusty louis the, an alabama give me a sense if you can, within the, the, sort of the urban flow of power within the establishment. in algeria who pulls all the strings, is it to boon, or is it the security apparatus? both because they're they are in the same boat and whatever is going to be to gain lose to missy will gain power as well. so it's not one person, it's, it's reductive to see to, to read it as one group pulling the strings and the other is following death. faith is link the military establishment faith and the boon faith are both linked. and
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the way to look at this election, the to frame it is they meant to be to book and the transition period with that started with books of departure and then kicked. and then we have the federal election referendum and this legislative election. usually this is the sequence in any retain state that is moving, forming the talk prosy. so democracy to follow. however, the speak with, you know, jerry is not going to book and the transition to democracy is going to book and transition to the same. because in these 3 elections we've, you know, we've seen that the turn out rate was absolutely extremely low, but in standard and this election will also have a really low turn out rate. so days the crisis of legitimacy and the bows know that and the military foundation and institution knows that as well.
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and i would like to differ slightly with your last guess. i don't think they don't care a day do care very much the bidding care they, when you go through this reactor, it show putting on putting on elections and going through all this theaters. they do care and they will collect to have some kind of legitimacy and when they would like to collect a, somehow iraq, but can't del log into a logic where it says they will some lovek in their mind if they give up power a little bit to the street to iraq, they lose it. ok, has been some game logic. we are stuck in the same place in the fall of food. is that a valid point when we talk about the systemic elements of this?
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because both tina and russia with an alibi, ma, making the same point in a different way, record low levels of turner and stop me got this wrong here. but in algeria there is no lower threshold of turn out where it's kept. so in theory, one person can vote in parliament re election and the powers that be can say, oh, we've got a majority of a 100 because only one person turned out to vote. exactly big during the day. not exactly. i was going to be no matter what the result of the election, the power would stay with the military. it would, they would, we didn't with the same men of the systems, no matter what they have been experience and that they know exactly the new generation of jerry and who are for me. and they know exactly the mechanism, the methods and the eyes of the mechanism. so for example, you know, you cannot run an election for the parliament without having
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a clear ideas about the process. but the district didn't have it in time for the police campaign. let people know their candidate and also be explicit about the financing of the political parties. none of that have happened even worse is that because of the pressure of the process in iraq and the president has advanced at the date of the election, which was everything. elections also means that the chamber, the department and the chamber has credibility in the gym. se, in among the people, not even in constitution. and the reason. and that is due to differences in terms of power with the executive machine and the representative of the people. one of the demand ok,
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less one of that point on $200.00 calorie in london. could this be the beginnings of this is not coalescing around a hierarchy leader or leadership. but could this be the beginnings of a generational shift in algeria and as much as one in 7, only one and 7 of the people who voted voted for the new constitution. and those people, the majority of the population is under 29 years old. i forget what the percentage is, but it's a big percentage. and they've seen 60 years, they've seen their parents talk about 60 years of the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. yeah. so these elections are happening against the backdrop of the name, socio economic crisis. the people know, the altering economy, habits dependent on hydrocarbon. and in recent kids, especially since this 1014 all the while you have me during the economy has not the
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capacity to, to reduce tributes and guarantee subsidies of public goods. and this constitutes a significant problem for the regime, because historically we distribution and buying social. he has been born on of a jury regime survival strategy and the list the unit thing if you submit the problem. now to answer the question on generational change, what we're thinking of the moment is the regime roadmap to regenerate itself. so we might see a new generation of musicians emerging from the new parliament. however, it just a generation of people who are willing to be the fad of what is in military regime . we're not seeing any genuine change. the, the roadmap, imposed by by the regime has consisted in electro like presidential election in
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2019. then the constitutional referendum in 2020. and now we're seeing the last step with this parliament re election. but none of these election was free and fair . and we are not witnessing any meaningful willingness to, to engage in regina change and moving towards a more democratic form. of government and to move people in the head, i have opposed the selection. we haven't seen any major figures from the opposition entering these elections, actually more important opposition parties and adria are boy coughing, which is the electron. so it's very unlikely that this would need to any generational change power still very much. c lies in the hands of old military generals area, rusty louis the in alabama. is that a valid point? because if you look or if you drill down into the back story of people who self
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identify as being quotes, opposition they've had in the past. associations with the f l, n and the r and d point number one. and point number 2, at some point, somebody either in the military or in the government always goes down this road of saying, well, we were involved in the liberation fight. that was almost 60 years ago that, that unemployed, younger generation they've moved on. they want to move on, so this kind of, that might be an explanation why the campaign so far has been so well lat cluster, i guess. yes, that's one reason. but the other reason is that the outcome is already known by the people by this young generation. they know that the outcome is going to be more of the same. and the blue dilemma and the jewish and the law is how to create they are dying and seeking to create some level of popular lives, timothy,
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because there are serious economic and social want to be introduced. and this was, especially the economic and financially phones are very painful, such as reforming the pension system reforming the way the heavy world for states reforming the banking fees. you can out and do this heavy reform, graham harper without having a social and popular base. so to do that, i might find himself lacking listing to see the military. no that therefore for the sake of survival because i always seek a way of surviving all the christ luxury day. will jenison from one day or not of the boy. and if he becomes a heavy weight, you becomes an albatross around the military, families and mic. so the parent that is come in this new generation that is coming, this iraq. and that is not also blameless. because then missed an opportunity to
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really propose and organize themselves to perform a serious political or character. day succeed here i succeeded in the 1st period in between april and june, 2019. then it went through a summer of 2019, just before professional lecture, and when it last momentum, instead of structuring the instead of organizing these instead of setting up a direction spokesperson, a collegial leader, or just one leader to propose. as soon as tentative political and present of soon as little horse and do any political environment de missed that dental fortunately. so ok. income. i'm here right right now. ok to do that, does without it, we are going to something that no one wants a confrontation between the street and the military. and that plays into the hands
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of the actual region. no fall abode in robot is, is her rack in that sense its own worst enemy, because there are internal divisions. there are internal squabbles. they don't have a designated leader or leadership. and every so often, the past 2 years in algeria has been punctuated by to boone or people close to him, accentuating and illuminating those divisions within her rack. yeah, when the rock is lead, unless yes, it's actually a challenge in, but it's also a strength of iraq. that's what made iraq, you know, last longer until today. and they've had been, you know, ways from the regime to try to dismantle the iraq various ways. but until today that couldn't, because no matter what division and how can it is in
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a way to look at popular mystic and diverse the iraq is. but they stick to the main claims on demand, which is actually that the system needs to be met. the law that the military should go off completely, but the military should not be controlling. this was the life of a jury and, and also there have been stick into the demand. so regarding the structure of problems that exist in last year. yeah, this is about corruption, unemployment and so forth like that. okay. so i'm going to interrupt you that because we are trotting quite quickly towards the end of the programs to forgive me for that. pausing you there. i want to go back to 1010 on l, cardi in london. we seem to be saying 10 turkeys don't vote for christmas. the military wouldn't go for their own extinction. a lower turnout seems to push us towards realizing that there probably will be more demonstrations on the streets.
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might that turn into, say, an algerian summer, along the lines of the arab spring perhaps? is that a possibility in the us ability? because what we've seen is that processes within the head are very much committed to continue purchasing and so meaningful political change is achieved. so many are viewing these elections as just another rule or another, attendance for, for the ministry to, to keep power. and i think the countries reaching your real political deadlock, in the sense that we've seen that the government was unable to move forward with any real reform, whether it's not made or social. the headlight is really the political situation in general and the country is an a soulmate and this cannot continue in such challenging times. well, as i mentioned earlier, there is a really kind of
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a crisis call that my, to them, it came to further deepen very structural crisis. and we have extremely high unemployment rate. in recent months. we have the number of young children crossing the middle journey and to reach the southern shores of europe has increased significantly. and so i think that is very much necessary. that true power holders in the country sits around the negotiating table with political liter. it's one of the, a position with representatives from the head and try and find a consensual political solution because the situation of that is, isn't a very can untenable situation whereby there are no freedoms, no, no democracy. in the same time, the machine is unable to achieve all that. no freedoms and no democracy, russia, louis and alabama. algerians haven't had democratic elections what 3 decades,
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30 years. on the one hand, we seem to have a country that got lots of hope. on the other hand, we have a country that has lots of repression and we have a country run by the old guard where the still want to talk about legacy. we have a french president emanuel mac wrong born in 1977. i mean, he post dated the call events that gave us algeria as we recognize it today. should he go close to this, or should he to stay well away? because he is tilting towards, you know, former french colonies in africa at the moment. i think it's this is a loaded question because there is no easy way of ever in it. i think it would be really not helpful for algerian opposition, as in iraq to have them open and, and loud sports from any french friends. because dad would play into the old
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narrative of the external hand beforehand that the medicaid established into nancy cation have been turning out the london sixty's. so yes, you can support hirata. he asked, you can support it through transition toward democracy. but to be outspoken about it, to be out loud about it in to be opened about it could backfire. and i would like the june p o position and leadership in iraq to do it themselves. yet they need help. but it is important for you to do it itself. that is the question of logistics. because that comes from the algae and people to push all out competitive well to retain stayed there are usually very resilient. we just have to look in europe, russia and hungry. all righty. so i'm going to have to interrupt you because the
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clock has business here on inside story for that. i apologize. the very interesting or compelling conversation to thank you so much to all i guess they were neufeld a boot teen hannah l. connie, and rushed to louis and thank you to for your company. can see the show again. anytime the web site ounces here dot com. and for more discussion, go to our facebook page that facebook dot com forward slash ha inside story can also join the conversation on twitter. we are at a g inside story for me, piece adobe, and the team here until how cats are. thanks for watching. we will see you the same time, same tunnel tomorrow until then i it's one of the biggest clubs in south america. but it's greatest rival is just a few blocks away. a mutual dislike between fans formed from a class device sustained over generations. most local junior support is born into
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these club colors in an epic feud of rich versus poor. the fans will make football . when i was just the way between tokyo and non lawyer, she was then relatively sleepy place, not a lot of violent crime. and so when 4 people get killed on one occasion in as bloody and massacre as this was due to tracks a lot of reporting, a task force of 80 police officers was created to find out what happened. the police counted more than 40 stab wounds altogether. victims ah, is who's
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ah, a non pill task ahead g 7 liter tank. hope climate change on the final day of the summer in the united kingdom. ah, my time is, this is al, just they're alive from the hall. so coming up start day in israeli politics. i'm stephanie decker outside, the israeli parliament where bar any last minute surprises benjamin netanyahu.

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