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tv   [untitled]    June 14, 2021 8:00am-8:31am +03

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was of interest to people around the world. this is been going on for a number with you guys use of data reports. so return it to national perspective, to try to explain your global audience. how's it could impact your life. this is an important part of the world, and it's very good at bringing the news to the world from here. ah, ah, he's really celebrate id for john coalition takes george ending benny mean that's now 12 years empower. ah, he watching al jazeera alive from dill with me fully bad. people also ahead be on mars ousted leader on time. so she goes on trial as protest continue against her removal in a military cool. it was rachel countries renew obliged to raise millions of dollars
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to help poor countries cut emissions by climate activists say it's not enough and overshadowed by corporate 19, the long delayed copa america football, trying to and kicks off in brazil without france. ah, thank you very much for joining us. benjamin netanyahu 12 year. ron, as israel's foreign minister, has ended after parliament approved a new coalition government by the narrowest of march. in a short time, later writing leader and tiny bennett was sewn in as israel's new leader. harry fosset begins coverage from west jerusalem municipally naked benjamin netanyahu has spent 2 and a half years and 4 elections fighting for his political life. desperate to stay on his, his role as prime minister, so that when the end came, it was quick and by the list of margins,
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an abstention leaving the votes tallied at 60 to 59 against him. israel's longest serving prime minister whose catholic curated image is 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 peach 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 the days proceedings or tried to as prime minister designate, even by the standards of the often rowdy committed. 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 show 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 the world. israel will not allow iran to be equipped with nuclear weapons from an
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early taste of what to expect of him as 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 just what a powerful force that division remains in the can i sit there was the mister hun
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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 whose demanding tangible benefits for his voters may not be. what we're doing is a big sacrifice for people are present and future. we know that this move entailed lots of dangers, a difficult re content not but the opportunity is big for changing the balance of power at the nasa and the upcoming government. last. but to 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 is 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 the ideologies at bay. that coalition together and demonstrate that they can govern and israel can do
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without its now former prime minister. harry full sit al jazeera, west jerusalem, while hundreds have been celebrating the end of many hours time in office. this was a scene in television or being square after crowds heard the vote had passed. hundreds more had gathered earlier outside the message. these really parliament, as a new government was being debated either of the new prime minister of tiny bennet support annexing much of the west bank in opposes the creation of a palestinian faith. ha says the new government won't change anything for those living under occupation, consecutive or whatever form the government does not change the nature of dealing with it. as a settler by entity was the behavior of the government term 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 loc side and red line. one prime minister and tony bennett 1st called to a foreign leader, was
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u. s. president joe biden bennett described him as a great friend of israel early. the white house issued a statement coating by doing this, saying my administration is fully committed to working with the new israeli government to advance security stability and peace for israelis, palestinians, and people throughout the broader region. earlier we spoke to seek but a new bar was the middle east specialist and the author of the gulf region. and israel old struggles, new line says he says, this is a very important moment for israel. i think that does. this is certainly a watershed moment because on the one hand, it is obviously the end of an era of our prime minister netanyahu has towered over, is really politic for nearly 3 decades. and over the last decade asked the uninterested rate at the prime minister. and he has come to non minutes with israel in many circles around the world that he's also recognized beyond the middle east,
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in places like india and china and in the west. so, so with his departure. so of course, the level of a certain because both natalie bennett and his coalition, part dinero, peter, shirley, political, no business who have been able to put a really 1st time in modern is really history to coupled together in national unit, the government that comprises parties from the right and the left including an error party which has its origin in the most of the brotherhood. so this is a very diverse coalition that was not easy to stick together. and with that comes in the new era. we don't quite know what that will entail. as of yet, but i do think that the commitment from all the party leaders, including of the rom error party is clear to try to bring in a new direction for the country and other wells news. the trial of me on march,
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the polls leader and fans or cheese you to begin in the coming hours. she is facing a range of charges and is appearing alongside the countries asked the president when meant, and maybe the former mayor, my on. so she has been under house arrest since the military took over. in february, tony chang has more from bangkok, a neighbouring thailand on the charges. she faces post challenges that were presented almost immediately after the crew were, were holding onto illegal telecom's devices, namely walkie talkies and cell phone blocking devices. they're apparently in her apartment a since then they've added new challenges, 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 coo and last week, they added a new charge is 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
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power and influence to get cheap land prices in the name of the foundation she was 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 worse nonetheless, given the current situation in men more, 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 held very much in isolation. allies been communicated with her to weiss. this is the 1st time to meet her in person. and there are some concerns that she may be in full health being held so far away from, from anybody. and that she doesn't know what's been going on a minima. over the last month. since that happened. while dozens of people have marched through myanmar, the largest city to call for an end to military vote, some burned a flag representing the association of southeast asian nation. a saying has been
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meeting 100 for the amount of effort to resolve the 5th week to feel robinson a battle. this is the deputy asia director of human rights watch and joined advice from bank. very good to have you with us again on al jazeera, felt that thought with a trying to, i can. so she, that begins today, what do you make of the charges against her? and she liked to get a fair trial. while these charges are bo guess and they're politically motivated, all you need to know, for instance, is like the walkie talkie charged that has been brought against her. those walkie talkies were actually owned by her body guards who were provided by the ministry of home affairs. and the ministry at home affairs, in the pre qu, government was controlled by the military. you know, these are the kind of charges that are being abroad again, since they're politically motivated. and they're intended to basically knocked her out of the political arena and keep her under arrest and ultimately in some sort of imprisonment to basically run out the clock on her in the national league for
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democracy party, which one then they november 2020 election. yeah. so why, why go ahead with this trial if this is just an attempt, as you say, to, to stop any challenge from her in the future. i mean, why, why pretend, i guess, to hold her told this, right? well, that's a good question. i think it comes in part from the international pressure. it comes also, i think from a recognition that holding, you know, someone who is the leader of the government in, in, in indefinite detention without char, without significant movement on the charges would be untenable. we don't think that she's going to get a fair trial. this is a court that is beholden to the military and will basically do what the military asked to do. so if, if, as you say this is an attempt to news or any sort of challenge to the military rule, then what impact will it have you think on, on the almost daily protests we've seen in march in february. cool,
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i think it will create greater anger, particularly amongst the as the berman, you know, which is 65 percent of the population, among whom on times, which is hugely popular. you know, she is the most popular political figure in the country. there is no doubt about that, and they will see her once again as a martyr for democracy and human rights which have been stripped away from the burmese people by this military winter. the military ministry of foreign affairs has released the statement today accusing the un of unfair and inaccurate assessment. the situation in mar, after the you and human rights chief called it human rights catastrophe. do you feel, do you feel that the international community feel has done enough? asian leaders have done enough to put pressure on this military? well, there are 2 parts of this. i mean, on one hand, we want to see more international action, particularly targeted economic sanctions. to cut off funds, for instance, like the oil and gas money that the martin kill,
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who does receiving. we also want to see a global arms embargo, which the un security council has failed to pass in the resolution. but we also see there is a dynamic where the un is being bypassed by the military. want to talk to asi on because they think they're going to better get a better deal from os ian and the asi on itself as a regional body, has been much more willing to defend the myanmar military hunter. so they're playing political games here. they're maneuvering to sort of marginalize international concern about me on mar and unfortunately parts the international committee are falling down on their job to stand up for the people and me on more and for the restoration of democracy. he'll robinson from human rights watch. thank you very much for talking to us. thank you. still ahead on al jazeera found in this race by conflict. any law has threatened with eviction from the camps. they've called home for 7 years. ah.
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hello there. the weather is lossy set for as usual across the middle east, but we have got a few showers just popping off across northern parts of oman, some lively down. pause here, some sundry showers at that as well. it has caused some localized flooding, the stiff shamal wind will continue to blow out over iraq, down across q 8, that east side of saudi arabia. so lifted dust and sand on the cards here. ready for the next few days and more, that very hot sunshine. but as you can see, lots of hazy sunshine, not too much wet weather in the forecasts might catch a shower or 2 up towards the black sea, central western positive turkey fan aside. it does look dry, hot and sunny dry on sunday to cross the horn of africa. we have got one or 2 showers just coming in across the highlands. not too much to speak of should be
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a little bit weather than it is at the moment. but those showers the all and the last one or 2 showers to just around the gulf if you need to common room, southern parts of nigeria. on the other hand, seeing some a wet weather south of that, it's generally dry across southern africa. lots of sunshine coming through. pleasant autumn sunshine into south africa. cape town, 1900 celsius port elizabeth. similar value along with jo beth. we got some may be running low for the eastern side of madagascar over the next couple of days with the possibility of some local study. the news in the us going capital coming may not have been really maternity clinic killing pregnant women need wives and baby one on when he traveled to afghanistan or even newborns. our targets on al jazeera, something was going to change. anything really changed. this is the demick violin that needs to be addressed at its core. we are in a race against the area and know what to say. so we are also looking at the world
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as it is right now, not the world. we like it to be, the devil is always going to be in the details. the bottom line when i was just there, i'm me. oh, i welcome back. a recap of our top stories on al jazeera white wing nationalists. natalie bennett has been so name as israel, the new leader, after parliament approved a new coalition government by now launching it and spend a minute now was 12 via grape on power. bennett has spoken with the u. s. president, calling him a great friend of israel earlier, joe biden said he was looking forward to strengthening by natural time. and now the news trial of march, the post leader unsigned to cheese. due to begin in the coming hours. she is facing
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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 have wrapped up their summit in the u. k releasing a final statement saying 2021 should be a turning point for the world. agreed on new targets to tackle climate change, including money to help reduce emissions in developing countries. but environmentalists say the practice and, and bishop enough, john a hallway for some con wall. they made bold sounding commitments on the 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 communications challenge as it is a scientific or technological one. we have the skills to address this in time. all
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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 $100000000000.00. we're going to need by court to support develop the developing welding tattling, 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
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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. 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 said for themselves. and then if they cannot commit, if they've only basically committed an intern, 14000000 excess, if they've bucks a 100 percent of your population. so the question is, does that sound argent to you? does that sound against anybody else? the g 7 did, however, signal the return of us global leadership. america is back in the business of
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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, al jazeera cornwall, while the chinese embassy and the u. k has responded to the g sevens, communicate which criticize beijing on a number of issues, including reported human rights abuses in machine john region. in a statement, the spokesperson said that communicate distorted and reverse remarks on shing john . hong kong taiwan deliberately slandered china and arbitrarily interfered in china's internal affairs as well as exposing the sinister intentions of a few countries such as the united states as springing katrina, you are correspondent in beijing, a lengthy response. katrina from the chinese embassy in london to this g 7 statement talk us through. what else? 5th, ed. that's right,
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and the chinese embassy in london criticized the jews 7th block as a whole saying, but during a time of global pandemic, the international community should be banding together. there should be a sense of unity, but instead these g 7 leaders, we're creating a small click to create frictions, and so discord. unsurprisingly, as you mentioned, there was targeted criticism of the us accusing of creating artificial conflicts is what it said and slander, in order to contain china and then went on to elaborate on some messages. we have heard before from beijing saying that she's young, that there were no such thing as human rights abuses or anything close to genocide saying that all those measures taking place with the week is were about anti terrorism. it said that when it came to taiwan, that this was an inalienable part of china, and that all the countries in the world should respect the one china principal. and when it came to coerce of trade practices in paris by beijing on other countries,
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it said that baiting was again in a responsible international player. and that it contributed roughly 30 percent of annual global economic growth in recent years. so from messages we have heard before, and then early a statement, china said that the days were a small group of countries dictated the decisions of the world, were long gone. so very strong words from china, but it does feel a lot of pressure from this. this g 7, joint communique was the strongest rebuke we've heard from the g 7 towards china since $989.00 gentlemen square cracked down. but in reality, this pressure, that paging is feeling now is unlikely to push it towards changing its behavior. more likely, what it will do is push time towards forming its own clicks and strengthening its own alliances with russia and other countries. for example, in the in africa region in opposition to the g 7 countries. katrina, thank you very much. katrina you. if correspondent in beijing, china,
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malaysia has extended a nation wide, long time for 2 more weeks after a sharp increase in daily, over 1000 infections. an average of more than 5000 new cases have been confirmed every day for the past week. flying 3 has more from caroline for 32 weeks into the lockdown and we started to see cases come down very slowly there still hovering around the 5000 mark. but there was a peak at 9000 mark when malaysian reported 9000 cases, new daily cases a day. now, 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 pope it 19 cases that come back 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
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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 condemning and malaysia is no longer at the point where it was in march, 2020 in need of more find it needs a final instrument to deal with what, what it, what's happening right now and that, that approach, it needs to be war new and, and how such but say a better approach would be to conduct more test, more white threat testing and more effective contact tracing. because the data shows that cases are already in the community and these is for attic, meaning health expense. don't know where these inspections are coming from. to americans are going on trial in japan, accused of helping former nissan chairman carlos go and flee the country in 2019. the trial will be the 1st appearance by michael taylor and his son peter think they
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were extradited from the u. s. in march. going was being held on financial misconduct charges when he escaped to lebanon, to iraq. now the government is closing, the last displacement. cam thunder is control tens of thousands of lead. i. so being forced to relocate authorities say they want to reintegrate people back into society. but many say they have no way to go him non con, re, for some couple muscle, sorry, the 7 years, but her k camp and others like it to become home for those who fled. i saw the salt and takeover of large parts of iraq 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, our land on the saw, i can't go back because here we have some help, at least i'll houses destroyed. there's nothing to return back to. if we go back, where do we live under the sky?
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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 out there i didn't says being set up 7 years ago, but her k is become home to many babies have become children. families afford bonds with each other. the count provides basic services such as water and limited electricity, but still offers more of a community than the destroyed houses they left behind. the iraqi government is shot 16 of 20 camps. it controls down and he's putting pressure may 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 and federal government finance is the camp. electrical model, 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 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
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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 the 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 non existent. 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 have 100 families move back the adult home and jobs. it will make the situation
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verse video begging the street, and this will verse and the all ready 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. iraq on our 0, most of be controversial, caught by american football competition, has kicked off in brazil. the whole country is being criticized for agreeing to hold the turn of mentoring the pandemic. the original whole sergeant, tina and columbia opted to cancel the event that his way to bolivia and now columbia have all reported corporate infections among their staff. since arriving in brazil, one has more from an error on why they're trying to mend,
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has been so controversial. well, it have been very divisive because it has become a political event until now more than a sports event with people that were supporting, holding the cup america here seen as supporters of president j bowles and i don't people that were against it seen as his opponents and like the brazilian team, and it's head coach, had asked football authorities of people that are organizing this tournament not to hold the tournament in 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's 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
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was organized at the last minute and the vice president came in and said that the head coach should go with, he didn't want to play. and so politics got involved with force and, 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 the death championship. and wilson himself trying to show this as you know, of football, which, which has always brought popularity to politicians here. ah, logan, i'm fully back the ball. with the headlines on al jazeera white wing nationalists, natalie bennett has been stolen in as israel, as new leader. after parliament approved a new.

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