tv [untitled] June 13, 2021 3:30pm-4:01pm +03
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the technology and human ingenuity, we can make it work for you and your ah hello again, adrian and again, here in dough hard, the headlines on al jazeera g. 7 leaders have declared that 2021 should be a turning point for our planet. in the final communicate, the leaders say that they are committed to what they call a green transition setting targets to cut gas emissions, and boosting funds to reach climate goals on diplomatic. it's a james base has more from this and ives in cornwall, not far from the summit venue from the communicate with regard to both cobit 19 and climate change, the g 70 does say that this should be
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a turning point for our planet. they go on and communicate to say we commit to a green transition, cut emissions, we commit to accelerating efforts, greenhouse gas emissions, and keep the $1.00 global warming $1.00 degrees global warming threshold. winning reach, we commit to mobilize finance, endeavoring leveraging innovation to rich climate goals. and they said to me that they commit to ambitious efforts to reach net 0 greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible by 2050. the latest is really politicians have begun to arrive at israel as parliament the connect it for a vote of confidence on a new government among them. yeah, la paid and natalie bennett, who want to share power, unseat prime minister benjamin netanyahu. after 12 years, an office. the proposed coalition is online alliance of 8 parties including the right, the left, and for the 1st time a palestinian israeli party. algeria is parliamentary elections or its lowest tongue out nearly 20 years after cause from protest. as for a boycott,
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about 30 percent of voters took part. the election was the 3rd since president of the disease of flicker was forced to step down in 2019. india has recorded its lowest number of official daily coded 19 cases since april, more than 18000 do infections were reported, but deaths remained high with more than 3000 recorded in the past 24 hours. 22500 fans are expected at london's wembley stadium. as england kick off that 20 euro 2020 campaign with a match against croatia, it's the largest number in the stadium since the start of the time, the danish football player christine erickson, has regained consciousness. of collapsing on the pitch at a euro 2020 game against finland. the 29 year old was given cpr before being rushed to hospital. those headlines now let's get you back to our city or a world. oh,
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the i the salted and again that will the fight between israel and the countries and during the wall a took his sheep to the 4th of near the 4th of a 4th aid and broadcasted the messages for peaceful people. stuff of the woman in think with the bullying and speak with our deal. but he said it was like, it was realistic because he's equal see the me size and the planes and the, the plane are being heated and falling to the sea and everything was killing the other. but they didn't touch him. they didn't touch the voice of face after the war
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. return to broadcast again. have you got permission from you guys for the canal? not yet, but i never asked religion. they weren't. i wouldn't let you go through last time. why would they change their minds now? i think know, the better climate right now, and i think what we're doing right now is really the then it's of people, the people effort. and it's a gesture of goodwill with flowers. they are long be remembered young kid over at the day of a lot of violence. maybe we can help change that the my presenting birth control. this is been a minion piece, banner minion, piece barbara, april alpha, charlie. to remain andrew immediately. okay,
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well leaving now. thank you very much. good morning. ah caroline could have got involved with politics in 1970 the station deed, but only for a short while, but most of the time it was here just to play music. the chances are, had the station really got political, had overstepped the mark. then as had happened in 1970, it would have been jammed by, by government, probably any government. and they, you know, if you are an embarrassment to the government, they do the utmost to close down. caroline knew how far to go, but didn't overstep that mark. and until the eighty's, when the dutch invaded the ship,
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they were reasonably safe. we kept ourselves to our selves and just played the music and that was the intention. that's clive gregson, an american car sounded very much like well spent. 30 minutes away from h and we have colleen, glen stone, late summer, 989. the ship came out from england and spoke to the ship and said, we want you to shut down and switch off, go away. and if you don't, and something else is going to happen, which is far more severe than our am nice request. and of course, the law of the sea is you can't board a ship in international waters unless you're invited to do so. so our thought was, well, then what they have in mind. they went to the ship because international law says you can't do that. the next day, a very much larger ship horizon tied up alongside and it came from holland. and on
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board with dutch police and dutch coast guards. and in holland the dutch police and coast close, they were guns, and there were a lot of them. so they climbed on board and nobody's going to confront a uniform man with a gun. and so they took ship over. now my contention is i had no right to do so because they had no authority. because you are only a policeman in the country where that power is awarded to the 2nd you are in a foreign country or no country, you know the policeman anymore. be your man with a gun. and they wrecked and stripped every part of the ship during the course of the day and took all of our equipment away and left the ship behind. but the crew were invited to give up and go ashore and they said, no, we won't, we'll stay. and we start all over again. what happened? and this is a nice, wonderful moment for me really to come back out on the caroline ship into the studio. play wonderful all vital. again. this is what radio is all about. it was
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a great adventure. yes, i was aware that i was breaking the law, but i don't make a habit of breaking the law. and if the worst thing i ever doing, my life is sit on a rusty ship and play a beatles record. i haven't got much of a problem with that. my conscience is clear. i wasn't that keen on rough weather out at sea. we did have some really, really, really rough weather, but equally we had black. com days. beautiful, sunny days. so people tell you to go on cruises, we're going to ship like music sitting in the sun. when the sun shone, it was lovely with friends or doing the same thing. they all wanted to be part of radio. caroline, unless if you work for radio station, why not work for one? with the most famous name in the world, we will use to discuss the music that we played. so the great thing with everybody who was on the ship was if you can imagine a radio station on land, you know, somebody comes through the door through the program, go home. now the person comes through the don't do the problem. here. we do what
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we're doing and record library. you know, we used to sit around and talk about music. you know what colors into music when new records used to come out to the ship. we used to get a lot of new records every week being sent to us even though the record companies weren't supposed to. but i did because they knew where the listeners, you know, we actually listen to what the listeners want as well. that's what that was. the beauty and the success of caroline. it was the listeners controlled us. we controls the listeners viewed as a station, a be paid the hill of the prize being in jail. and i visited him in jail. not for the radio station of us for his so called illegal meetings with p o leaders. soon after, it became thanks god legitimated to meet below people. but in this
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stage it was still is a result thread. the after the brain was against the piano, is or was not ready to to for such a step. he understood very early on the piece with egypt was not an issue. the main issue of peace with philistines and a, although the voice of pieces no change because of that visit his own personal activity became more focused on the settlements and he'll get by tories the meeting with a pillow. so i think that it was this credit that he was a moment of achievement for him. not that he contributed directly to this piece, but he understood many of the northern said that this was not the whole picture that it was still
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a lot of work to be the well, it's a huge thing with caroline when everything's going well. something real bad happens and when everything seems so terrible that there's no means it means a possibility of rescuing it in something good happens. but the worst time was in, in round 990. when we absolutely ran out of money, we couldn't grow across the signal. the ship was in the middle of the ocean. the living conditions were appalling. nobody should have been expected to live like that. but people didn't live like that because it meant some power to radio, caroline, so continued, and then the ship was shipwrecked in a part of the coast. where if you get ship, where you just die and it is part of the coast were 250 ships of in shipwrecked and
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no one is survived. and those ship is survived. and when i had, this is in the 1st, this is happening. me having putting people on the ship, encourage them to be there. i thought, well this is good. i'm probably going to be responsible for the death of 6 people with all the repercussions that will follow after that. but the funny thing way and thanks to the british rule, therefore, there were no death. and only 6 crew rescued without injury. but then it seemed absolutely certain the ship would just be lost, gray cart but think. but it was the only ship of $250.00, which was rescued and brought in. sure that point we had a ship, but nothing else. so a choice was okay, you know, we've given a best shot. this will go and get on with our lives or you know, i think we start over again and we did the
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news . 2 with my 9 year old, a music station. it's not exactly 9 o'clock the u. l. o v. a lunch time boulevard. caroline continentals. ah, david goliath. think you know, you have big brothers. the government trying to stop is all the time. and to be fair, they could have stopped bits, but we had a lot of friends within the government. lot friends within the police have just turned a blind eye. cuz since i've been working on shore and i worked for legal radio, when i 1st came ashore, i remember talking to a policeman and he simply have to have things to do and changed the jays up and down the river. we got criminals to catch, you will, you know, as soon as playing music and most of the police and most of the government dysentery anyway. i think that's what kept us going. the fact that we shouldn't
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have been there, but we were doing no harm. anybody who worked on the station, if we were doing any harm, we would have done it. that was it that we were entered, we were there to entertain and not not to do any harm. and we brought about a change in radio and british radio. and again, that was, you know, that was what we, what we were therefore, to change british radio. we've done it. but we're still here. you know, we've got the license now and that's why we're sitting in, you know, if you like a river, not in international waters anymore. they're still doing it on the ship to say thank you because there's so many list thinks i caroline's not caroline unless it comes from a ship. so for 2 weeks, you know, for a weekend every month we do everything from the off the original radio caroline ship sank. me, amigo, i got a call to say will you come at work for the voice of pace and i felt gay goal and then are initially when i was going to go out there for 3 months, but enjoyed it so much that, you know, i stayed to 9 months, and we used
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a broadcast fees for $10.00 of 8th, but we, we broadcast the whole at the middle east. so again, we kept everything very short, very sharp because a lot of people can understand english, could they? you know, so, and that was why we kept the billings ratio shout there that play pop music. because at the time i was there $980.00 at the time. i don't think there was many stations playing. so pop music. and that was what we used to do with the baby said doesn't float. so that's the 1st difference. but you still work with people who are committed to bringing good radio. but it's a different sort of radio to the caroline radio here on the ship your. it's part of your life, you live on the ship, you eat on the ship, you sleep on the ship. you are part of the ship's crew. whereas with a baby say, you wake up at home, you can, you car, you drive to work, you do the program. you go home again. and once you've got friends there and the
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guys, they are very friendly and a nice guys to, to work with that as, as around the world, any radio station. but you don't sleep with them. you don't eat with them. you don't talk with them other than with your program because it's the time to go home again. and that's the difference with caroline. you. you live sleep 8 radio on the me amigo, which was the one of the original radio, caroline ships, the one that sank in 1980. that was probably the most challenging because literally, every day it was so all with the ship we use the spring leaks. you know, so technically the boat was thinking every day and be like, well, you know, there's water coming in, pump it out, but it just became like one of those daily occurrence. so you just got used to it. but there was one particular night where at the time you think to yourself, yeah, it's windy, it's rough. we're in a situation here where, you know, like we were walking around in the record library on the b amigo, which was downstairs and the water level was coming out. so about here on the legs
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. so, you know, it was like, do we call a life boat down? we call a life that we thought. now let's, if we can get the pump started, we got the pump started, pump the ship out, very cold. but then she started to ride again and didn't take, we still take a water, but we are pumping water faster than we were taking it. and we used to fill the holes in the bottom of the ship with a piece of wood, not going through the hole that made it bigger. stop the water then concrete around . but that was all why patching up the boat. and i suppose the next day that was myself, geico, pretty chicago, was our chief engineer. and another guy we sat at the mess room table. and we actually said that was probably the closest we've ever come to losing our lives. but at the time, you didn't realize it, you know, because there's so much going around and you had, you don't have time to think about it. but even thinking back to, to it now you think that was probably the closest law for me to come to lose your life.
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i just love it. the chances you heard that for the very 1st time on this radio station many years ago, the kind of smith group because they're not here on our live. you know, when you turn on the radio on and suddenly a radio last out there speak or do you think while i haven't heard this for ages and ages and ages, this is that moment for the whole latitude is changed over the years. following on from what radio caroline started, it's taken an awful long time. i mean, here we are now with a license with a government license, but why couldn't they have given that to caroline 50 years ago? it just seems that they were worried about something that really they shouldn't have been worried about. and perhaps that's the way with governments around the world they, they worry that they haven't got control. and the government didn't have control of caroline. but i had nothing to fear because we, we really wanted to play music that we weren't spies, we want terrorists, we weren't bad guys. we just wanted to stay on
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a ship and play music and some politicians. some politicians still even today find the hard to understand. that's the other thing. it didn't matter how bad the weather got. you never felt unsafe on the ship, even on the me, amigo. you never felt unsafe on the ship? you thought so. if we, because we call it the lady and you say the ladies looking after she's looking after is and again, something we often talk about in the history of caroline, which was 964 to 2019. nobody's been, you know, seriously her or even worse killed yet. we've had a few injuries, but that's it. you know. and when you consider what we went through to keep a radio station on the air is remarkable. very good morning this morning, madam special. good morning to you, sunshine. a thick so for the tuesday morning, the 10th of june. 1980. those are legal piece is the word and the voice is peace is the station 24 hours
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a day. it was quite crazy. because the whole projects of a be was finally was it was a very said and very said ending personally, his live and in a very, very said way lonely for gotten in a wheelchair is a didn't appreciate this man as he deserve. and also the sheep go into financial travers. nobody was there to help him. there was all slow and everyone saw that there will be peace without a be not that which was obviously not true. and in a certain stage, he gave up and made the sheep sink. there were very few listener, then it was all dying. and it's a very, very sad story. i mean, it's a, it's a good stories, a good the openings and many good years. but the end,
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both of the both end of a be both very tragic, very said and shouldn't be like this. it should have been different. they would know to appreciate the heroes of peace and not only heroes of war, then able to be more remember, and his boat may be broadcast until today. the we're going to also done a for too many times work on the ship of the go do while a lot of the go to prison. lost a lot of money. i lost all the funds i have i've been ship ship has done the job. the radio station and the whole purpose was to
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bring the 2 parties isn't off of each other and all this other talking that the government there was i think the by lodge. it is a lovely fairy tale. was there unhappy ending at a b was a dreamer. he was not taking seriously enough as he deserved people liked his parties. people liked his born life. he was a bohemian, also. we men food parties. he owned the restaurant. i mean, he was really a social project, but we need to get it go to politics and he was even elected for the parent he was running for the farm and but it didn't take him seriously enough. and i wish that is with taking him more serious than he take by the end of the day. it is one of
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those color, 4 aspects of the conflict. but unfortunately, it's not the story of success because we know how the both ended. we know how a be ended. most of them for working today. and whenever i think about a b and i think about him quite often, i must say. whenever i think about him, i feel deep sadness for the fake that not only he deserved more success between railways and the palestinians, obviously deserved more people like a b who really could have changed the picture, but never did a b as many, many friends. and finally, he was quite a lonely person. he had those and you will be parties in hilton every year to commemorate his flight to egypt. any had dinner at home almost every friday or
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every 2nd friday, which i attended and all the who's who came or so there. but as i said funded, he was the only ok, let's put this is a song we cannot possibly and without the song i don't i hear it. ok. we oh, this is a song i think we should all sing or if it together in the broadcast of the voice of peace after more than 21 years. thank you all for all your support all the years. i thank you and show every, oh, be ah, a to be,
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we are out there. well, his into the murky world. a state sponsored spyware. and the discovery biologist era journalists, 06 technology smart system. is this the new frontier? ah, think about the sophistication of exports to breaking the phone. this is as soon as we get your phone on our news news. ah,
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it's too late for the journey to winter sponsored like cattle airways. hello, the weather's philosophy. finding dry cross match of south america. we got lost clear skies for bolivia, for paraguay, uruguay. good parts of brazil, northern parts of brazil, another hand seeing some very heavy rain, some really heavy showers. they're just pushing into southern and western parts of columbia. and look, we got some wet weather coming back into guyana, further flooding, concerns here over the next couple of days. it'll pop up a little as we go on into monday. more heavy showers as you can see it. the western pass of bolivia further north where we got the heavy showers to into west central america. some particularly wet weather that just affecting southern parts of mexico because see further flooding here as we go one through the next day or so. very, very heavy rain fun, very down. pause, continuing all the way across into the tom peninsula, some larvae showers to into cuba for a time law. she tried to make
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a but you could catch a shower or 2 here as well. so chances, some showers they're coming across in to where hispaniola noticed some wet weather . also for the eastern islands at least for a time, but still a fair amount of sunshine, a plenty of sunshine across north america. we got showers around the east coast anywhere from the carolinas to the florida panhandle. the heat continues for the plains returning wetter to the northwest sponsored cattle airways. get up in my coffee. clear my hands of the few cigarettes. go to go to place. they are not now to do not to go to starbucks and start drawing, drawing keys. my sanity gives me from going to find some money or rival christ are doing thing outside a normal life. when i drive,
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forget about everything else, it was, and one time my mind on the paper, waking up in newbury park and to walk out of my job as only has my last paycheck. i am now homeless nowhere to go all anything to turn to is my drawings for peace of mind. the renters of next, se 7, triple x volume tow, drawn 1200 pages, 3 loops, and age stories of people nowadays is 11 using a regular job. and i see where you told me where you can get a job, you're going to be happy. and so make your bills. i figured out to be comfortable what while, but i what i've been trying to get, i need a lease and 1000 hours. that costs about 6 to 700 code
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transportation. i like to make enough lease to go through the winter months where i go, where i can do drawing inside and peace. you know, not to worry about. somebody has to wake me. i can come and go and i want to get a good amount of sleep and i want value make enough money to last year around a weekly critique of the story hitting the headlines. the news media have been left to sort through mixed messaging on a quite complex story from mainstream street journalism. the listening post covers the way the news is covered on a job award winning programming from international. so make it one quick, so it's straight on the back to the federal global discussion. what guarantee the right to take the life giving voice to the voice here in california is almost
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everybody's a paycheck away from being on house program that open your eyes. you know, if you, well today, this is what the picture looks like the the world from a different perspective on houses near the me. ready this is al jazeera ah, hello, i'm adrian again. this is, are, these are life from joe hop coming up in the next 60 minutes. g 7 lead is going to increasing funding to fight climate change, and promised to revive more covet 19 vaccines globally. israel's parliament begins voting on a new coalition government the could and benjamin netanyahu, the 12 year run as prime minister.
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