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tv   [untitled]    June 19, 2021 7:00pm-7:31pm +03

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to more severe cases of the corona virus and more death from it and no way in india situation worse than daddy, the number of cases order and record eyes. and when in a desperate situation, the indian government set up a new commission to monitor filters of and pollution across 5 north indian state health experts and environmental had been wanting for months. so that even of the locked down would lead to an increase in pollution in the impact that would have on those the causes 19. ah, abraham racy is declared the winner of iran presidential race the pre lead. how many calls the election of people victory? ah, hello money side, this is al jazeera, alive from also coming up. the testers in brazil's amount,
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the impeachment of president julia both tomorrow and more access to vaccine get a 2nd about an outbreak is declared over avoiding repeat the disaster of a few years ago. and we'll see what's on the mind of armenians as they proposed to vote in an election office. very difficult. here. i congratulations are coming in from around the world as abraham racy has been declared the winner of a ron's presidential election. the hardliner has also been congratulated by the man he's replacing her son. we're heidi rice, he's victory has been widely anticipated off to other strong contenders were barred from running turn out. was the lowest ever seen supposed to show us,
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and 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. rice, he takes over as a critical time. iran is trying to salvage the nuclear deal. i'm free itself from punishing us sanctions. however, outgoing foreign minister jobs or a says that could well be settled before rice takes office. there is a good possibility that we reach an agreement before the end of our tenure as as how soon. so we are supposed to leave office by mid august and i think there is a good possibility that we can reach an agreement they before made us talk. so going on right now as we speak, i just read the latest text editor that is being discussed in vienna. the text
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is getting cleaner and cleaner. the brackets are being removed. iran supreme leader has hail the vote as a victory over enemy propaganda in a tweet itala, how many wrote the following the winner, the election is the iranian nation. they have again stood up to the propaganda of the enemy's mercenary media and the edging of the simple minded and the ill wishes they have displayed their presence in the heart of the country's political arena. from to her on acid bag tells us more about what these results could means to the country. what it tells us that he has increased his vote by i think, 2000000 volts since the last time he stood back in 2017 then against president hudson ro, harney. but it also tells us that there are considerable number of people in this country that support brain, right?
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the and he's out in those debates that took place as presidential debates. he very much concentrated on domestic issues and he was reaching out to those that feel different. disillusion, disappointed with the honey administration of the last 4 years. and he promised to make the economy better. he built his reputation on fighting corruption and that's what people know him for. so the 1st task for him will be to deal with the economy . of course, there are the international issues such as the 2015 nuclear deal. now many of he's supported never supported that deal in the 1st place, but abraham raise, he has said that he does support the yes as the supreme needa has backed it. but the difference between him and the reformists is president has been real handy and he's reformist back is, is that the form of the, the 2015 nuclear deal as the foundation to build better relations with the west. whereas abraham, right. you see, and he's conservative supporters or some some know them as principal list
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supporters. they see it as the ceiling. they have a deep mistrust of the united states and mistrust. in fact, that they feel that it's proven right. especially since the former president to donald trump pulling nike states out of that deal, an impulse tensions against iran was turned to latin america now, which has seen some of the worst of the current of ours. pandemic countries is still struggling with high infection rates and slow vaccine rollouts. the continent is reporting the most that spec caps in the well the up to 18 per 1000000. as compared to less than 1000000 in the united states. and in brazil, protesters have been taking to the streets, demanding the impeachment of president j. both nora over his handling of the pandemic. they want better access to vaccines. it comes a week after both sonata was fined for not wearing a mask at a rally in sao paulo. we have to correspondence with us the south monica yanna, king of his, at the protest in rio de janeiro. and we can also speak to daniel schwab miller,
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who has an update from the rest of the region 1st, last turned to monica. what is the situation where you are, the? well, the situation is for the past 3 hours, people here and we have been marching down one of the main street in the center of the city. this is a nationwide protest. it's happening not only in rio, but at least 14 other state capital as well as other cities. people are calling for presidents. i've also models engagement a whole different monster bowl for the death of half a 1000000 brazilians. right now there are 498000 people that have died by co had 19, but the number should reach the 500 tonight or at the most tomorrow they say he has always downplayed the virus. he has delayed the roll out
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of back to see their calling for the gauge men. and this time, this is a 2nd time the opposition is french of things. the last time was 4 weeks ago. they have tried not to go to the trade because they wanted to effect the social justice thing, measure the math, which they say principals are not, does not respect what's on out. it is already on a campaign trail for next year's reelection is been holding a motor bike route leave. the last one was last saturday in the city of some follow . so, but the people here are saying if we don't go out to the street, it's always getting worse and worse. and so the result will no longer be the current with the 2nd largest. 5 hold at 19, just told the one with the firm to go out tonight to say many things that monica young in rio de niro. let's speak to daniel smile now. who's and one is there is,
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it's interesting when you look at countries in europe and north america, they are cautiously optimistic about an end to the pandemic. it seems to be a very different picture across latin america. why is that? well they do look to north america to europe and see the situation that really can only dream about being in that situation. we heard from monica there, how grim the situation is in brazil, a similar situation across latin america. although the political and economic circumstance is different in every country, the wage government tackle is the pandemic is different. yet we're seeing very high rates of coverage infections and death. countries like peru change the way in which it monitored, registered the number of covey death now has 180000 registered cases, or people who have died from the virus in the population of 32000000,
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making it the highest per capita rate in the world. paraguay is, is catching up in many ways, a much smaller country, 7000000 people. but still, the last week, the number of deaths and infections was shot up over a 1000000 new infections in the last week, across latin america, 31000 death. so whenever you look at it, even when vaccination programs all going according to plan, even way in those countries which tackled the virus quite effectively in the early days now or suffering one way or the other, it is very high rates. and i say on the looking to the rest of the world and think and saying, what's happening here in latin america? it's still a grim situation. we still go a long way to go. and they are, they all calling for help from the rest of the world and all of any theories as to why this might be the case. what many different reasons i mean, i think one of the most serious, one of the most prevalent is
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a very poor infrastructure rights across the region. poverty and poor distribution of wealth, especially when you're talking about hospitals, health systems, even people who are getting into hospitals. and we're seeing this right across the region. the i c u beds a full to bursting on the very best, 90 percent occupancy rates. but even when people are being admitted to the hospital, there's often not enough feature and there's often not enough medicines to treat them. we're seeing people dying in the car doors or not even being left in the hospitals in the 1st place. that's particularly severe in places like powder, why to renown peru. so that's one of the, maybe the major problems. we're also seeing a massive amounts of corruption. we've seen several health ministers across the region resigning off the scan doors. the vaccines not getting to people on time, really as, as we stand at the moment, only one in 10 of the population of latin america and the caribbean has been
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vaccinated. so the pan american health organization, the regional brought to the world health organization cooling on the united states on europe, to make sure more vaccines gets so latin america, more people get vaccinated and much, much quicker than they have been up until now. many times that, daniel, why know that 1st and one is aries or moscow has registered and you records the coven, 19 of infections. the 2nd day running more than 9000 cases were recorded in the last 24 hours. most goes may s, as the surge is being driven by the contagious delta variance 1st identified in india, restrictions including a ban on large gatherings, have been extended in the city and a boiler outbreak which started in se guinea in february has been declared over by the health ministry on the world health organization. 16 people were infected. 12 of them died during the outbreak in guinea, 2nd largest city,
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or the health ministry vaccinated 11000 people to contain the virus, which causes severe bleeding and organ failure. if we look back, could be about an outbreak from 2014 to 2016 that killed more than 11000 people. mostly in guinea, fairly own liberia. stay guess most jobs is a by a medical scientist and experts on several viral diseases. he says, health experts, land lessons from the previous outbreak. we manage very quickly to bring the tradition of our nation for a whole lot contain transmission using really effective diagnostics approaches. and then also put in place in springbox missions, games which although basically people around individuals come in fact that for the buyers to be vaccinated very quickly and be protective. they are a 100 percent. i think it's a so that we can save you from becoming
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a problem locally, nationally and internationally as well. there's national response stuff most put together in 2015, 2014 to try and turn around the time. brought a lot of learnings to the local community managed to reinvigorate the local community in terms of health care professional training and in terms of understanding of the disease, but also in the local community increase the understanding of the disease because culturally people just didn't have the experience of all of them when i came across that just didn't know how to respond to it. this is very funny because the, the west african outbreak wrote the book. unfortunately with so many questions about nations in the last year. look at the rubric. i know this is almost africa and nothing to do for us, but in fact, real human, we'll respond the same way that with most of shopping by phone or there are all
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like you remember, we have the same situation with a virus. so yes, a lot of learning something brought together implemented in west africa. the disease came back again and we were able to contain it. we were able to make show about it doesn't become a problem. cilla, head on al jazeera, with his low loyal of having the site taken over a border crossing without area. and how black native americans fighting to regain that tribal citizenship. ah, ah, it's time for the journey with sponsored by cut on airways. hello there. i was say more very heavy, right into sense from southwestern parts of china recently can see of the my,
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you front the, the plumb ranging. see how that wet weather when it extends all the way across into the south west of china. and this is the scene swan province where we have see many, many days of very heavy rain around 21 rivers that have burst the bank. so we are going to see further problems as we go on through the next few days, a same line of cloud of rain coming right out to eastern parts of china just to the south of shanghai. shanghai will be in the dry as we go on through the next couple days and that dry weather pushing right up into beijing, some shallow us there into our north korea. wanted to shout into northern parts of japan. too much wet weather in the forecast here. having said that, follow that line of cloud and rain back the plum rains all the way back into southern areas of china. weather to the south of that. certainly hot, just around much of indo china burning heat. continuing here, we'll see visual showers there across much of south east asia with the usual heat of the day. downpours, heavy down post continue across the northeast and parts of india up into the pool.
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further flooding concerns here. up, tools baton. we're going to see some wet weather into the far north east of india. meanwhile, the western got staying very wet. sponsored cattle airways. in february, 2021. the crippling storm to down texas is power grid. 4000000 people plunged into darkness with no heating. many died from hypothermia, with hundreds suffering from carbon monoxide poisoning, as they tried to stay with them any way they could. plunge investigates where the use of the regulation and prioritizing profits led to the state's power grid failure. the texas blackout on our jazeera ah, the me,
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you're watching else is there were my stories with our abraham racy has been declared the winner of iran presidential election. he secured 62 percent of the votes in a landslide victory protest, as in brazil, all demanding the impeachment of president drivable. nora trembling of the panoramic fridays are being held across the country and by the outbreak. this started in getting in february, has been declared over by a health ministry on the world health organization. 1216 people who were infected 11000 people were vaccinated, contain desires to libya. now where a large military force loyal to the wall of holly for half says it's taken control of a border crossing without jerry or on thursday. a have to announced an operation in the area to expel what he called mercenaries. an extremist fight is,
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image is posted on line shows dozens of almond vehicles positioned in and around the border crossing. as the fast ministry operation off, it's kind by half those forces since a sci fi was signed with the government. back in october, malik trina has more from tripoli. libya has seen relative peace since the cease fire agreement was signed in october. so this is a very significant movement, it's the 1st time that such a large military mobilization has happened, declared, have to force have declared the area military zone. so we're going to have to wait and see what's going to happen. but this comes just days before an international conference in berlin. the united nations in germany are hosting the berlin to conference. and that's meant to bring, bring before an actors for actors involved, foreign stakeholders together in berlin to discuss, supporting libya,
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new in term unity, government. and also bringing about elections. elections are scheduled to take place in december this year. but this could possibly impede those elections. and impede the peace process that's been happening. and this also comes just a few days after an official visit by luke the libyan government. to algeria, they agreed on a couple things, one of which was opening the tunisian and algerian border for commercial trade. the board was closed for several years. we're going to have to wait and see what kind of, what, what, what exactly is going to happen after this military movement. and whether or not this will create or bring about, or bring more challenges towards this new government. to lead the country to elections later on this year. as really, security vehicles have been set on fire off to raid on
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a wedding in the palestinian israeli town of assad. police say there were spawning to reports of gunfire. the event spokesmen said gas attack, the officers eye witnesses said the situation escalated when an officer fired his gun, one palestinian israeli civilian was seriously wounded and one officer with injured armenians head to the poles on sunday, in the backdrop of last year military, the fee to the hands of as a, by john and turkey, the feed target anti government protests and the prime minister was forced to cool early elections. worry challenge reports from your event. i just 3 years on from it's so cool, velvet revolution and armenian politics is getting allowed again. this election should be 2 years off still, but prime minister nicole passion. and he rode to power on a wave of street protests in 2018 a since lost a humiliating war. and is much weakened are supported with
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a radi in yerevan sticking by the mandate. he's lucky. he's everything we're here to support our prime minister because we trust him. we've seen full freedom during his years and also, and this is enough reason to trust him again and again. somewhat unusually for a former soviet country outside the u. this is a competitive election with an uncertain outcome, but they're still a favorite. it could reasonably be expected that any prime minister who i was always countries, devastating defeat, and a war would be political history. yes, the polls have titans, but most predictions are the nicole passion. yon will be the next prime minister of armenia. paradoxically, for an incumbent. he's framing this as a new revolution. what do you see?
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sunny on the 20th of jones cutting from 8 am in armenia. a people non violent revolution will start. but this time it's going to be an iron revolution. and that's revolution would start from a t. m, at the polling stations, and delving massive voting for us. now with his armenia alliance, former president robert carrion is passion, dns main rival, although he's tainted by allegations of corruption. coach harriann is trying to capitalize on his polls bounce and unify the mc passion. the i'm vote i have no trust towards cure ortiz because that to blame for crisis in some of them in a cardboard are most important for me is to create pace for our country. i'm sure our media alliance will go forward and not back it. political scientists, alexander is, can darian says armenia is still democratic. the young and personalities dominates rather than stable parties. i asked him what challenges the winner faces eric,
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everything from economy to institutionalization from problems with that by john borders. no. going to cut about the problem refugees develop that said a lot of problem that that's a problem to be i would say any part to which will come to part to the, to, to power now will be not popular enough here about these campaigns have been polarized and bitter, and the country is deeply traumatized by a military defeat. elections may resolve, some of the countries issues that by no means all of them reach helen's out his era armenia. italy's economy appears to be climbing out of its cove at 19 plunge its finances face problems even before the pandemic, like people's preference, the cash payments that her tax revenues. well, that looks to be changing now. as adam rainy reports from room this
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vegetable market in the heart of room dates back to the 18 sixty's, a century and a half on cash is still king. but there are signs the times are changing. for years, the italian government has been encouraging electronic payment. as a way to increase tax receipts. the pandemic gave it the push it needed, as people wanted to pay without handling cash, because they thought exchanging money by hand could spread the virus out all of all this year. and we have to accept progress. this is how things are cash is on the way out. electronic payment in italy, rose 4 percentage points in 2020 alone. and now digital payments make up a 3rd of all transactions. it'll even has a lottery to encourage people to request his school receipt for even the smallest purchases to prove they were made above board. but i got not
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paying for euro coffee with a card or a phone was practically unheard of before the pandemic. and now it tell us is communism visit to your local such purchases are just a small part of the burgeoning digital economy, one growing faster as a result of the pandemic. the government is investing billions of euro's from the e u cove. it recovery fund to modernize the economy, which is projected to grow by nearly 5 percent this year and an additional 5 percent and 2022. i think this is a bigger keisha now for air increasing the amount of efficiency a spot and see in our system. we have spent a lot of money doing that during this crisis. so now economic growth is really a master executive trainer mounted your carving, jani sees. this is a moment of opportunity for himself and the country at large money regional capital
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. i think we used to think we had to be shoulder to shoulder with our boss or our lives revolved around the physical workspace to succeed today. 95 percent of my work is done from here at home, or do you love that provides more possibility for growth? we understand now we can't waste our time the world and must make the most of it. for lofty goals in a country where old habits die hard, adarine al jazeera rome, one of many uncomfortable truths about race in america is that several native american tribes once owned black slaves. after the civil war, they were forced to end the practice and grant their slaves, full citizenship. but over the years they stripped back tribal members of their rights. she ab returns the reports from broken arrow, oklahoma. in broken arrow, oklahoma, there lives a cemetery for creek indian 3 men, the tribes former black slaves. it's neglected and becoming a dumping ground. yes,
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this is one of the benjamin when run de grayson 1st heard about that she didn't get very far in her inquiries about who owns this plot of land. and when i received the 2nd call, i said this is the ancestors calling us. and we have to do something. not only did she find the owner, she managed to acquire the land on behalf of the creek. indian friedman. now she's begun work on restoration and an accounting of who's buried. this is rebecca johnson born july, 4th on independence day, 1865 at the recent commemorations for the santini, of the tulsa race massacre. black and native americans are a strong presence. and as with the massacre of 1921, many in the us and elsewhere aren't even aware of their existence. some native american tribes long accepted black members. but in also, oklahoma white settlers judged the tribes civilized because not only did they assimilate with the newcomers in dress and religion,
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but also in the adoption of black chattel slavery. after the civil war, the tribal nations abolished slavery as part of the treaty signed with the federal government in $1866.00, former slaves would be fully integrated and now known as friedman. and there was full integration and into marriage, legal. so to paramon even served as the principal chief of the creek nation between 887895. we know that american co, he was born in 1888. she is an original in rowley muskogee creek nation rome. the grayson's great grandmother, lived her whole life as a member of the muskogee creek tribe. but then in 1979, the creek past new laws decreeing that friedman were no longer tribal members. the other tribes followed friedman would lose that tribal voting rights as well as the housing health and other benefits. everyone should be outrage that this could happen in 1979 tribes argued it was an expression of their sovereignty. an
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866 treaty with the u. s. government should not be the final say on who was a member of that tribes. they should be. sovereignty is fine, but sovereignty does not give you the right to discriminate against the people. and that's essentially what's happening. grayson who's been leading efforts over turn, the new laws, sees other motivations. it's about green and it's about racism is the core of the entire issue. that said, efforts to pressure the tribes to reverse their exclusionary policies have been successful in the courts. in 2017, the cherokee nation was forced to abandon plans to expel its friedman cherokees or are people. and unfortunately in this world, there still people who are racist. i think the vast majority of charities or not the u. s. congress is getting involved threatening to withhold funding if other tribes don't reverse course. and it seems to be working some say they will open a dialogue on the issue. but it is fraught on the face of it. the federal
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government is overtly intervening and tribal affairs. however, since a supreme court ruling in 2020, the tribes arguments are excluding freedman have become shakia. muskogee creek tribe argued for ptolemy from the federal government, its basis, the 1866 treaty with the federal government and the tribe one. but it's that same treaty that gave freed bill full rights as tribal members fioma, edward creek, all grayson's tribe. and she's determined that friedman, numbers, both living and dead will soon be able to reclaim their identity. she ever tenancy al jazeera, broken arrow oklahoma. ah, let's get a recap of the headlines on al jazeera. abraham right, you see has been declared the winner of iran presidential election. the current head of the judiciary, secure 62 percent of the vote in a landslide victory. the result was widely anticipated off the other strong
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contenders were barred from running. they to turn out was just on the 49 percent, the lowest.

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