Skip to main content

tv   [untitled]    June 13, 2021 4:00pm-4:31pm +03

4:00 pm
here in california and almost everybody's a paycheck away from being on house program but open your eyes to view. well today this is what the picture looks like the the world from a different perspective on how to narrow the. 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 us commit to increasing funding to fight climate change. and promised to provide more cobit 19 vaccines globally. israel's parliament begins voting on a new coalition government the could and benjamin netanyahu. the 12 year brought us prime minister,
4:01 pm
high security in the c and language report from my g area on how west african nations a trying to prevent piracy in the gulf of giddy plus. i'm trying to get charged on the bank for the modem of one of the longest rivers in bangladesh where hundreds and thousands of farmers lives have been affected day increase in salt water. i'm joining with the sports in england, k call say euro campaign against croatia and this growing angle to organize the years after allowing denmark much to go ahead following the collapse of one of their plays on the page. ah 2021 should be a turning point for the world. that's the main message from all g 7 leaders. as they wrap up some of the u. k. in their joint communicate, they made a series of climate commitments including achieving net 0,
4:02 pm
compet emissions by 2050 and promising funding for developing nations to ditch coal power. a message from conservationist david happened. brothers also played, urging the leaders to act for bell though we're going to take you live to a corner where a host of the d 7 summit providence, devoris johnson. the u. k is getting a press conference in 2 years and i know that the world was looking to us to reject some of the selfishness and nationalistic approaches of mod, the initial global response to the pandemic. and to channel all our diplomatic economic and scientific might into defeating caving for good. and i do hope that we have lived up to some of the most optimistic hopes and predictions i should time. sorry to hear that said adding to their preexisting even football team. and also able to watch this press conference live in the way, i'm sure that they would, they would like to. but i hope that feeling that resigned the victory,
4:03 pm
they will be able to catch up on the triumph of the g 7. and later on a week ago, i asked my family to help in preparing and providing the day sees we need to vaccinate the whole world by the end of 2022. i'm very pleased to announce that this weekend leaders have pledged over 1000000000. this is either directly or through funding to go backs. that includes 100000000 from the u. k to the world's poorest countries, which is another, another big step towards vaccinating the world. and that's in addition to everything, scientists and governments and the pharmaceutical industry of dance, i thought to roll out one of the largest vaccination programs in history. and here i want to mention in particular, the row of the oxford astrazeneca vaccine, the world's most popular vaccine developed 250 miles from where i've done it day by
4:04 pm
scientists who have rightly been given honors by the queen this weekend. today, over half a 1000000000 people are safe because of the development and production of that vaccine funded on a ad by the u. k. government. and that number is rising every day, and it's popular, of course, because it, it's being sold at cost to the world. and it was designed that ease of use in mind . and because of that active generosity by astrazeneca, just to reiterate, to making 0 profit on the production of that vector that vaccine millions more vaccines have been rolled out to the poorest countries in the world. in fact, 96 percent of the vaccines delivered by kofax and the co bax bax distributions team for the oxford astrazeneca. but this weekend on discussions when far beyond defeating the pandemic, we look towards the global recovery,
4:05 pm
a great labor recovery. our countries are committed to lead, and we were clear that we all lead to build back better in a way that delivers for all our people to the people of the world. that means preventing a pandemic like this from ever happening again. apart from the stablish in a global pandemic radar, which will spot you diseases before they get the chance to spread, it means ensuring that our future prosperity benefits always. it is of our country and all the citizens of the world. at the g 7 summit this weekend and my fellow leaders helped the global partnership for education and organization working to make sure every child in the world is given the chance of a proper education, which ha of it's 5 year fundraising. go including a 430000000 condonation from the u. k. it's an international disgrace that some children in the world are denied the chance to learn and reach
4:06 pm
their full potential. and i'm very, very pleased with the g 7. a came together to support that course because educating all children, particularly girls, is one of the easiest ways to lift countries out of poverty and help them rebound from the kind of ours crisis. with just one additional year of school, a goes future earnings can increase by 20 percent. i'm proud that g 7 countries have agreed to get 14000000 more goes into school and 20000000 more reading by the end of primary school in the next 5 years. and that the, the money that we have raised this week is a fantastic start. but of course, the world cannot have a prosperous future if we don't work together to tackle climate change. they to this year, u. k. was the cop $26.00 summit, which will galvanize global actual pike in climate change and how and create a healthy plan for our children and grandchildren. g 7 countries accounting for 20
4:07 pm
percent of global carbon emissions. and we were clear this weekend. the action has to start with us. coffee space is one of the most beautiful places in the world, as you can see. and it was a fitting setting for the 1st ever net 0, g 7 summit. and one is fantastic that every one of the g 70 countries is pledged to wipe out our contributions to climate change. we need to make sure we're keeping that starts as we can and helping developing countries at the same time. and what unites the countries gather here this weekend, not just the g 7, but australia, india, south africa, and south korea joined us. and i should say in india's case, joined us. but we're not just our result of tackle climate change, but also of democratic values. it's not good enough for us just to rest on our
4:08 pm
laurels and talk about how important those values are. and this is in devise, imposing our values on the rest of the world. what we g 7 need to do is demonstrate the benefits of democracy and freedom and human rights to the rest of the world. and we can partly achieve that by the gracious featured medical history . fascinating the world. we can do that by working together to stop the devastation that correct of ours is produced from ever a carry again. and we can do that by showing the value giving every go in the world, access to 12 years of quality education. and we can also do that by coming together as the g 7 and helping the world's poorest countries to develop themselves in a way that he's green and dream. and to study before i go to the
4:09 pm
media, who just yeah, i want to fight. finally, the, the police, everyone who helped organize this summit and every, every, all the i think all the people but just have copies. but you certainly help us put the cards into, into carbon bay. but everybody involved every, all the wonderful people. como for that. for that hospitality, it's been fantastic, some it and i know that the all the other delegations i would want to express that thanks as well as to communicate that to me anyway. let's go over to best review of sky from a prime minister barak johnson giving a press statement of the end of the g 7 confir gay ferry in cornwall was looking at us to drop the nationalistic approach for the response to the pandemic. he said, that's, let's actually listening to the questioning. 4 percent of the population had 2
4:10 pm
doses. what the center of the population need to be double vaccinated before we can proceed with stage 4 unlocked him. and how do you think it will take? i'm on the summit. you said in a recent interview, the breakfast lemon had been sucked dry, but it has left a bit of a sour taste in the mouth that this summit 100, instead of building global alliances, you leave him farther apart from allies and you seem to have provoked a diplomatic round, now too, with france. do you regret blowing up the breakfast round, some of your remarks at this moment? the tractable bed on cobra? because i know a lot of people will, will be thinking very much about that. i just, i forgot to, i'm going to repeat what i, when i said yesterday, we're continuing to look at the data. no final decision has been taken and the
4:11 pm
right time to fill everybody in on what we're going to do with step 4. with june, the 21st is, is tomorrow is as i've said, and you know that that's when we'll be putting out the whole package of information so that everybody can see it together. i hope i'm calling to understand that that is i think the best way of handling that today and on your, on your, on your, on your can i just respectfully just say i know that you have lots of detailed questions and suggestions on on k bid. i'm, i think probably not, we don't want to get it out in dribs and drabs. if i, if i may, what we'll do is, is be saying it's tell you all that info tomorrow. so i think people want to see the whole, the whole package. but on your 2nd point, which is about about breaks and actually the, i can tell you that the vast,
4:12 pm
vast majority of the conversations that we've had over the last 3 or 4 days of being about other subjects. and that has been fantastic degree of harmony. i mean, between the leaders of the, of our, of our countries. and if you need to put some of these, they come together to, to agree, you know, 1000000000 more days is 1000000000 more vaccines. everyone agreed to phase out the use of not just supporting coal around the world early, but to phase out the use of coal in their own production. they, they agreed that they would have 30 percent of the land and 30 percent of their fees protected, consecrated to nature by, by 2030 to set a 100 day target for the production of, of new vaccines after the arrival of a, of a new variant of a new atlantic charter planned to build back for the wealth that was what took up
4:13 pm
our time. and you know, i didn't think that i really, i could've asked and will cooperative or, or a more energetic spirit for me, for my friends. your foreign secretary said this morning on television, that he found president mark chromes remarks on g b and i offensive. that's what your foreign secretary said at the g 7. you tell me that it's not a diplomatic route. i what i'm saying is that we will do whatever it takes to protect the territorial integrity of the u. k. but actually what happened at this summit was that there was a colossal amount of work on subjects that had not nothing to do with breakfast. and together with our european friends and partners were lodging, all sorts of projects for the, for the benefit of the, of the well,
4:14 pm
we will so that i, but you know, i think i want to stick what i, what i've said, yes. okay, good. who is going next? robert s m i t v you would say the climate change is the most serious issue facing the world, but it doesn't appear to be a collective agreement yet on a binding time table for concrete actions on issues like eliminating unabated coal mining or petrol carts. why is it so proving so difficult to get a formal time table for these important steps in terms of combating climate change? so i've gone the prime minister, gordon brown has described the bill in doses of vaccine as a moral failure because it's just not enough vaccine for poor countries. and finally, did you have an opportunity to explain to president my call of northern ireland as
4:15 pm
much part of the united kingdom as to loses part of france. okay, well i, on the, on the, on the last flight i repeat, i said to, to, of course, we make the point continues the, this will thought of one great, indivisible united kingdom. that's the, that's the job of the u. k. government to our home that as you would expect, and on your but on your point about you know, the vaccines you talked about tomorrow, i think a moral failure to supply more than more than that. i read you must reject this. this is another bit made up of massive contribution by the united states, other other friends, the u. k. put in another 100000000000. this is june to june, till next june. and thanks to get the, you know, this back in has literally only been invented very, very recently these, these,
4:16 pm
that seems very, i come on stream very recently and already of the, of the 1500000000 vaccines that have been distributed around the world. i think people in this country should be very proud, but half a 1000000000 of them as a result of the actions taken by the u. k. government, in, in doing that deal with the oxford scientist and astrazeneca to distribute it costs . and the u. k. has put in 1600000000 into funding from if we admitted into funding a k that we are doing everything we can distribute actually just thought of, you know, the world collected well capital they have about, well they wave again last night we're getting smarter and i think, you know, i think it's,
4:17 pm
it's producing vaccines as fast as we, as we can, and distributing them as fast as, as fast as we can. and clearly there's much more to do. we said to target to vaccinate the world by 20, by the end of next year, and that it will be done thanks to the efforts of a very large thanks to the efforts of the, of the countries who come here to today. now your, your other question was yes, look at the, i think the g 7 has made great commitments on climate change. i mentioned facing out cold phase there also bring to stop the support the, the subsidy of coal mining around the world. everybody here in this meeting agreed to, well, the g 7, i should say, agree to net 0 by 2050. plus a national, a national actually determined a contributions by 2030. they all made significant steps forward towards the
4:18 pm
$100000000000.00 we're going to need by call to support developing the developing welding, tackling climate change because we, as the rich nations of the earth, you know, we need to, we need to build our credibility with those countries in asking them to make cuts and yet you, because this country which started the industrial revolution is responsible for a huge budget of carbon. it's already in the atmosphere. we are now off the other countries to make a change. that's why this government put 11200000000 into climate finance and this g 7 summit actually so many other countries stepping up to the plate and making a very big and the you making very big commitments. i'm not gonna pretend that you know our work. he's done so mary draggy, the italian prime minister, who's the co chair of cop and 10 year carriage sector general of the u. n. and i
4:19 pm
was going to be on everybody's case between island and the summer, and on into the autumn to get those commitments. and to make sure that we, we get the world into the right place for the call. but i think that i think we made a a very good start date nor can i be see i'm going to start and forgive me. i'm going to ask about this again because the foreign secretary was very happy to talk about this this morning. so yours might find it slightly strange, you know, we'll talk about it now. where are you offended? 5 president microns comments in your meeting yesterday about northern ireland place in the u. k. you've listed what you believe to be the achievement of this summit, that health and environmental campaigners are really clear that they hope to go farther. do you wish you'd be able to push your fellow leaders to give even greater commitments? thanks very much, laura for inviting me to answer that question for the time when i what i will say
4:20 pm
is that i think it's the job of the government of the united kingdom to uphold the territory, the integrity, the united kingdom. i think it was the point i made to you yesterday, and actually that subject was, i think i said to beth just not occupied at this best digital vanishingly small proportion of our deliberations and on the general criticism of the summit that you relate from, from sources and then i mean, $2500000000.00 pledged for for go of education already. that's not half bad. that's not half that every country. as i said to robert, increasing the pledges for global climate finance. i've mentioned the 30 percent for the 3030 by 2030 pledge on on the oceans. and don't all of that. a 1000000000. i saw another 1000000000 vaccines and so on to say
4:21 pm
nothing. even you atlantic charter and new global campaign to help countries around the world to, to, to build back better, cleaner, and greener to build better for the agenda. i think, i think it's a, it's a, it's beat and there's much else besides. so i think it's been a highly productive few days how you come to the sun like you partner. so you said last year that anglin scales being used and demented chinese medicine. maybe maybe the cause of it is that still we will abuse and learn this week from fellow leaders about the lap leak theory. and do you agree with dominic, rob said when he doesn't believe it and knew some wembley, some of the crowd just booting the team after taking the knee, coming erections of that place. and in the unlikely event, that cascade was to call you up to play for england. would you personally take the need say festival on on tangle is
4:22 pm
i think i do think there's a problem. is there a lot of diseases? this is clearly the, the thing we have to focus on. and it's the, the, the practice that seems to be particularly prevalent in, in some parts of a, of asia, se, asia, so farming, wild animals. that is really where the, the risks are at the moment the advice that we've had is it doesn't look as though this particular disease is that what artic origin came from a lab. clearly, anybody sensible would want to keep an open mind about that. but what we did agree just come to yet another thing that we, we agreed that was that. but as you know, we're having a new treaty on pandemic preparedness and to make sure the world works better in
4:23 pm
the future and tackling as though not diseases like this. and you know, types of a disease and one of the things that we agreed to do was to strengthen the world health organization and to make sure that their inspectors can have power is similar to those used by their p c, w, or the i a or other inspectors who can weapons inspectors, who can, who can go on the scene and try to determine as independently as possible. exactly what is what is going on. so the people can have confidence about the etiology of these diseases. the origins of these diseases, hopefully in the, in the future, a lot of this is obscurity will be, will be dispelled harry and you asked a couple of yes the, everybody should cheer fragrant. everybody should cheer for irrational as the possibility that i might be called up to, to play in the, in the team. i, i think,
4:24 pm
you know, i think, i think he's, i think my grades are starting to concede that that's not going to happen. so, so it is, it is a hypothesis that i think is probably one of one of the most plausible hypotheses yet constructed all the hypothetical questions i think has ever been a thread my way, my lands or the new york times. thank you very much mister. i mister and thank you for including a few international reporters on your list. you described president biden as a breath of fresh air a couple of days ago. but it's also true that you and your government worked extremely hard to cultivate his predecessor. and there are lingering feelings in washington among democrats and amongst some in the ministration of suspicion about the johnson government and a belief that you are more ideologically in tune with donald trump than you would
4:25 pm
be with joe biden. i'm wondering what if anything you said to the president, to dispel those suspicions, what you would say to the, those in the u. s. that might view you to turn a phrase as a physical and emotional clone of trump. and then lastly, on the specific issue of northern ireland. notwithstanding, what you've said today about micro and northern ireland. how worried are you that with a devoted irish american in the white house who is fond of quoting the 8th? and virtually every speech that this will inevitably spill over into the, the u. s. u k relationship and cause you trouble on other issues. we're flexible on the whole issue of duration ship between the u. k and, and, and the united states. and what's happened over the last years that let's be optically, it is the job all prime ministers, everybody who does my job to have close relations,
4:26 pm
a close working relationship with the president of the united states. and i think what maybe has been helpful be useful in building the partnership with, with j biting his as being you know, the common interests we have, in fact, in climate change, for instance, which we've discussed extensively of the, the campaign i've been running for a long time on, on female education, which he lately, which he completely shares. but the whole idea of, of leveling off, which is that the core of what this government is, is trying to do using infrastructure using better skills technology to give people access to the highest highway high skills jobs around the whole country. and that's something that i know that the, the presence engaged in the big program that the bad some resemblance to a lot of that agenda. and when it comes to building back better for the world and
4:27 pm
making sure that we build back greener together. i think that will take you on the same page and i, i so it's been, it's been, it's been very, very refreshing and very interesting to to, to listen to me and you had some other point about yes. yes. well, why say that? i think that you know, i the greatest respect to all our friends around the world. this is something that i think we're going to, we're going to fix. we'll fix it in a, in a pragmatic way. but this is a about making sure that we protect the good friday, a peace process and the territorial integrity of the, of the u. k. and that's, that's what we're going to do. ok, ben roddy smith of the ro, thank you prime minister to questions. if i may thirsty on reopening,
4:28 pm
i understand you don't want to have been absent, but the whole country is watching this issue. can you offer a guaranteed the ultimately for reopening will not be delayed longer than 4 weeks. and what is your message to? this isn't people who may consider breaking the rules if there is a delay. i don't pack things. there is a simple way to try and boost. well, supply. dropping the peyton some kind of back scenes. why don't you support that? then 1st of all, thanks have you know, another i understand why people want to to hear more about about kaden and step for the softening. i understand people's impatience, but it really, you are some good questions. but the best thing is to get all this arch in one package, so everybody can understand it in the rounds, and that's what we'll be doing tomorrow. as i've said, as i said repeatedly and on your, on your point to bite trips and intellectual property and,
4:29 pm
and that route. look, i think the, the, the crucial thing is to make sure that we build up capacity, build up manufacturing capacity, fill and finish and, and manufacturing around the world. particularly in africa. i think we should be sharing knowledge as much as we can whilst over the protecting the as i think, dr. engage the of the w t. o. well put it protecting the in the incentives for innovation. so, you know, you've got to, you've got to accomplish both things at once, but what we think is the right way to go is to, to sell these vaccines with a cost. and that's why we're particularly we champion the oxford astrazeneca model. what we're doing is getting a lots and lots of jobs into people's arms by insisting that they are sold at cost
4:30 pm
. and i think that's a fairly effective way of doing it. the way i think. but i think the g 7 agreed to to look at that and see what they could do to expedite knowledge transfer, but it can a transfer of take manufacturing capability. but the particular solution that we've come up with, which is said, making sure that, that the vaccines are distributed at costco on a non profit basis, i think is the, is the right way to, to get a, can we get to and from hello get era of that thank you very much premiere step since the very beginning, your global britain as significantly brought forward the importance of the in the pacific region and the far east. and it's really stressful.

28 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on