tv [untitled] June 13, 2021 10:00pm-10:30pm +03
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care facility stated the object. i know the antennas, he's got a prominent bond. i can see why you love looking at it. it's all about the t, t and see man telemetry tracking and see command. you're not the only one who knows everything in that space to deliver your vision. oh, i celebrations in jerusalem. the israel parliament approved the new government by just one vote ending benjamin intern. yahoo is 12 year rain the team. but the outgoing prime minister remains defiant, telling a heated session of the head of the vote, but he will return. ah, lauren taylor, this is out of here, alive from london. also coming up g 7 leaders and summit, promising to spend
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a $100000000.00 a year on helping poor countries go green, leave activists disappointed and us president joe biden. and his wife meet queen elizabeth for tea at windsor castle. ah, and i was taught in israel where benjamin netanyahu is 12 year run as prime minister has just ended after parliament approved a new coalition government by the narrowest of margins. right. we lead enough tele bennett, has now been sworn in as well. new prime minister, the 8 party coalition want to confidence motion by just one vote, followed a heated debate during which netanyahu supporters frequently interrupted. and some impedes had to be escorted out of a chamber into yahoo used his last speech, his prime minister, devout, he would bring his liquid party back to power work,
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listen, members of the connected. we've gone from being a marginal state to a rising power in the global arena. this is our way mine and my friends from the national block, my friends of the real rights. and if it is destined for us to be in the opposition, we will do it with our back straight and so we topple the dangerous government and return to lead the country in our way. the government has the flemister majorities with just 61 of the 120 seats in the class. it is made up of 8 political parties ranging from left to the far right were united in their determination to unseat missing. yahoo! centrist jojo, lockheed need of the year shots party, is the man behind the coalition. the television anchor turned opposition to will serve as the foreign minister and then prime minister as part of a rotational power sharing agreement. but millionaire tech entrepreneur natalie bennett, who's a former ally of netanyahu, will be prime minister for the 1st 2 years. and for the 1st time in israel, history of palestinian israeli party as part of the governing alliance. it's going
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to have force it in west jerusalem to her. it was quite a dramatic birth for this new government. indeed, it was, i mean, there was all the, the rowing men shouting and interrupting that accompanied bennet's attempt to introduce the session. as prime minister designate there was an extraordinarily divisive and fiery speech from netanyahu, as he sort of began his transition from prime minister to head of a right wing opposition in which he tried to lay all sorts of trip wise and booby traps for the new government vowing that he would try to bring it down as quickly as possible and be back sooner than anybody thought. and we, we now have the situation where the actual vote, which was expected to be $6159.00 if everybody played the part that they were assigned ahead of ahead of the vote taking place. it was actually even closer than
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that 60 to 59 because one of the palestinian israeli party members who was unhappy about the threatened demolitions of better homes in the southern negative does it. that was the issue that he was complaining about earlier in the day. he decided to abstain, and so we have this razor fin the finished in israel history. and while there were some hand shaking, there was some hand shaking going on between bennett and nathan, yahoo! there's also been on the one hand to promise that there will be official transfer of power hanging over the reins at the prime minister's office on monday. that's usually a sort of a public ceremony this year. this government change apparently not nothing you know, said that he isn't going to take part in such a public ceremony. so another breaking of a tradition, another sign and just how much he wants to sort of trying to stir the pot and keep
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fighting against this very new government in every way he can. and here it is, as we mentioned, a very broad coalition, a very different parties. how fragile is it not to be well it's, it's already fragile. it's, it's sort of shown that in the fact that it couldn't get the full $61.00 votes, it is going to be both one with lots of chinks. and it's nothing new to drive wedges through. because there are all sorts of issues that the constituent parts of the government degree on. they have said that they've agreed to disagree on those and not move on them. so for the very ideologically driven natalie, but when it comes to issues such as his rejection of palestinian statehood, his insistence on continued settlement expansion. well, the settlement building, we don't know exactly what's going to go on in that front, but it's a very different position from the merits party. for instance, on the far left never mind the palestinian is reading. so can they just simply
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agree to do what they said they will do, which is deal with the domestic urgent issues facing israeli, such as passing a budget such as dealing with the health system, the transportation system and the like. or will they disagree along the way? and of course, will they be able to confront the threat of netanyahu trying to so division in their ranks and stay together almost in spite of even because of the power that he wields in that role, or will netanyahu be able to successfully prize people away? put it, put on the floor of the house, all sorts of divisive issues for legislation which could, which could cause embarrassment and difficulties between these members. it's not the easiest thing to sort of definitively split up and bring down the coalition under these really system. but you know, it will be trying everything he can and it's early weeks and months, i think will be the key test both in terms of its ability to have a life beyond then and also for israelis to sort of see the stewardship of the
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government and the economy and normal life continuing without the man who said he was absolutely crucial to that. being able to happen to the sort of the indispensable leader of israel harris also tell the new government in israel. thank you very much. indeed, hundreds have been celebrating the end of the snow whose room these were the scenes in tel aviv robina square after crowds heard the boat had passed in. yeah, her opponents can be seen that celebrating the swearing in of new government with a deliberate and dance party. hundreds more also gathered outside the clifford during the afternoon while the new government was being to pay debated less cause now to stephanie deca who's in tel aviv forest. i'm pretty happy people on that news about mission yahoo! being out i really have turned into
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a party atmosphere here to say like a music concert album. 30 initially there was a b as the thing are analogous to names and now they were voting. and then there was a massive cheer that went up. i really believe, believe that benjamin s. now of course a lot of people will tell you that it was simply and not a bad different. yeah, i was 12 years of age and i was not. and even though they know they realize, people are excited, even though they know that they are going to be challenges with a big hurry. they're in 5 centers, right. which a mean? yeah, probably it means there won't be any major changes. will people have been telling us is that maybe it also provides some kind of violence in some form, but certainly tonight, the message here is that people in this where i am very happy to see benjamin netanyahu has been too long of the same person for way too long to stephanie,
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tell little bit about the future for himself because he faces court cases and what's the prognosis on those? well, this is the thing, he hasn't only after the prime minister and gone into either of the opposition. he's also law crucial immunity. immunity that is only afford is a prime minister in this country child. it's ongoing faith, georgia, he essentially can go to jail. lauren: so this is something that many people here will speak to will say, well hopefully they're going to put them in jail very now can you give them other people who tell you well there should be a pardon? i think the speculation, the reality is that he faces the so your job to to sit there and face these hard to think that many people who oppose him say that he will do everything to prevent that from happening. they will have everything to stop from going to jail. and as you heard, harry mentioned very publicly that he will do everything to bring down the
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government at the moment. certainly, we know that it is incredibly large and political savvy knows how to operate when it comes to politics in the country. now you've had the religious me as the capacity to make life difficult, particularly for really was united when it came to the idea of getting rid of him. but they'll be challenges when it comes to new legislation that perhaps you could try your beta. because again, you say it's right, it's very little, they will agree on maybe potentially made united states or may not. you may or may not putting in their policy just for driving through that was already said. what does it provide at least these already days or do you happen to have to be getting when they are ready? your nation, perry. i'm ready for the for
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a day ration will be a very, very serious for this. you got the discussion decker and tell you, thank you very much indeed. ah, g 7 leaders of wrapped up their summit and the u. k. releasing a final communique saying 2021 should be a turning point for the world. a group of 7 wealthiest democracies made a series of climate commitments, including net 0 carbon emissions no later than 2050. they also promised to spend $100000000000.00 a year to help poor countries go green. but environmental groups say that pledge isn't enough, lacks detail. the g 7 says it wants to end the pandemic and prepare for the future . they promised 1000000000 vaccine doses for developing nations over the next year to build up manufacturing capacity on all continents and improve an early warning system. and there was
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a clear push to counter china's growing influence over developing nations. they also called beijing to respect human rights in shooting jang region rights accused of major abuses against the week of minority turned our reports from cornwall. they made bold sounding commitments only carbon emissions and the environment, but with the consumption of fossil fuels. just getting around at this summit, you'd think g 7 leaders. we're here to support climate change rather than defeated . tackling time of change is now as much a political communication as challenge as it is a scientific or technological one. we have the skills to address this in time. all we need is the global will to do so. u k has bar is johnson hailed the g 7 fantastic achievements. they all made significant steps forward towards the $100000000000.00 we're going to need by court to support
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develop the developing welding, tackling climate change. i, campaigners and protest as though complained of a lack of ambition ahead of november's climate change summit in glasgow. if we look at the 100000000000 commitment around climate financing, that was committed 2009, and here we are. 12 years later, we still haven't seen it being delivered appearances or everything on these occasions. the leaders looked at ease with one another united in the face of global crisis. but friction and disappointments lurked beneath. there was tension between the u. k and e u leaders over a post briggs, a trade deal, invited delegations here in the in south africa, would have hope to see more movement towards lifting vaccine. patience and host bar johnson wanted to actually raise the 1000000000 doses promise to be donated to poor
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countries, rather than falling well short in the, in the final summit. communicate revealing that g 7 countries have just 870000000 doses to give away over the next 12 months. the some, it's shipments not quite so fantastic. viewed from the global south, there are 2500000000 excess doors. if that they have more said for themselves, and then if they cannot commit, if they've only basically committed an intern for $2000000.00 excess, if they've bucks a 100 percent of your population. so the question is, does that sound urgent to you? does that sound again to anybody else that you haven't did, however, signal the return of us global leadership? america is back in the business of leading the world alongside nations who share our most deeply health values. joe biden stopped off at windsor castle for tea with the queen, before meeting nato allies in brussels and russian president vladimir putin in geneva. later this week, during the whole,
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al jazeera cornwall and the barkers live in winter for so after the meeting between president biden and the queen go what joe and joe biden may have left a couple of hours ago, but the queen is very much still here. the royal standard fly high over windsor castle dust. the meeting went as well as one could expect the bite and said the head of the meeting with queen elizabeth so that they were very much looking forward to this. and given that joe biden is now landed in brussels for talk, 1st of nato and the u. s. a. u summit on tuesday, and that meeting would put in a wednesday by contrast, they must have felt like a bit of light relief. he was welcomed here by queen elizabeth of the main quote to us national anthem was played by the royal band before by the biden's were led inside by queen elizabeth for tea. and we gather that queen elizabeth drinks l gray black with no sugar. they may well seem like a series of formalities,
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but at the end of the day, this is the year in which the british government, at least was hoping to reaffirm britton's place on the global stage and meeting queen elizabeth is a very much the climax when it comes to british soft power and in terms of the optics of it, how is the g 7 perceived to have gone was we her very and, and jonah, how's reports? it's very difficult to understand exactly what clear cut steps have been reached. when going forward from the g 7, we know that g 7 leaders will return to that countries hoping to implement some of the things that were discussed at length by g 7 leaders. but we don't know exactly where they will start in many ways. the g 7 is being viewed as a starting point as a series of broad brush strokes without providing much of them to the bone of the promises made by many of the leaders, including boys, johnson and joe biden. we've heard of course about a massive commitment to raise
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a $100000000000.00 a year to encourage a developing countries to move away from their dependency on fossil fuels, also about to countering china as expansionist hopes by developing a joint infrastructure international scheme really, under the auspices of the united states in developing countries in africa, for instance, in central asia, places where china already has a massive head start. but the hopes that breaks it would be on the sidelines forgotten completely, was simply not the case. it continued to cast a long shadow over the this g 7 summit. so much of the chagrin, or you would imagine all of boards. johnson big questions from the european union as to whether or not the u. k. would honor its commitment to uphold the northern ireland protocol at the end of the g. 77. summit ties between france and the u. k.
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seem to be under great strain. no great conclusion that no great shakes at the end of the day when it comes to smoothing over many of the cracks created by breakfast . but the message overall, the final message from biden and johnson is this is a good start. after a very, very difficult possible year, new baka, thank you very much indeed. still to come this half hour as some is ready to celebrate the asking of benjamin netanyahu. we'll look at what change a new government is likely to bring a hello, we got some fun down pools gathering across eastern parts if you have a favorite cloud here, long line of cloud from the baltic states right down towards the black. so we can see some heavy and foundry showers here, but further west really is all about the heater little tongue of high pressure
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running in across northwest corner if you are. but it really will warm up over the next couple of days. some very high humidity as well, so this could be a hot, sticky, 170 difficult to sleep at night we'll see temperatures in london at around 28 celsius. 30 for paris. gratifying the temperatures picking up for berlin as we go one through the next couple of days as well as that. he just couples a little further eastwards. as for the the rain. well that will continue across a ukraine down into, well bulgaria, pushing across remains somewhat to whether to to that western side of russian that isn't heavy rain just spilling across scandinavia dryer and brights across a good part of the british shells. glasgow 15 celsius. pleasant football weather should we say for mundane glasgow and also in dublin will see temperatures at 28 celsius. therefore, london, similar values we can wanting to choose. they notice that weather weather across the black sea still continuing, some rather wait weather to around the gulf of guinea, and the showers, and making their farther north into southern pass. good molly,
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reminder of stories hello to 0. 27 leaders have wrapped up the summit in the u. k, releasing a final communicate saying 2021 should be a turning point for the world. a group of 7 wealthiest democracies made a series of climate commitments. environmental groups say they aren't enough and lack detailed necessarily, bennett has just been sworn in of israel's new prime minister after his coalition narrowly want a confidence vote on an acrimonious session in the message were outgoing prime minister benjamin netanyahu. supporters tackled bennett. now who says he will be back straight and senior political analyst em i want to shower? who's in paris? so the end of an era for the moment hops. yeah, absolutely. it's a good way of putting it. just like in the united states trumps supporters to to think that he's probably going to be back. i think so we do in israel and
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a lot of his followers believe that he will be back. he certainly does. and if you want a bit more, i really liked, he just said that he wouldn't be attending necessarily, been, it's been our gratian. he would not be attending his successes in operations. so i think the similarities between the former american president and the former israeli . busy prime minister and i quite erie both have been accused of being serious wires. both have been accused of being radical nationalists. both have been accused of betraying a number of people around them. and i think both of them have basically met their destiny for the time being whether he will be able to come back or not, of course, will depend or to a large degree or on a number of things. one is with this question hold. and there are big question marks, whether it is because as we heard through today, the contradictions in the collections are quite huge to left hand, right. and so,
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so for the 2nd, i think we're going to have to see what happens with his trial and whether that's going to be spent and what's gonna happen to him if he's actually finally, you know, goes beyond indictment, to actually be found guilty and probably be fishing and sentence, and hence we'll probably see if we see a change of probability without method. but tell us what is like, i mean, in terms of foreign policy with, for example, iran being big issue amendment, but also in relation to the palestinians. you know, it does not run on the basis of a prime minister's orders, right? i mean there's, there's a strong military establishment. there's a strong to eat in israel. that's basically centered around the military, the, the big business and the mean zionist parties. so i think you could say that in terms of policy was iran in terms of security in terms of occupation in
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terms of supplement and also in terms of relation of the nice things we will see probably more of the same because this was not just be something directly from the prime minister, this will be done through quite a long experienced colonial administration in israel. that basically has a number of wars and committed so much experience in dealing with the neighbors and especially the occupied better students. so i think a lot of what the prime minister saying about, you know, right, this government will see it is probably more about the person of necessarily been it. he's not exactly the most able of people just to remind them or if you are around the world just 2 days ago, he himself could not even past the threshold by that he or his party to enter parliament. so he's not exactly a man with following and he's smart is his park is small and i think his experience
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is limited and he's nothing like that anyhow. in that sense. so we might see a fragile coalition implode and we probably see a prime minister unable to fulfill the responsibilities, whether domestically or in terms of foreign policy. no, i'm sure thank you very much indeed. i'm going now live from west reached by you need been met him and israeli, and arab affairs analyst and former general director and chief editor of israel radio. thanks very much for being with us. so it was incredibly close, wasn't it? why do you think it was so close and what that tells us about the future of this government? he said the government is going to have a lot of difficulties to come to a consensus about the different issues and they will have to raise the majority of the parliament every time they will deal with the crucial matter. so a, dissipate a lot of problems for the government is a very afraid coalition, and they,
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this is why tanya was very confident in the speech that they will not last for long . what would you say the 1st main test will be for it? the main test will be in 2 days on tuesday. the march of the flags of the settlers in these to jerusalem, and the or what the calls on those social media of the palestinians to confront it, be a parade of the flags. the last time may come, us launched the rocket from god to jerusalem, a over the a flag parade. and i think this will be the 1st security challenge of this new government. and we'll see what will happen in 2 days. do you think that the pressure from nathan, yahoo and others will be only detrimental? what do you think that could be an element of them kind of uniting and saying,
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trying to prove him wrong. i didn't understand your question and do, do you think that the pressure from the nation, yahoo and others is something that can it can only damage the government or do you think that can be positives that come out of it in that it could unite the government against it, it's the opposition. it will only cause damage to the new coalition, then it then, you know, is the furious with what happened the he says that this was a big reception. he has 30 mandates indic this a tale. bennett has only 6 and he wants to take advantage, and i think that the starting for tomorrow we will see a very aggressive opposition to this government headed by in the l. what using the changes might be in terms of foreign policy, if any there will be no change in the policy on the crucial issues concerning
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iran. a concerning a settlement in the concerning the creation of a palestinian state, the the difference in the position of the tale. bennett from the positions on the now. and you will actually continue then attorney our policies towards the issues tell us about what we are told you were just reviewing some of those scenes from the class at earlier was incredibly tenants, wasn't it how, how, how tend to meet in general in the country was it just in parliament that it feel so kind of tricia know you. i think that there what we saw is only a small example of what is happening outside these a growing tension among these really society and the head of the security services . the issue, the warning 2 weeks ago, a from the possibility of violence, then the thing for a maybe a political assassinations like happened in 1995 when the prime minister robina was
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assassinated by the right wing, gave a right wing activist. so the atmosphere is full of tension and hate and i'm very worried personally because i was there in november in 1995. when a prime minister assisted they did. and i remember what, what was their pursuit then? it's very similar today to what was the 1995 to tell us about the legacy of missing yahoo, if you had to sum it up, what would you, what would you say it was? it's the you know, way, who early to say what is legacy was but they, i think that he feels he feels that the, the, the last for the state of israel and a, this is a big controversy. name is all about. he may know most of the people in israel are right wing, they think that is done
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a lot for the state of israel. and the other thing that he was a disaster, a e personally saying that he's the one who is preventing iran from achieving nuclear bond for, for many years. and he's the one who made a foreplay peace treaties with our country as a boy for a normalization agreements. and there that is big achievement. these, that the prevent the declaration of independence stephen states which is a great danger for israel. so he sees himself as the savior, israel on these issues and as i told you, the other can mean these are the society, it doesn't think so.
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