tv [untitled] June 19, 2021 3:30pm-4:01pm +03
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the change is all around the shape, my technology and human ingenuity. we can make it work for you and your business. ah, 2 of the bottom line is coming up. but for us to check on the headlines and preliminary results are out in iran's presidential election as expected the hotline at abraham rice. he is well ahead. in fact, he's already been congratulated by the 3 men who were his rivals. even though the full final result was only expected in the coming hours, he's been visited at his office by the outgoing president. how sandra honey, the figures that have been released? sure, i see one, nearly 18000000 votes. voter turn out, however, with low red less than 50 percent. here's what face he had to say after his meeting
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with president, ronnie supposed to shut down right now. i'd like to offer my gratitude to the very dear honorable and vigilant people. i thank the almighty god, the dear people's trust. in the serving seminary student, i hope i can respond well to the people's confidence votes unkindness during my turn. and in return, ronnie wish racy well for the future. ma'am, said matter about that. if you're as i congratulate my very dear brother mister abraham, right. you see he has a very heavy responsibility check. now that i'm care, ma'am, i have no doubt that the people will support his legitimate government so that their interests can be based implemented. one issue that will confront racy when he takes over as president of the nuclear deal earlier, the current foreign minister job at the reef said, talks in vienna ongoing well, and the countryman rejoined the deal as early as the summer. there is a good possibility that we will reach an agreement before the end of our tenure
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as as how soon. so we are supposed to leave our office by mid august, and i think there is a good possibility that we can reach an agreement way before mid august. the talks are going on right now as we speak. i just read the latest text editor that is being discussed in vienna. the text is getting cleaner and cleaner. the brackets are being removed. and another headline moscow registering a new record for over 19 infections. for the 2nd day running on the 9000 cases are recorded in the last 24 hours moscow's masters. the search is being driven by the contagious filter, very 1st identified in india restrictions, including a ban on large gatherings have been extended in the cities. all right, we're back with a new zone in about 25 minutes from now. the portal is coming up next. the
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hi, i'm sandra gartman. welcome to portal your gateway to some of valdez here as best content online. this week we're focusing on syria. it's been 10 years since president bush, our last on launched a war against protesters decade on hundreds of thousands of people have been killed, and half the population has been displaced. the fighting is still going on, while outside remains and power. the will take a look at how the conflict started and where things stand now will also meet a woman who has dedicated life to helping syrian women and children overcome their trauma while dealing with her own. and we'll hear from the syrian activists who haven't given up fighting for change or not more about who each other is, but who the regime and who the rest of the world is.
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at the end of may, syrian voted in a presidential election. it was dismissed as a sham by the u. s. e. u and others, only people in government held areas could vote, and there was never any doubt over the outcome. but the election helps to cement boshra loss of control, even though he's presiding over a country shattered by war. on a digital show start here, my team and i looked at what started the war and why there's no end inside. but 1st, a warning. this video contains pictures you may find disturbing. the me, let's talk about the war in syria. the entire cities, flattened hospital bombed, ancient sites,
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low enough, 13000000 people forced to leave their home. at one point the un said the battlefield k off made it impossible to count the dead. so they stopped. but the fighting hasn't and people are still dying. the little fema doing suffering in syria. it's just beyond imagination. i think nobody expected that 10 years later, we would still be in the midst of this conflict. so who's fighting? who? where are serious millions of refugees? and why does this seem like a war without end? for years the syrian war was the biggest news story around today. not so much, maybe it's media fatigue. maybe people think it's over and that president bashar last lot is one of the syrian government seems to think so the cities and railway they're being rebuilt. domestic flights of started up again,
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they're even letting travels longer than why in the city. it's not what you think we, how far and through time is changed. in reality though, most of syria is still in ruin. me the if you compare the amount of invest to fuel compared to the money to a need to get the impact of before on the syrian, the people left the end of august christ. it's it all started back in 2011. the arab spring was happening, and leaders in new jersey and egypt had already been overthrown, syria some children had been watching all that on tv and decided to send their
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president a message because the children were arrested and tortured, and people started protesting. the government responded with force, and the syrian uprising was on demonstrators killed wild clashing with security forces in what appears to be the most serious threat. her family is 40 year rule. protests of now spread from the southern city of death to damascus, hammer, homes, and other cities proved this movement was, starts me. and it shook the regime to explanation. the all sod regime had been in power for more than 40 years. starting with our father. many people were tired of things like corruption being repressed. they wanted a lot that out. when the war started, it was very much a civil war, also forces against the syrian opposition that included people who defected from the military. and opponents who picked up a gun. then other players piled in the us turkey and others cited with the
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opposition. pretty much from the start. the syrian president had allies to russian warplanes bombed from the air and militias backed by iran font on the ground. but there were other enemies common to them all i saw on no sir, front and other groups consider terrorise, took advantage of the chaos to take control. then syrian kurdish fighters got involved, they joined up with aaron militias to push eiffel out and stake their own territorial claim. turkey though, seize them as terrorists and didn't want them on a southern border. so they went to war with the syrian kurtz. it's been a messy battlefield, an over the course of those 10 years, the syrian people have suffered the most, the people who weren't part of that war with barrel bonded by the sod regime. hello,
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how you attacked with chemical weapons? blockaded starved and detained, mainly by outside forces. victims of filed allegations of war crimes and courts all over europe. finance. martha colored, i'm at the irony, highly behavior. things were bad during the peak of the war. the right now the economy has never been worse. nearly 90 percent of syrians live below the poverty line, their currency, the pound is at its lowest ever level against the dollar, making everything expensive. costs are on a john hadn't show from the phone as of last night. there are shortages of fuel food, some places only have electricity for a few hours a day out to not a covered 19 epidemic that no one knows the real scale of even without the conflict
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being at a high level. there's still aren't services sufficient enough for people to have jobs and send their kids to school and receive adequate health care. okay, so where is the war at right now? these days the government has control of about 2 thirds of the country, but they are still fighting for parts of the north, where all kinds of groups are still hanging on from syrian rebels or in one part where turkeys basically and control. and then there's a lip, the last opposition strong hold. ah, it's a complicated place. syrian rebels are mixed in with lots of groups. consider terrace. millions of refugees are living there in camps. ah,
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an every so often syrian and russian forces attack they say they're liberating inlet from terrorists. couple condemned in blue has the metal can hygiene. and meanwhile, syrian curds control this region. hundreds of us soldiers are still there, 2, mainly protecting oil fields. but there are other groups roaming around, including malicious, backed by iran, like had below. you'll notice though there's no sign of isis anywhere. it took a while, but eventually they were pushed out. their leader of bucher alba. daddy was killed by the u. s. in 2019, and most of their fighters were either captured or killed. but i thought id. ology of survived, and it's spreading and camps were fighters and their families are being held. i says build on several things including cairo's. the lack of a grievance is the division, the people in need for jobs, and i think it's been that they're recruiting. so that's where the conflict of that
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. but you can't talk about a nation without talking about its people. and half of the syrian people are refugees, me more than 6000000 or internally displaced, but another 5 and a half 1000000 are living outside of serial. turkeys taken in the most, followed by lebanon, jordan, iraq, and egypt. over the years there have been countless peace talks and all of them have failed. right now the un is put together a committee made up of both opposition and government people. it's to try to turn the page on the war by writing a new constitution, but it's not really working. meanwhile, there are all those external players still using syria to settle their scores. and can we see the externals come from each other directly rather than on the steering ground? i don't see an actual end to the shooting. there's an argument to be made that this
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war really is over a b s on resume is one. if that's true, it's come at an enormous cost and 10 years on things in syria have never been worse . so as we just heard, a live is one part of syria where many displaced people of ended up and were many are trying to build new lives. people like a be to far as who helps widows and children deal with the trauma of war. here's her story featured and the online documentary series close up the me
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added that we show up in just a little bit. and when you say, need national any of the floor in the, in the o 4, i have got to well, the problem is, wanted comedies before all, but i'm in my family and me. so then when i called the health care people, all you gotta do, should i? yeah. and how did you wanna, i didn't want it. all of them has it on me and i enjoy my initial medical and i don't want to look at and then i looked at me and i lost my,
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have the on that please let me know that you wish to much was hold on one of my heidi information i, i told you you can start up and how did you know like a lot of people the yeah, i mean, i back in 2011. that dream of a free, serious old so close for thousands of young syrians protesting against the
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government. there was a sense that change was possible. but after all, the horrors of the last 10 years, is there any hope left. ag plus spoke to 3 syrians who took part in demonstrations back in 2011 to find out how they feel about it all. now. the, the the pretty difficult to imagine a future for very soon. but even if i don't enough for me but they come one well after the solution started, when i did, i remember nothing. i only remember myself being on one the crowd and just looking
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around and just healing, but it's actually happening. like in this day, i mean i can feel it now it's time years later. i mean, i don't feel it. it seems like it was in a different world. suddenly, so many pool that were, we lived together. we were actually separate your name and your neighbor, but felt like, you know, you could say something wrong and you would be imprisoned. there was so much distance, but when the protest began, everyone was so close that would just unification. people of all different backgrounds coming together. for many people, they will tell me quite a 1st time that they felt truly artistic justice. and i think people really weren't aware necessarily of not having that until until
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the only value is actually what makes me survive every day. so the very the not only with others, also with all the human share, our pain and blue shield there was ambition to have freedom crackers to be with me. the officers done here is that freedom is not treat them is very difficult and low, but i feel bad, i can say about after 10 years, it's clear that there are still people who want freedom when they felt pricing begun. 10 years ago, we did have hope and if we didn't have hope,
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we wouldn't have participated in protest from the very 1st moment. very dangerous hearing stories. that book is not closed. i think you know, your pastor, you know, maybe act want the saga. so i don't, i don't know how long act tune actory will be. we kind of had to go through this phase because otherwise it was never going to really show it without it or people are not going to be just about of, of any of the sort of all, all believe. i remember at the beginning i was with my dad watching on tv and i saw tears in his eyes and i asked him like, are you sad? and he said that this is like 2 years of happiness. and he said that even if i do not witness the moment, the solution is enough for me that i witnessed this moment back
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in i ventured disappeared now for 7 years and 9 months typically we haven't done. we don't even know if a life or not very gina is actually using this detention an enforced dish that i carry and, and not only to empower those who are in detention centers and in prison, but also to this empower there. ah, ah, the very 1st agent damascus that i saw with my own eyes, people that philip here today and they still have that hope. okay we, we did this to read it, but i'm just,
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i will tell you this are not about who each other is, but the rest of the world is when i am in a room with other theory and i still have the same feeling. i'm excited. i am empowered, but at the same time i'm sad and i'm because every time i see the faces off my bath and those many others whom we are close, i buried for those who killed me if you want to find out more about falling, the staff of campaign to seek the truth about what happened to her father. you can hear more on all disagree podcast the take. they've put together a really powerful episode about syrians looking for justice through the german
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courts. you can find that on our website or wherever you get your podcast. that's it from portal for now, we'll be back next week, but until then, you online ah ah, ah ah, ah, it's time for the journey to winter sponsored by cut on airways. hello. we've got some rather weather for south eastern parts of brazil at the moment. little area found it just to the south of rear partition,
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some rather heavy outbreaks of writing and see how that just extends its way from paraguay over towards the south atlantic. the south of that, it is pretty cold there for want to service just 13 celsius south the afternoon at a similar temperatures, we go on through sunday by sunday, hopefully wet weather, pulling away from the southeast corner, opposite brighter skies, coming back in behind. but further north for heavy showers, continue across the western side of the amazon up into we're columbia, some very heavy down pulse if further flooding concerns coming through. then we have flooding consent to where the trouble is. still dolores, very close to the west coast of mexico, making its way inland as we go on through sas day and on into a sunday, producing some very heavy rainfall that will cause widespread flooding across the western side of mexico. elsewhere across the region, the usual showers down towards the guatemala, into panama, costa rica, seeing some heavy showers and a line of showers there too, across the caribbean, but plenty of sunshine in between. sunshine continues. meanwhile,
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across the southwest corner of the us, the burning heat continuing here, it stays very wet for the deep south sponsored by cattle airways, a global pandemic, social unrest. a world under locked down, brought to the knees by a deadly buyer. but now we have a window to like the past to a brighter future. coming to you live from doha. we bring together leaders from all corners of the globe and across all sectors of society. chalk away out of the join at the top and on the forums powered by balloon. the latest news as it breaks, a significant number of the 32 attacks carried out in the quarter of 2021 happened in nigeria. salvatore watches with detail coverage, president binding this foreign policy is the buying close allies and partners. and
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then with the united position deal with problems from around the world. the government says they are aiming for 70 percent of the population by the end of the year. the. ready this is al jazeera ah, hello everyone. i'm kim all santa maria here in dough. how welcome to the news our from al jazeera iraq president. how found ronnie congratulate abraham liner who become his successor after an election? criticize the lopsided asia good possibility that we can reach an agreement before mid office runs. foreign minister, meanwhile,
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