tv [untitled] June 15, 2021 10:30pm-11:01pm +03
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importance on reports of problems that are a nuclear power plant in neighboring one province. the plant which is jointly operated by china, one on nuclear power group and the french multinational electric company electricity. the phones has been dealing with a performance issue, so cold, but is apparently operating within safety limits. but electricity, the france says it's investigating media reports that have been normal levels of radioactive gas had leap from the plant. china says there are no signs of abnormalities. ah and other top stories on al jazeera, he's really far right. nationalists have held what they call the flag march through occupied east jerusalem. israeli police move dozens of how the stimuli from outside the system, the mask escape before the controversial gladly. 27 were injured. the rally was
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delayed from last month, but was given the go ahead by the new government. the palestinian prime minister says it's a publication and factions pulled for a day of rage against the e. u and the u. s. a. resolve the 17 year back over aircraft subsidies, the deal suspense, paris for 5 years for boeing, and they are bus us president joe biden call that a major breakthrough and says it will help counter china's anti competitive practices in the a v, a sion sector. we had an excellent meeting among friends and allies, and this meeting started with a breakthrough on aircraft the agreement we have now really opened a new chapter in our relationship because we moved from litigation to corporation on aircraft. and that after almost 20 years of dispute,
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it is the longest trade dispute in the history of w t. o. or president biden is now in geneva, where he's going to meet his russian counterpart. let me put in last time the man met was 10 years ago and ties between russia and the us have, have new lows since then. the agenda is expected to include cyber crime, election, meddling on control and human rights. more than 600000 people have now died from corona virus in the united states since the 1st country to pass that figure. it's also had the most cases more than 33000000. but the vaccination drive is rapidly bringing down the daily figures. climate change may have already passed and irreversible tipping point. that's the warning from a top arctic researcher in the biggest ever expedition to new york take more than $300.00 scientists spent more than a year. gathering data they found that arctic ice is retreating faster than ever
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before. the stream is thanks. more news than half an hour, but me. ah. and they're welcome to the stream. i'm josh rushing. i'm hosting for me. ok. who's out today and lucky enough to do it. if you're watching this on youtube, check this out. see that over there. that's like a live discussion that's happening. and we actually have a stream producer who's in there waiting to get your comments to me so that they can be part of the show today. and for the show today, we're talking about the situation with the refugees in bangladesh and cox's bazaar
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is now the largest refugee camp in the world. it's approaching a 1000000 people, something nearly like a 1000000 people. and so to ease some of the pressure there, the bangladesh government has moved about 20000, these refugees out to an island called boston shar, and they've really kind of pitched, this is like chance for a better life. there's going to be schools and medical facilities, but a recent human rights watch report has actually called me to show you this on my computer here in island jail in the middle of the sea. so we will talk about the stacy, what's actually happening. and this chart i'm joined by 3 gas to do it in studio and join. i way, way new way, way can you tell us a bit about yourself? sure, thank you. thank you for having me. so my name is way we knew i am a real hint job and myself. i was born and raised in kind state to a rule hinder,
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political family. my family was deeply involved in bernice democracy, move men. my father was and elected parliamentarian in 1990 elections due to his in both men, my family and i where put in do for a long time imprisonment. we spend 7 years in prison and we were released in 2012 and then i become an activist. right now. i run an organization called womens piece networking in my where we promote peace and human rights in mont and for the rest of their enjoy. and my great thanks for being here where we really appreciate it. not a we you share a bit about yourself with our audience. sure, thank you so much for having me. my name is nadia hardman and i am a research in the refugee and micro rights division of human rights watch. and i supported in the production of this report and i used to live in me, and i have done some work in the written, idp comes in the in time and comes and rock. i'm state, great, great. and then timber,
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much for audience on out there will know who you are already, but if you'll tell them the correspondence are english and bangladesh. i've been covering the news since august 25th of 192017. sorry for almost 4 years now covering the cam. they inflect so good with the community made a lot of friends and i remember understanding about the situation on the ground. all right, so let's start with this video from the bang. what us government promoting the island a boss and shark we bring this up. a 120 trust hours, including franklin shelf is built equipped with water reservoir, eco friendly kitchen and separate muscle. solar power systems are installed to ensure 24 hours electricity for the rest of the adequate
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school health care services, including hospitals and community clinics have been filled to support between your families. ah, child has been developed in a way so that we can get people can improve their social life and be benefited financially. they can work in agriculture sector, fish, farming, and animal husbandry before make them economically independent. for nadia, it may not be met in the they have been gone, but it looks pretty nice on the video. however, the report that just came out says something quite different. he talks. what do you guys about? yes they, they look we, we've interviewed over a 167 renter refugees. $117.00 of them on bus $150.00. and
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this is and then 30 of those ended up on by sunshine. so we've spoken to a lot of people and what you see in the film in this propaganda video is simply not what you get. the island is not fit for purpose. putting aside maybe for the moment, the fact that it lies in the baseband goal, an area subject to deadly sight cleanse. and now we find ourselves in the middle of a monsoon season. all that was promised in that video, access to livelihood fishing husbandry, hospital, health care facilities, quality education simply has not been provided. instead, what we see is that people were forcibly relocated in some instances directly by finding the names on the list when they hadn't put them on the an in directly by being misled about the condition. we've recorded abuses as well by security officials, restrictions on freedom of movement. children being beaten, or trying to access
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a different block than the one that they find themselves. and just today, i mean we can't verify this, but i read a report today, she may see 3 children have died because of a diarrhea outbreak preventable disease. on the island, there is a diarrhea outbreak. and many people, many thousands of people, apparently a suffering. and there aren't enough medical supplies and your reports really kind of a rare look at what's happening on the island because to very keep trying to get out there without 0 cameras for a while. now kiki told me about that. why? why you haven't been able to go that we've been trying for 2 years and it's always been a promise of next month falling 2 months later, you know, because the transmission is going to be granted by the national security intelligence and the prime minister's office. no other government bodies actually as authorized to give us permission. they never say know that we kind of go, but we've been in touch with a lot of that are interested in living in that to our context in the camp and conference, but that some of them i got to know. now,
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given the benefit of the government does one to improve the situation for them. i don't think the government has a bad intention. that's done a lot for the community. we have to praise bye with this for what is done for rain or do also. now, having said all that, the commendation according to the record is not me. i haven't seen that except for what's in the picture. talking to a lot of them are actually living there. they have no complaint structure or say, or they're commendation itself. what their main concern is that isolated, you know, they don't have that kind roaming around the island, they get arrested on each end by naval police or the local police. and the backend can, again, their problem is the bail out to the fishing, farming, farming, etc. you know, and also a lot of people told me that their skin that never lived in isolated island in the middle of those and just get a title start psych loan, you know,
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monsoon rein letter on the issue of diarrhea came up, which is exactly true. it's a very preventable disease, bang, came up 971 with a solution which itself is good enough to actually help people out of this misery. and one of them, main concern or destroying are actually given passion. chart is isolation. it's a mental isolation. it's not just physical people are used to living next to me on my body and i have an extended family system that support mechanism. a whole ecosystem is built based on commerce that shops the vegetable market that depend on each other. they've been have a magic relationship with the local people because they speak the thing dialect off the language. they do trade, whole extend of support them being close to their own. give them a confidence that feels good. not a lot of them because of the promise up better accommodation, farming,
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and that means some livelihood decided that maybe it might be an option somewhere, leered into that, but now most of them they want to come back. there's been a lot of skate but so many with the chinese north district which takes about our and i asked across the us mainland coastline. so there are definitely issues concerning relocation of journalists can't get out there yet. but that you, when recently paid a visit, we have just a bit of footage about what happened when they did the the, the, the and they're screaming that they can't take it any more that they can't live there. and they're also call up internalised around the world to tell
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their story, which i can assume if you feel that isolated it's, you know what i would to do. you know, anyone who's gone out to the island. yes. so i have been in contact with several of our contexts and i'm friends and relatives. so we are, i am receiving the similar messages that tanya and tundra has been explaining it exactly like the fear this, this mental kind of isolation of fear and frustrations and really mental health is a major part of it of the same time and educate, love, livelihood, conditions like really bad livelihood conditions you know, whatever you have seen on the, on the propaganda video, it's not simply true out there. there is no medical, you know, affective medical care or medical assistance,
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as well as no education. and also there is no livelihood other live load opportunities. so people are really good and afraid of being living in there and yeah, everybody want to escape. and there has been many more. all people trying to escape from the island than, as tundra said, you know, some of them have been caught up by the, by the most security forces and been detained. and we are concerned about their safety and security policy or per 2nd to talk about this because the way they promote it is like they're building a new home for them. but what i'm hearing is that in that new home, you're not allowed to go to other parts of the island. you're not allowed to leave the island, you're not like, it seems like they've taken their freedom of movement. and so is this a new home, or is this a, this is a detention camp. is this a prison? what like, what do we actually talking about here?
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not yet jump in there. i just, i mean on that point, i think the, the, the main issue and, you know, i should say that human rights, which doesn't oppose the, you know, the existence of so the sake of opposing it. we oppose it because the bangladesh, the authorities have renamed on that promise for an independent technical assessment that the us has offered on a continuous basis. and so you asked this question about, you know, what is this island what is happening? we don't know the cause that hasn't been an opportunity for an independent humanitarian assessment nor a technical assessment understand if the island is based on habitable. so what you have seen, these rather orchestrated events where you and officials, that members of the diplomatic community have been taken to the island and shown activities of livelihood, handpicked ra, hinder, refugees that have been told to tell
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a version of the story that is not true but then, you know, we documented and you know, way, way and hundreds that the same instances of the pieces. and as we've seen today, because of preventable diseases, we would urge, you know, our call is for an immediate sensation of relocation and for an independent technical assessment to take place. if the island is deemed uninhabitable and her hinder refugees must be returned to cox's bizarre and anyone who wants to return now should be allowed to do so. yeah, i mean, if it's not, i can, i don't understand why there isn't something in this context. yeah, go for the refugees, but promise, but he doesn't want to like that. they have the right to return back. you know, that haven't been the case. and the bigger picture in context to literally $1100000.00 ret, subtle in cost. those are the logical analysis, one of the export secretaries, but how much di congestion actually going to have moving 100000 people from the
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main engine isolated island, your friend 1000000 trading logistics build a hospital, the largest water treatment plan to move any refugee can wastewater treatment plan solar run, power line to just to be a water, whole bunch of interest structures been spanned created. it's really not really good for rapid. you can just greenery, is now it used to be ban. lane killed in the main campus. this micro hardy culture by the f b o and all this to better their life in near to their homeland suddenly you want to take in a remote island just doesn't make logical sense. this island is a still that island. it's a forward naval base. why do you want to take suddenly 100000 people? it doesn't really doesn't carry the threat under 2000 people doesn't really minimize much said if there is that so called security threat. and okay,
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you brought up a bunch of things. i kinda want to jump in on. i want to bring in some people from our youtube audience. nebel search well says, why can't other countries take the men to 100 says, what are people doing for money or work or how they're surviving? mohammad, well same says bus sha reminds me one of the infamous colonial era island prisons and nice looking video should detract from the fact that it's a unit for human habitation. experts have warned against it before 10 very if you say it doesn't make sense. that's why they're moving people there. what do you think's really going on? but let me tell me one more thing. you did bring in security and we have a just this morning the foreign minister of bangladesh was on a panel and he mentioned security being an issue here. check this out. it is high pain for all of us. so the blue stub, this sort of dung lob dead. and secondly, my feelings, if this problem we have been on 1100000 and if they are hopeless they have
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no future. we only provide them for 2 times a day. and these young people that large number of young people, there could be poker, so ready call it. and once they become extremist, it could be had big don't totally for buying lead this on my end month. but the for enter region. so that was a foreign minister just said that you were actually on that panel this morning. i guess the point steps back in place, a little bit of devil's advocate what's being with are supposed to do. they have a 1000000 refugees who come in and really kind of no fault of their own. what are they supposed to do here? so we have to remember that the problem, the issue is caused in mom and the solutions lie cinema now, but malicious carrying so much blood. and we understand that and our community is so grateful for the bundle. a dish help support and their generosity,
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unkindness to our people. however, the bundle dish and all other recipients, countries of their will hinder refugees and refugee in general, has international obligation to provide them safety and protections and respect their rights as, as refugees. and at the same time will also have to remember, this arrange, refugees are the survivors of the survivors and victims of the genocide. and you know, the well being mental health retoma dice avoidance retoma times ations should be priority for any of this country. and we are, we expect to bangladesh to respect that one has come to the issue of bashing shaw. you know, if it is the pub, is the purpose is for di conjunctions. and i think, you know, there are many countries around the world want to help bungler dish and they shouldn't take all the bud and addressed by their own. they should coordinate with
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many other countries and come up with a better solutions than the you know, the situation now in boston, shaw in the camp, you know, knowing that the level of bud and they are kerry and, well, i think the best way to move forward at this point for the bundle of dish is to talk to the other countries and government and come up with a more fair solutions and better solutions for the refugees. and you know, whether it is the resettlement or providing more assistance to the bungler dish or even, you know, facilitate and returned to me at some point when situations gets better. and all of this has to work together or, you know, countries the world need to walk together along with bangladesh. so that i think, you know, that will be, we will hinge, i will have a better or, you know, we'll have some relief and you know, some justice, although we didn't have it forever. our community has been prosecuted for ever. now
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. you know, we take refuge in this country because we want human dignity and human rights and we want to live as a human being. so, you know, it is the international communities responsibility to work together to fulfill that human needful community. so we have a video comment from someone in our community who actually as a refugee and cox's bizarre and i'm so hot and i'm to share that with you guys here . my name is lisa hamilton. yet if you found one more flood, just giving you in the office around love that we are in office here and on the 17. finally, we're creating a new web page in many thank you. let me know if we can have your freaky and help crazy. we don't want to live here anymore,
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went home then. so please help us and we were great. men must, as soon as tender he says they want to go back to me and mar, but the military coup that doesn't look like it's just almost everyone we speak to that can. i mean, for the last 4 years, almost we've been going there almost every month except last year because of and then everyone wants to really go back. they want to be in their home all the way here. by another reason, to be frustrated that been trying to convince the international community to accept pressure on me on my, to resolve the 3 fail, the ration. and yet the international community essentially live service and diplomatic brain friendship. no one really came up with a concrete solution, extra pressure on me, on my 2 countries that had a great deal of labor at the china and india. they even backed out from you and resolution. china could easily put
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a lot of pressure on my to resolve this quickly. yeah. yeah. i have meeting on a. yeah. you know, nothing happens. singapore, japan bought a heavy investment in me on my. everybody is relaxed and when comes to really put next, but changeable pressure, i'm not necessarily inspection some kind of tangible pressure in a blueprint at a roadmap. this is how i should provide an inter all their writing. i said, we want an international security guarantee, maybe presents true. we want people to guide us. we just want to go there without recognition. without that have been shaved without some kind of security. the already know what we went to and it's absolutely right. and bangladesh should be good reason to be frustrated. literally florio without much out from the international community in resolving a problem. 50 percent of the people in the camp, our children, last generation with our formal education, with our form of scale. what we'll do,
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even if they go to another country, or even go back in the last generation, not is, can you where, where's the national community? and that's why, what's the problem that's been going on for 4 years? why aren't they exerting more pressure in a more i mean, the, i think the international community is, has, has tried in terms of advocacy and lobbying for the kind of rights and dignity that we want to be realized that population in me and i mean, and i fully agree with what way said the moral and legal responsibility for this crisis lies in the the act of crimes against humanity committed against the rigid population and acts of genocide. you know, this is where the responsibility lies and we have to remember that and i want to underline the point that we accept the lord and praise the generosity and the compassion shown by bangladesh. we. we cannot forget, however, the regional response,
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the importance of ac on the failure as well. of countries such as malaysia and thailand in recent months, especially in the last year we've seen push back to over hinges, see, and you know, failure to help people disembark when they've been drifting at safe. mom, i think so, you know, the answer to this is not putting people on an island treatment in the middle of the goal, especially a season which is trying to fight plans and months in and on this i really push in terms of the urgency of what may happen, you're talking about title searches, which can reach 6 meters and storm stages, which can reach 5 meters. it's disingenuous, but you know, the bangladesh authority to say that living conditions on bus, on char when, and in fact, you ation plan, that bangladesh, the government relies on is moving people inland that simply not choice. the people on bus, on child right now, know they would be trapped in the face of
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a psych loan. i want to come back in about a minute left. i want to ask you, what would justice look like in this situation? yeah, i mean one of the thing that bunk ra bangladesh government has done incredibly well, effectually pursue in international legal justice ta and coordinating corporate in with the, with the international criminal court and support in other pressure at the un security you. and in general, you know, in terms of developing, in terms of like, you know, help in the, the did discussions on going on the justice and accountability. so what we need is, you know, the bangladesh to post of these that afford, as well as international community to really come up with the effective as action to hold the perpetrators of then aside and crimes against humanity. this military that's accountable by sending them to the i c. c. and by also coming up with
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a holistic accountability processes, looking for accountability, i know that you went to discuss this resolutions this week about us. we'll, we'll watch what happens there in the meantime. thank you very much for joining us and we'll see you next time with the stream. ah ah ah ah ah ah, when the shots came from the holiday and we heard cracks, we heard some noise which was known as my finale is in the most dangerous intersections and sought able you didn't come in through the front entrance. that
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was what happens to people who are shot. they came into the wrong entrance. the nightly pyrotechnics of the furniture turned to the camera man. so that's good l out of here, sorry, a vo holiday and will hold on outages. era in me and allocations of torture are emerging under the military. $11.00 east investigates, the secret detention it makes on the defective to reveal line one out of the chain. and i'll just do english in h d for the best experience. english h d 's available across europe on satellites. usually the 13 sci astro, long chaos, and astro, 2 g. starting fast to july 221 altitude english se across europe will only be available on full 512-418-2800. 078. for further information,
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visit our website. something was going to change as anything really changed. this is systemic violin that needs to be addressed at its core. we are in a way against variance know what to say until we are also looking at the world 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 around me . ready hello and barbara sour in london. these are the top stories on al jazeera is really far right. nationalists have held what they call the flagged march through occupied east jerusalem. is really police move dozens of palestinians from outside the city . them asked escape before the controversial rally. 27 were injured. the rally was delayed from last month, but was given the go ahead by the new government. the policy,
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