tv [untitled] June 25, 2021 5:00pm-5:31pm +03
5:00 pm
ah, ah ah more than a 150 people are still unaccounted for in the us building collapse with cool weather. now humphrey rescue. ah, again, i'm to solve your pain. this is out of their life and also coming up at odds over russia. you need to meet for a 2nd day after rejecting a proposal by from, from germany, the talk with president that person, hundreds of people turn out to me on an outspoken critic of the palestinian
5:01 pm
president. and a blood test that can detect more than 50 types of cancer, including ones that are difficult to diagnose. ah, well, we begin with the latest developments out of miami, where it is the 159 people are still unaccounted for a day off the 12 story building. they're collapsed. at least 4 people died, but it's expected that that whole well rise as rescue teams continue searching through the rubble. it's unclear what caused the 40 year old building to come down . the local officials are saying it was undergoing roof construction and some other repairs. i want to be very clear about the numbers. are there very fluid? i will continue to update you as, as we have them. but we have confirmed for deaths. the search and rescue team
5:02 pm
worked throughout the night. and it was a very active scene from above and below. and we also brought heavy machinery onto the site to assist with the operation. while at south peter cream had odd. he is very close to the size of that collapsed building there in miami cream. i can see those grey clouds behind you. how is search and rescue going there? a middle that rain well, efforts are ongoing again. unfortunately, it has been raining on and off ever since yesterday morning. we had to really heavy showers just an hour ago that have really affected the search and rescue operation . who's working through the night. they recovered unfortunately, 3 more bodies from, from the rubble. and there are still over a 150 people who are, who are unaccounted for. many of them foreign nationals have consulates from all
5:03 pm
over latin america. and israel, who have expressed concerns about their citizens, were unaccounted for and officials. he are working desperately to get visas for their family and loved ones to come and check on the welfare of of, of the residents in that building their over my shoulder. of course koreen just looking at the pictures. this was a huge, huge collapse. now despite all the speculation we're hearing, and if there is fil nokia indication of what actually cause no, there isn't. we know that the building was undergoing some maintenance work. there was having repairs done to its roof. this is a building that was completed in 1981. and there's a mandatory re certification here for buildings over 40 years old. and it was in the midst of that process before the collapse happened. it's not entirely clear though what led to the collapse, although there has been a lot of structural problems,
5:04 pm
structural engineering problems. we have many residents who are new law, complains about cracks, and the walls and, and other things that made them question the integrity of the building. we also have construction at the building immediately adjacent to it, which you'll see right behind me. that's that slightly bigger building and there's heavy construction work that's been done on that building. and many residents had complained of shaking in their own apartment long before the collapse had happened . so there had been some concerns about the structural integrity of the building. there's also been some talk of a phenomenon called subsidence, which is when the ground thinks essentially and building the think deeper into the ground. and there's been some reporting that this building here in the years past, we're thinking at a daily rate of about 2 millimeters per day. it's not entirely clear if that would have directly contributed to the collapse, or if it was
5:05 pm
a number of factors. but that in investigation is ongoing and we likely aren't going to have much clarity for several days weeks. it's not more. so korean had died there on the ground for us in miami. thank you so much, corinne. arrest you are his and the tech republic. climbing wreckage there for survivors after red tornado in the southeast. at least 3 people have died. hundreds of been injured. that storm that you are seeing that swept through 7 villages and towns destroying hundreds of homes. how has been cut off to more than 120000 household meteorologist? so saying this is the strongest tornado to hit the country. police officers in chile have rescued at 27 people who are trapped in a blizzard, where the temperature is plumber. it's a minus 20 degrees celsius. is office is height full hours at more than a 5000 meters above sea level to reach the group that included 2 children. they've
5:06 pm
been stranded in their vehicles after that sudden storm struck all 27. they're all said to be in good health. when moving on and french president emanuel macro has warned against an east west divide within the european union and followed some us in brussels, where eastern european need is rejected. a franco german proposal to hold talks with the russian, president, poland, and some both countries and voice concern about what they're calling moscow is aggressions, and said summit would send the wrong message. we are right now in a negative spiral, and we need to brace for further downturn. so we agreed to push back. when russia targets the european union on what we stands for when it violates human rights. to constrain russia, when it attempts to undermine our interests. and we will engage russia when it is in our interest to do so to achieve our goals. for example,
5:07 pm
if we talk about climate change, or if we talk about public health, and i'll talk about that has worn out from paris, while the summons actually wrapped up now and it's clear at the end of it, there were some, there was some resolution when it came to russia that all still divisions in terms of opinion because going into the summit, the german chancellor and the french president of both made it very clear that they believed very space to open dialogue with russia on issues of common interest. and they were actually calling for an e rush, some 8 and 5, perhaps by the events of last week in which the u. s. president joe biden met vladimir putin in geneva. however, that really went down badly with the leader who said that until russia did more and it's human rights record to respect, respected ukraine sovereignty, then there was no faith for the use to be reaching out, rolling out the red carpet for moscow. so what we heard at the end was the head to
5:08 pm
the commission, saying that leaders had agreed that perhaps it isn't the right time for something like an e rush summit that that's too soon. nevertheless, the door is not being closed on dialogue in the future on certain issues of common interest, including the wrong nuclear deal, for example, or climate change. while speaking of the nuclear l time is running out for iran to return to the latest warning from the us and france. both countries are also concerned that iran could make sensitive atomic advances and step up uranium enrichment as time drags on us secretary of state anthony blink. and saying that karen's new government must make concessions in order to advance talks in vienna. we still have serious differences with iran, with regard to return to mutual compliance with the with the j. c. away our teams are going back for 7th round of indirect negotiations in the, in the coming days. we'll see if we can bridge the differences,
5:09 pm
but they are real and we have to, we have to be able to bridge them. i would tell you that with regard to the k, this remains serious concern, a concern that we communicated to, to iran, and it needs to be needs to be resolved. now in the occupied west bank, a funeral procession has been held for an outspoken critic of palestinian president, muslim bus, hundreds of mourners. as you can see that gathered in hebron, many of them calling on a bus to resign needs. a balance died on thursday after being arrested and biesen by palestinian authority security forces. you can choose the human rights violations and court on western nations to cut off aid to the group. stephanie deca has more from that funeral in hebron in the occupied west by i can tell you that people here are incredibly angry at the palestinian authority. you'll probably see some of the men in the crowd with guns. the people telling us that basically
5:10 pm
they're now calling with a downfall of the regime. these are chance they've also been calling for as they carried the body through the streets of hebron to the cemetery. here for present mahmoud abbas to go. he's been in charge for a very long time in the palestinian authority. the cancellation of elections council, those in april elections hasn't been held here for 15 years. this is one of the main criticisms that the people here and also the activists that was killed the, his response to when those elections were cancelled was to call on the european union stop funding to the palestinian authority thing. they were corrupt, saying that the leadership had to go, that fresh elections had to be held. so this is the sense really from everyone we have been speaking to, you can probably, selina, can you get those? i know, you know, there's a lot of armed men now we're looking among the crowds. this is a sensitive people. they say we are under a double occupation. it's the privacy authority. they accused of being hand in hand with israel. i'm speaking to an elderly gentleman. he said, you know,
5:11 pm
this is the 1st time in my life that i actually see our own security forces coming into a palestinian home and beating someone to death because they don't agree with our policies. well, china has approved a government reshuffle and hong kong and what critics say, it will just further tyson, beijing security cracked down on the territory. police chief chris tang will become security secretary while his predecessor john, the husband promoted the chief secretary. and he's the 1st person from a policing background to assume that office, since i'm calling was handed over to china, back in 1997. to be fair. so john lee has been in a government for almost 4 decades. and security bureau is perhaps one of the biggest in terms of significance in terms of the number of civil servants and its position. so one could not say that as a secretary for security, for many years, his experience is limited. when you villains government is planning to strengthen
5:12 pm
hate speech laws and response to the mosque attack and questions that killed 51 most. and 2 years ago, a high level inquiry found that existing laws were a week to turn for people targeting religious and other minority groups. these proposed changes would increase the maximum sentence of the hate speech offensive to 3 years in jail or $35000.00 fine. the human rights at the crumbs which we are proposing are not about restricting anyone's ability to engage in debate about the issues of sagnasti things to someone or about someone does not make healthy and construct. the relationship is not the type of speech that we are targeting. what we are looking at is when people are speaking or commenting about a group because of the misty, how they really displace the 60 or other characteristics, a lot of the agenda status. and what they are saying is intended to inside, stay, maintain and normalize hatred against that group. are still ahead here on out there,
5:13 pm
facing decades in prison form a police officer, derek. so that is to be sentenced for the matter of george flowing on the skies filaments. the u. s. company that's promising to take human to the edge of a gigantic balloon. ah ah. the rains not really concentrated in the band that you might expect this time of the year. this is the seasonal rain been pretty well broken up now. it will be enhanced as championed up towards japan the next couple of days. but in the immediate future that say south day, the range really concentrated around beijing or just to the east and in the southern china or up towards the yanks valley. this is pretty well scattered thunder selves. there is a flash studying that's not
5:14 pm
a real concentrated effort. it might be rather more like that with a miserable day on she in shanghai on sunday. and then later on sunday or monday, the champion engages was the seas. no rain gives particularly wet time to tokyo. i would think that sense of always when you think, well it should be dry season. really? certainly it's not supposed to be wet season. widespread shaft. and then one reason is because the eastern in the nation is it a bit woven, it should be in hansing, the potential for rainfall now be realized in java and in sumatran all the way up towards the bay bang goal. obviously the monsoon rains assure themselves so fairly wet, dry seasons amendment, and for india itself, the concentration heavy rains in the eastern northeast. it's still dry in new delhi . and in pakistan the earthquake is cause a little disruption and the local network is down. but these guys know what it
5:15 pm
looks like, just setting up a network. once they're connected to our bishop services, they'll be able to share the network and give people the vital phone and data connection looks like it's up and running. data is coming up to back down to where it is needed, the job guys sort even, i could have done that 1st child space to deliver your vision. oh, the the hello daniel watching al jazeera. let's remind you of our top story with our 159 people are still unaccounted for a day off the partial club for 12 story building in the u. s. patient florida. at
5:16 pm
least 4 people have died, but it's expected. the toll will arrive french president, emanuel micron has warned against an east west divide within the european union. he was speaking office almost in brussel, where eastern european leaders rejected a franco german proposal to talk with the russian president. hundreds of mourners of gathered in hebron for the funeral of an outspoken critic of palestinian presidents, mussman. he's been off died on thursday after being arrested and decent by palestinian authority. security for a former us police officer. derek shaven. he's convicted of the matter of george floyd is due to be sentenced later on friday. john henderson is in minneapolis where residents are bracing for decision that could have implications for both security on the black lives, massive movement. more than a year after the death of george floyd, minneapolis is still rebuilding a passive destruction still lies in the wake of the flaming riots that followed the
5:17 pm
killing of a black man beneath the police officers ne on friday officer. derrick, jovan will be sentenced for floyd's murder. the judge is already ruled. children is guilty of aggravating circumstances, acting with particular cruelty in front of children under the power of his authority as a cop and is part of a group. leaving legal analysts expecting a stiff sentence, i think the judge is probably going to depart upward, give him a greater sentence than what our guidelines call for. and given the defense motion and the aggravating factors, i think it's it's probable that he will go close to 30 years. prosecutors, jovan deserves the maximum penalty for actions that in their words traumatized, mister floyd's family, the bystanders who watched mister floyd die in the community. and his conduct shot the nation's conscience. despite those stern words his lawyer is asking for probation. the murder trial watched around the world,
5:18 pm
began with the viral video of floyd's arrest and ended with children's conviction on all counts in between with a devastating prosecution, a defiant defense, and some powerful, sometimes tearful witnesses. i didn't leave me about that at some point. did you make a 911 call. that is correct. the quarter police on a boat. and why did you do that? because i believe i witness a murder is been night. asked data apologizing in power to source for if we're not doing more. i felt that derek show van was justified, was acting with objective reasonableness. i will invoke my 5th amendment privilege today. guilty, guilty, guilty in the streets of minneapolis, minnesota,
5:19 pm
and brace for the response. many hoping you won't repeat the violence, summer of 2020. the city over and down, of course. really? yes, that's the normal response. the sentence judge peter k, he'll hands down comes with waiting consequences for shogun, the city where floyd died and the civil rights movement, his death accelerate, john hindering al jazeera minneapolis for us, vice president, cala harris has just arrived in texas on her 1st visit to the border with mexico since taking office harris will visit a board facility and also meet local leaders. she's been under pressure to visit the border after rise and migrants arriving in the u. s. mostly from central america. border patrol says it encountered 180000 people just last month. well, rob reynolds is following that visit for us in el paso. rob, can you talk us through what the vice president will be doing now? i mean, this is all rather politically charged. very
5:20 pm
politically charged, the vice president has been charged with the responsibility for trying to do something to stem the tide of migration and fix problems at the border. a somewhat thankless and tricky task that she was given by president biden. earlier she visited central america where she was criticized were some rather blunt language where she said to speaking to migrant, do not come. the by the administration of course has been eager to contrast its own approach, which it says is much more humane towards migrants. with the harsh policies of the trump administration. so those harsh words didn't go over well in some quarters. but now she is here in el paso. she landed a few moments ago. she will visit this border patrol facility behind me where migrants are processed. she will not actually go to the border of herself on her
5:21 pm
itself on her brief tour, but you will visit with the officials here at the border patrol station. you'll also talk to some migrants we are told later on you'll meet with non governmental organization leaders, faith leaders from various religions, here in el paso and the immigration advocates. as you old a press conference before before departing from el paso for los angeles. and she's being accompanied here by a couple of members of congress as well as the secretary of the department of homeland security out of 100 my york us prob reynolds, that following that trip for us in el paso, texas. thank you so much. trouble on our canada, as prime minister says the country must learn from its past after the discovery of 751 unmarked graves. indigenous leaders are calling it a crime against humanity. a canadian fascination group says they were found at the
5:22 pm
sight of a former residential school for indigenous children. this is the 2nd such discovery in less than a month or higher at triple the canadas indigenous people. it's another tragic but no fun expected moment. less than a months off the remains of $215.00 children were found in british columbia, and other on most grave is uncovered in such a catch one province. an estimated $751.00 bodies at the now defunct catholic residential school. this one more than 3 times bigger than the last. this was a crime against humanity. an assault on the 1st on 1st nation people, we are proud people. the only crime we ever committed as children was being born indigenous a lot of work, a lot of healing will take it will take place and there are many sites that we're
5:23 pm
going. i'm going to be doing the similar work and we will find more. one survivor said indigenous people were labeled heathens by the catholic church. and nuns told the children, they didn't have souls. i'm 80 years old and i went to boarding school down there. i had, i was taken by my parents to go at that time. if the parents didn't want to allow their children to go to boarding school, one of them had to go to jail when order to be keep the family together. we went to boarding school, they brought us there. we stayed there kind of his prime minister, his tweeted saying, my heart breaks and we committed to working together to write these historical wrongs. just intruder spoken by phone to the chief of cow, assess 1st nation to offer his support. but the chief says the government needs to do more. there is no legislation to implement that
5:24 pm
t r c. the truth and reconciliation calls to action. it's, it's just in the better interest of canada to do that. secondly, investment investment and mental emotional help in some of our areas that we lost of control because of residential schools, addictions, child, welfare. but also in investing in the growth 1st nations, leaders in canada and now demanding the pipe apologizes for atrocities committed against them in the name of the catholic church and help them identify all of those that have died. countrywide protests found lice churches caused by activists to cancel kind of the day. all part of the fall out, indigenous leaders say schooled us were under reported, and the actual number of children in unmarked graves across canada could be in the 10s of thousands. they want to find them all, but even if they do full reco keeping means bodies may never be identified. so the
5:25 pm
families who still remember the children who went to school and never came home, may never have closure. so the height of al jazeera, now around the supreme either ali has any common a has received a dose of the countries 1st locally developed curb in 1900 vaccine company called the development point of national pride trials of curvy iran. barracka began back in december. the supreme neither has outlawed the use of us and british made vaccines. 83000 people have died from over 19 in iran, or indonesia health authorities. meanwhile, scrambling to expand hospital capacity after daily infections that hit a new hi more than 20000, the number of deaths is authorizing, with a record 143 fatalities reported on tuesday. 3 hospitals and the capital to casa, are now being converted to exclusively treat corona virus. patients or more than
5:26 pm
a half a 1000000 people in a trailer is biggest said he has again been put on the locked down sidney's batting and outbreak of the highly infectious delta therein of curve at 19 health littles have told residents and work is in for central suburbs to stay home for a week. there are currenty 65 cases in the so called bondai cluster that fled up last week. restrictions across the state of new south wales and now also been extended until next month. when moving on and study has found that a blood test to detect more than 50 types of cancer is not accurate enough to be used by doctors. it was developed by the u. s. company grail, and specifically for chemicals that leak from to move into the bloodstream and can then identify kansas that are difficult to diagnose in the early stages, like head and neck, ovarian and pancreatic. scientists found that this test correctly detected cancer and 51.5 percent of cases. often before any other signs or symptoms appeared. they say finding hands as early as one of the best ways of fishing the disease and say
5:27 pm
this test could have a profound impact. when i spoke to talk to eric kline, he's the chairman of the glickman, you logical and kidney institution, cleveland clinic, and also fast. also on that research, he's optimistic about what that test could mean for the future of cancer treatment . this is a whole new way of screening for cancer. currently we screen for individual cancers like prostate breast, colon cancer. this would allow screening for multiple cancers in a single drop. currently, i understand that gray has made it available just in the united states or, and out of pocket cost of $949.00, but eventually i could see it being used worldwide. this test will not find ever cancer. on the other hand, the value here is that it will find a lot of cancer is for which we have no screening currently. so it will find a lot of cancer that we don't find. now head neck, pancreatic ovarian, those are cancer's that generally presented advanced stages when patients are symptomatic and the burden of cures high, the amount of treatment needed is high and the courage not very good. so if you
5:28 pm
look across the entire cancer spectrum, it's true for virtual ever cancer. the sooner you detect earlier, you detect the easier it is to cure, the more likely it is to be curable. so this test will detect many more cancers than are currently detected. now, earlier stages and the hope is that that will translate into better survival. while you can now book a seat to the edge of space can accompany in the u. s. is turning to 5 passengers and a high tech version of a hot air balloon space perspective is now taking reservations for flight starting in early 2024. the tory gate and be report ah, after a successful test flight last week the company behind space ship met jude has sold more than 200 tickets for flights in that space. balloon. if all goes to plan the journey starting in 2024 will involve a 2 hour cent. above 99 percent of the atmosphere. passengers will spend 2 hours on
5:29 pm
the very edge of space before the balloon makes is to send to the ocean. i think you probably think lots of pitches of rockets launching. that's not how i would describe that right there. high. geez, bid is completely the opposite. so you're going to spend about 12. 1 miles now if you're going to space at the speed of cycling that allows the vehicle to be very smooth and gentle. and the capital itself is very roomy. nysha that left off perspective is in competition with companies including virgin galactic, which brenson and space ex l. musk for the space tourism market, but it says it's offering something differently. virgin galactic charges passengers up to a quarter $1000000.00 for 6 minutes of weightlessness. space perspective says it's trips cost half that price and last 6 hours. but without the 0 gravity experience,
5:30 pm
it says there's enough demand for every one and predicts a booming industry in the years ahead. we get our study where a walner now marketing company, market research company as a market for the kind of like what we're doing is on the order of 250000000 cow and budget. i've done their own studies with this kind of what possible light they're saying and 500, the 700000000000, whatever the blank number is. the market is huge. and if you can afford the sky high prices, it promises to be a trip that's out of this world. victoria gay to be al jazeera. ah, hello, this is al jazeera and these are the headlines. a 159 people still unaccounted for a day off the partial collapse of a 12 story apartment building in the u. s. state of florida. at least 4 people have died and.
18 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=382572020)