tv [untitled] June 14, 2021 6:00am-6:31am +03
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of the vista cation and mechanics, at the time was the extravagant elephant clock, ah, written around $85080.00. the book contains a range of ingenious inventions and contractions, science and a golden age. with jim alkalinity on al jazeera, the ah israeli celebration as the front dr. coalition takes charge, ending benjamin it was 12 years in power gain. the form of prime minister of our top will be incoming governments calling it bad and dangerous. ah, play watching your life from don't with me fully bad. people also coming out the
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most outfit leader unsigned food. she goes on trial as protests continue against her removal in a military court. and the world's richest countries renew a place to raise billions of dollars for countries, count emissions, but comment activists say it's not enough. ah, thank you for joining us. 20 minutes. yeah. has 12 year brian, as israel prime minister, has ended after parliament approved a new coalition government by the narrowest of margins. shortly after writing liter enough. tiny bennett with thorny as israel. a new leader faucet begins coverage from western slim. mean it's negative. benjamin netanyahu has spent 2 and a half years and poor elections fighting for his political life. desperate to stay on his israel's prime minute to go down. when the in came,
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it was quick and by the slimmest of margins and abstention, leaving the votes tallied at 60 to 59 against him. israel's longest serving prime minister, whose catholic curated image as its indispensable leader, had to be told to give up his seat. swapping it instead for that of the leader of the opposition, the outgoing incumbent jala. he'd only too happy to make way. natalie bennett, but it was the peat pop in coalition natalie bennett, who took the oath 1st to replace nathan, yahoo! it was the 2nd time he'd been at the podium earlier. he began today's proceedings or tried to as prime minister designate, even by the standards of the often rowdy method. this was a concerted campaign to prevent him from speaking in between. he thanked netanyahu promised to work for all israelis and sought to defend his right wing credentials against the attackers people shawl from the skeller govern renewing the nuclear deal with iran is a mistake that will, once again lend legitimacy to one of the most discriminatory and violent regimes in
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the world, israel will not allow iran to be equipped with nuclear weapons from an early taste of what to expect of him is opposition needa fake, right. he called him damage because in fake, you mean he said bennett couldn't be trusted to stand up, not just to iran, but to a u. s. administration that wanted to return to the nuclear deal, actually, methodological him. so i have a message, i have a message to those who a joyful into iran and to those who do as they say and his belong and hum us, the opposition in israel will have a loud and clear voice. and i have another message for them. just as important if there's one thing that's characterized reasons is ready politics, it's division bitter and intractable, plunging this country into a political crisis at last it for more than 2 years. for all the talk about changing with this change government netanyahu in the manner of his going demonstrated what
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a powerful force that division remains in the can i sit there was the briefest of hand shakes on monday, netanyahu's refusing to hold the traditional public ceremony to accompany the handover of power. the other big break with convention is the place in this coalition for a palestinian israeli party, united arab list of months, or a bus who's demanding tangible benefits for his voters. my not going to be what we're doing is a big sacrifice for people are present and future. we know that this move entails lots of dangers, a difficult that we can to not, but the opportunity is big for changing the balance of power at the nasa. and the upcoming government last but many israelis, the biggest adjustment, even for the narrow majority who voted for times to move on from him, will be getting used to in israel, not led by benjamin netanyahu, who's so dominated, not just politics, but life here. that knew i was making it clear he's not ready to move on. he will fight to splinter this new government and return. bennett le pete and the rest will have to hold the divergent ideologies at bay. the coalition together and
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demonstrate that they can govern and israel can do without its now former prime minister. harris will sit al jazeera, west jerusalem for hundreds have been celebrating the end of nathan yahoo! time in office. it was the scene in television or bean square after crowd heard the vote had passed. hundreds more gathered outside the message earlier while the new government was being debated. stephanie deca was among the crowds in television. the it's just been and now that israel has a new government, has the new prime minister, not up to 12 here, a benjamin netanyahu. how can i be there where there's been a lot of crab trying out of ration as you can see, believe that they know that they are going to be i need the way for the opposite. a lot of people who are telling us it's not a benjamin netanyahu,
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and up me that it is time for change, even though there will be challenges and how long will the government but what they're saying, it will be a balance. this is what they're saying because you were dealing with math center, right? even for the 1st time and israeli thing, it should be what we spoke here will at least now there may be some problem when they come out and write something that there hasn't been before. i israel, new prime minister enough, tiny bennett support annexing much of the west bank and opposes the creation of a palestinian state. hamas says the new government won't change anything for those living under occupation, consecutive or whatever form these government have not changed the nature of dealing with it as a settler occupy entity was the behavior of the government. and the way and nature of dealing with it on the ground, we continue to firms as well as video blog and all the sites and alexa, red line,
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one prime minister in italy. bennett's 1st call to a foreign leader was us president joe biden by bennett, described him as a great friend of israel. early of the white house issued a statement coating biting to say, my administration is fully committed to working with a new israeli government to advance security stability and peace for israelis, palestinians, and people throughout the broader region. cable elizondo has more on that from washington. well, we have heard from president joe biden read out from his call with prime minister bennett. according to the read out, joe biden congratulated new prime minister of israel, said that he would support that. the u. s. support for israel would remain steadfast and said that they would continue to talk about key issues, particularly iran at the us would remain steadfast behind israel
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security. it's interesting because after joe biden became president, it took about 4 weeks before he and former prime minister benjamin netanyahu spoke on the phone for the 1st time. that's about 4 weeks. benjamin netanyahu invite and had a decades long relationship, sometimes very contentious. but you could tell that there was not an immediate embrace of netanyahu by biden, when he became president. this is now change because it only took a couple hours after bennett became prime minister for joe biden. and bennett to speak on the phone so that significant in of itself. so what you're basically seeing here is main figures within the u. s. government, particularly the very top, joe biden, wanting to immediately establish a relationship with the new players there in israel to move things forward. in the world news, the trial of me on march, the opposed leader and france,
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which is due to begin in the coming hours. she is facing a range of charges and is appearing alongside the countries on the president when men and maybe to form a mare the out on. so she has been under house arrest since the military took over in february. let's speak to tony chang in bangkok, in neighboring thailand. tony's tell us about the charges on the fence which is facing well, the 1st challenge is that were presented to almost immediately after the qu, holding onto illegal telecoms devices, namely walkie talkies and cell phone docking devices. they're apparently in her apartment a since then they've added new charges of flouncing the current of virus restrictions during the election campaign last year. the election campaign of the military says was flawed, and was the reason for the february, the 1st coup in last week. they added new charges, very substantial ones of corruption pointing to 11 kilograms of gold and $600000.00 us dollars that she is accused of receiving and using her power and influence to
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get cheap land prices in the name of the foundation to set up in her mother's name . now her lawyers have said that these charges are absurd. they say they are hoping for the best, but preparing for the worst. nonetheless, given the current situation in men, they could be very serious. she could be facing between 10 and 40 years in jail. we've seen very little of her since the 31st cuz she's been hell very much in isolation. her lawyers were communicated with her twice. this is the 1st time to meet her in person. and there are some concerns that she may be in pool health. being held so far away from, from anybody and that she doesn't know what's been going on over the last month since the could happen. right. and so is this likely to have any impact on the process that have been occurring almost daily since the february 1st school?
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well, that's an interesting question because she has been such a dominant figure in the pro democracy movement for decades. a think ahead during those 15 years when she was held under house arrest and the last 10 years, which is effectively been at the head of the government. the one of the core demands and those protested is that she and the senior n l. the leaders be released immediately and all of these charges dropped. nonetheless, we have seen something of a transition. she has been held very much in isolation. her lawyer say she herself doesn't really know what's what's going on at the moment. we've seen a new generation of leaders emerge, have many of them just the student leaders who've taken to the streets themselves. so this may signify something of a change in me on my politics, particularly she herself, is 76 years old already. nonetheless, i think she is seen very much as a universal figurehead and i'm very much a rallying figure, despite the say that internationally,
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her reputation has been somewhat tarnished because of her refusal to denounce the military crack. down on the hanger and 2017. she's still with me and mom is very much the figurehead for this democracy movement. and that's the thing that's motivating this protest is to go out. despite the dangers they faced from the military, almost every day. tony chang in bangkok, thank you very much, tony. if you appears prime minister abbey made his calling for unity ahead of next week's national and regional parliamentary elections. it is facing international condemnation for deploying the military against the regional government in the north voting will not take place in the war on t gray region election, then 2 other regions have also been post after one week, e t o p will old 6 national elections which are the 1st of their kind of new figures. this election, the government wants it to be peaceful, democratic and equally inclusive of all parties in the council of lawmakers. we
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want a government in which all parties collaborate on key issues by prioritizing the benefits of the country, acting, not as traitors, but his fighters. while activists from t grey warning of an eminent government offensive the global society of tea grace, callers and professionals has written an open letter to g 7 leaders. voicing that concern. finding broke out in tea gray november between ethiopia, government and the regions former ruling party, the t great people's liberation front, hundreds have been killed in thousands displace. still ahead on al jazeera 1000 disgrace by conflict in iraq are threatened with eviction from the camps that called home for 7 years and overshadowed by corporate 19 the long delayed copa. america kicked off in brazil. ah
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hello, welcome to look at the international forecast. we're still got some rather live a shout because the southeast corner of the u. s. circle to southern played some other wet weather here as well. but really the story very much about the heat across much of north america, some very high temperatures, through the plains, over towards the eastern seaboard, and particularly down towards the south west $47.00 celsius, the phoenix over the next couple of days. very dry air, very hot had high, far risk continues, of course, somewhat cooler up towards the northwest into the pacific northwest need to that western side of canada, some showers, some longest spells of rain, just spilling in here. meanwhile, the wet weather will continue around the carolinas, down towards the florida panhandle, from west weather to for monday, up towards a northeast corner of a hue, made some lively showers, just puffing off from time to time and that eastern side of the lakes, the garage is a little further eastwards as we go on through tuesday,
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me see how the skies do open up plenty of sunshine, but a few showers there just across the deep south ways. dana, mississippi, alabama right across towards georgia. so very heavy rain linking back across the southern parts of mexico. big down post coming in here, we could see some flooding as to the caribbean, plenty of sunshine, but michele is as well. ah, it's one of the biggest clubs in south america. but its greatest rival is just a few blocks away. a mutual dislike between fans formed from a class device sustained over generations. most bulky, junior support is born into these club colors. in an epic feud of rich versus poor . the fans who make football. when i was just the europe, me the
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the me welcome back. a recap of our top stories on al jazeera right wing nationalists. natalie bennett has been sworn in as israel as new leader after parliament approved a new coalition government by a narrow margin. it ends spending 12. yeah, great on power. bennett has spoken with us president joe biden, calling him a great friend of israel early, abide, and said he was looking forward to strengthening by natural ties and the trying to me and marsh people's leader on fans. so cheese you to begin in the coming hours. she's facing several charges including illegally accepting goals and payments. so she has been under house arrest in the military took over in february g. 7. leaders
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have wrapped up their summit in the u. k releasing a final statement saying 2021 should be a turning point for the world. they agreed on new targets to tackle climate change, including money to help reduce emissions in developing countries. but environmentalists say the pledges aren't ambitious enough. join a whole report from cornwall. they made bold sounding commitments on 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 and communications challenge as it is a scientific or technological what 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 seven's fantastic achievements. they all made significant steps forward towards the
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$100000000000.00 we're going to need by court to support develop the developing world and 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 in trade deal, invited delegations here in the or in south africa,
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would have hope to see more movement towards lifting vaccine. peyton's and host bar, as johnson will have wanted to actually raise the 1000000000 doses promise to be donated to poor 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 achievements quite so fantastic. viewed from the global south, there are 2500000000 accessed those if that they have most of that for themselves. and then if they cannot commit it, they've only basically committed the intern $14000000.00 excess if they've bucks a 100 percent of the population. so the question is, does that sound argent to you that that's not going to anybody else? the g 7 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,
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before meeting nato allies in brussels and russian president vladimir putin in geneva. later this week, during a whole, al jazeera cornwall or made her leaders are hoping to reset transatlantic relations at a summit with us president joe biden on monday, washington face a new strategic concept will be discussed at the meeting in brussels. it includes action on china's growing military presence and cyber threats from russia. they found that aims to turn the page on for 10 years with violence predecessor, donald trump, who call the lions obsolete. russian president vladimir putin says he expects this week summit with joe biden will help restore the relationship between moscow and washington, which he says is that at its noah's point in years, it seems to me that it will help restore our contacts, establish a direct dialogue, create a functioning mechanism for action in areas that are mutual interest. there are such interests. the american side is also talking about the same and i generally
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agree with them that indeed there are some issues of mutual interest, strategic stability, regional conflicts concern for the environment in a global sense. these are the issues in which we can really work effectively. with malaysia has extended a nation wide lockdown for 2 more weeks after a sharp increase in daily new covered 1900 infections. an average of more than 5000 new cases have been confirmed every day for the past week. gatherings and non essential travel will still be banned. schools and universities will remain close. drawing 3 is on correspondent in malaysia. she joins us live from college or so what's the expectation in florence? will this extension starting today be enough to start this late? this outbreak was already 2 weeks into the lockdown and we started to see cases come down very slowly there still hovering around the $5000.00 marks. but there was
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a peak at 9000 mark when relation reported 9000 cases, new daily cases a day, no health experts, however, say that malaysia policy ought to be looking at more than just the number of new cases a day. it ought to be looking at positivity, right? and that's the rate of hope it 19 cases that come back positive out of the number of cases, number of total tests that are done. now the w h o standard is set at 5 percent. malaysia's positivity rate is between 7 and 10 percent to health experts say that suggests that more testing needs to be done. and if there are more tests, the likelihood, the very high likelihood is that there will be even higher number of daily new cases. and what they're also saying is that a lockdown is a blunt instrument to tackle the pandemic. and malaysia is no longer at the point where it was in march, 2020 in need, a more find it needs a final instrument to deal with what, what it,
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what's happening right now. and that, that approach, it needs to be wor, new and, and how much but say a better approach would be to conduct more test, more widespread testing, and more effective contact tracing. because the data shows that cases are already in the community. and these are for adding meaning health, but don't know where these inspections are coming from. now, of course, to conduct more test, it means that needs to be more personnel, people who are trying to take samples to take swap. and that's the difficulty that malaysia is facing at the moment. its health care resources are over stretched. the intensive care unit side over capacity, why the hospitals have enough to increase the number of bits. per cobit 900 patients, more people need intensive care. more people are being brought into hospital, so that's the problem that malaysia faces at the moment. now the other way out of this is to increase vaccination and we've seen that already happen in west and nation where vaccination rates are high and that's what the government is trying to achieve. it's getting more supplies and it's putting out mobile vaccination units.
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but at the moment, only 4 percent of the total population it's fully vaccinated and the government says it's aiming to bring that number. thank you for that update to grow and we live in to iraq now where the government is closing, the last displacement cam sander is control tens of thousands who fled. i sort of being forced to relocate. authorities say they want to reintegrate people back into society, but many say they have no way to go him on can re, for some most so the 7 years. but her k camp and others like it to become home for those who fled ice over salt and takeover of large parts were rock in 2014. now the iraqi government wants the people to go home and these camps are the threat of closure. but those here, so they have nowhere to go. marge, orlando, messiah i can't go back because here we have some help and least houses destroyed.
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there's nothing to return back to. if we go back, where do we live under the sky? here at least we have a tent. the government wants us. how did this camp? but they haven't helped us to go anywhere else. families after his being set up 7 years ago. but her gay has become home to many babies, have become children, families for bonds with each other. the camp provides basic services such as water and limited electricity, but still offers more of a community than the destroyed houses they left behind. the rocky government as shut 16 of 20 camps. it controls down and he's putting pressure on the autonomy as a kurdish regional government to show camps and its territory. the camp director works where the n g o linked to the kurdish regional government, which together with the iraq federal government finance is the camp. electrical matter. i keep my the kurdish regional government won't cut the aid to these families and we won't force them to return back if they want to leave will help
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them leave. the federal government has stopped some aid in a bid to encourage people to leave every month more families arrive at this camp from others that have been closed. the rocky federal government has stopped helping new arrivals with food puzzles and the camps managers can only give them shelter. they also say they have nothing a home to return to. and this is what they don't want to return back to now, and i still took over mosul in 2014. they killed or displaced most of the population. then when the iraqi forces took it back, whole neighborhoods like these were completely destroyed, but it's not just hair. it's also in villages and towns surrounding mosul, where a lot of these displaced people come from. now here the pace of rebuilding is slow, but in most small towns and villages is practically nonexistent. most of the rebuilding effort seems we focused on the unesco heritage site. the all new re mosque, the former headquarters of isolates, but with a few homes, even remotely livable, who might go to the rebuild mosque is the question i have. i think that's 100
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families move back the adult home and jobs. it will make the situation of earth video begging the streets, and this will verse and the all of the bed economic situation. most of these families are eligible for compensation, but few families. kevin received anything on it. out of the 73000 families who have asked for help to rebuild and move home since 2018. only 2000 have received help. according to human rights groups, the thousands of people, the camps, are there any option, but there are a few left and the pressure to ship them is growing every day. emron calling out 0, mosul to americans are going on trial in japan. accuse of housing for my nissan german carlos. go and see the country in 2019. the trial will be the 1st appearance by michael taylor and his son peter. since they were extradited from the u. s. in march, going was being held on financial misconduct challenges when he escapes 11 on is
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still wanted by japanese of tony police in nicaragua have arrested for more opponents of president. daniel ortega in what critics a connie, an assault on democracy, nearly a dozen have been detained this month, including 4 hoping to run against ortega, in november's election. he's alive, fi the candidates reach was on for in financing. opponent say the president is trying to eliminate competition and extend his 14 years in power. the controversial copa american football competition has kicked off in brazil. the whole countries facing a backlash for agreeing to hold the tournament. during the pandemic, the original host stopped to cancel the event, columbia as an aide to seem to report cover the infections among its after hours before its match against ecuador. when k and i kit has more from read a janera on why the championship has been so controversial. well, it have been very divisive because it has become a political event until now more than
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a sports event with people that were supporting, holding the cup america here seen as supporters of president j both and i don't and people that were against it seen as his opponents and like the brazilian team and its head coach, had football authorities of people that are organizing this tournament not to hold the tournament. and brazil. brazil is about to have to reach another grim milestone of half a 1000000 dead by coven 19. there's a parliamentary inquiry going on right now investigating the government handling of the pandemic. and they simply had asked for, for this tournament, not to be here. they said, it wasn't for political reasons. it was also technical reasons. they say everything was organized at the last minute and the vice president came in and said that the
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head coach should go with, he didn't want to play. and so politics got involved with sports and this is pretty much what happened. also, we must think that were present so not as practically on the campaign trail for next year's election. so you have his opponents trying to show this as a depth championship and both so now to himself trying to show this as you know of football, which, which has always brought popularity to politicians here. ah, no, again, i'm fully battle with the headlines on al jazeera right. we nationalists, natalie bennett, has been sworn in as a new leader after parliament approved a new coalition government by a narrow margin. it ends spending mean next yahoo! 12 year grip on power. then it leaves the correlation of 8 parties with.
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