tv [untitled] June 26, 2021 3:30pm-4:01pm +03
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india has been devastated by the covey. 19 pandemic. the one i want to make the frontline work risking their lives to treat the stick and very the one out 0 me i'm can all santa maria with another look at the headlines on how to 0 indonesia recording its highest daily increase in coven 19 cases. more than 21000 of them registered on saturday. they were also $358.00 deaths overnight. indonesia has the highest number of infections and fatality in se asia. 1000000 people in and around australia, largest city, sidney, have been ordered into a 2 week lockdown, sidney in the state of new south wales, as seeing a fast growing cluster of the highly infectious delta cove at 900 variance. the one
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1st thing in india, you zealand has now suspended its travel bubble with australia for several days. we're going to do this, we need to do it properly. there's no point doing a trade. i locked out and then having the bars continue to bubble away in the community. now, if after 7 days, there's a dramatic change in the trend. well, obviously we'll, we'll evaluate the situation. but at the stage, the best hilton box we had is that a 2 week period or until mid not the friday, the 9th of july is necessary in order to make sure we get to our target of your community transmission, which is always been our target from the beginning of the pandemic of a headline $38.00 workers from doctors without borders have been killed and ethiopia ticket i region. their bodies were found near their vehicle on friday. the group included a spanish national along with to your colleagues at these $128.00 work as have been killed, integrated since the fighting broke out in november, members of iraq's popular mobilization forces and build
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a rally in deanna province show false by the umbrella of she paramilitary groups that had been blocked from holding early a protest made the government arrest the leader of a p. m. f group in amber province before releasing him without charge rescue. curious, say the prospect of finding survivors from that partially collapsed apartment building near miami, in the us, diminishing by the hour. a lot of pictures here from surf side in florida with 4 people are known to have died. that building collapsed on thursday, 159 still unaccounted for an helicopter. carrying the columbia president, even duke has been fired as near the border with venezuela. and one was hurt. it's been a claim of responsibility either, but several armed groups do operate in the area. do you? guy says it won't keep him from fighting drugs, trafficking terrorism, and organized. and those are the headlines portal is next. looking at the past week on al jazeera, online, china will mark the 100 anniversary of the founding communist party with president
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segan king leading celebration. but it comes at a time when relations with the west on the increasing strain. energy 7 countries looking to countless china is growing engine around the world. follow all the detailed analysis on algebra. the hi, i'm sandra gartman. welcome to portal. your gateway to some about a 0 as best online content. now when g 7 leaders met in the u. k. a few weeks ago the big theme was building back better. the idea can countries around the world sees an opportunity out of the coven crisis, to create a greener and more prosperous future. and that's what we're focusing on in this episode with stories that look at the problems and what the solutions might be. we'll see the economic impact of the panoramic insane where people have been fighting to keep their homes well here. house of beer air pollution has become
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a normal part of life and india capital. and out a 0 environment correspondent gives us a personal take on why a greener global recovery is so crucial between us. this moment in history is a real time of opportunity. in spain, more than 80000 people have died because of the corona virus and over 4000000 have lost their jobs. the economic hardship is highlighted just how affordable housing has become, especially in big cities like barcelona filmmaker, i will go on tell the story of how people are trying to fight eviction during the pandemic. in this episode, a fly on the wall, an online documentary series, the something up. i didn't like it all. you simply have to
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but i mean i'm part of that is that would be my philosophy. yes. when you come in, i may, if you're not, i mean i still wish i was as when i'm in the visit when, when i sort of feel just familiar when i did that. but when i said, i don't know, i will, they might be that idea. that one's as much. i'm not sure. i don't know if that's the small boy multilateral. oh, yes. and the fact that i put them in at them, what was some blocks and says, we show that i'm in, it's not, it's not that much hopeful and it'll say that it was done. so it's opened up on them. yeah it's, i don't know what it gas out because we can get them because of the
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others that didn't have the because it was just you can tell us, you know, because the conditions, i mean and i will nothing but then she asked me, dana, me that he got put on, i'm got on the he gets perfect. i see them i didn't yet, and i think that companies and i think that they don't use cuz they don't know what i'm not gonna keep in contact with that. if i come down there, when i mean you told me to and i'm i, the one that i mean pressure to make the same as everybody like and i will be group and i'm not going to get them, but they will be to me
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to go with plenty of those p as i mean the 2 pages um i actually like a tool and i'm in discussing the channels that don't ask the whole way that i think jonathan wasn't even just because he managed those measures. he goes, come on. but on those made really getting and really that not that many battle, not that i know i am the tv. oh my job. he already was just because familiar with us thought i was coming up soon, but i mean the way ah,
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for him again, it seems that alex was off in the in, in the 1000. i've been feeling that remember me coming out of this in the 10 diode us a little while on monday, monday and i've done mandatory international blue shield in new york. i can book it up on a melody or not by a no, you're not. i'm in the cell feel no message has been associated but nothing. no thing on the i the
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a big hit. that's correct. oh whatever the pros like, no, but he got nothing. you're not on mute. so you don't get on a little younger than i was i thought the film at the start of his ears. i'm going to catch up with him now to find out what if anything has changed since then hired. i was good to speak to. it's an incredibly powerful film that you've made. i wonder know that the spread of covered 19 has eased somewhat, whether the level of evictions has eased as well. well then the big chips continue . and now the problem is that people are worries because that is the state of all
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of the subs. so it's found that, that in the last, the last month there was like more of a chance even during the damage given the state of alarm. even though it was the, the new law that was trying to stop the chance, it's true that a lot of addiction to stop, but it never stopped properly. know how many people are there on junior being? and they said they wanted more tardy or extension of this protection low in theory until the beginning of august. but everybody's really, really worried. what is going to happen them because there's so many thousands upon waiting to be a big you mentioned that the government is issuing some kind of temporary relief or suspensions of evictions. is it helping though? knowing them i would tell you an example. amanda was like 15, just commit suicide because he was going to be a big and he was so desperate that she just commit suicide and. and that's
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a problem that the government and administration, the social service adults over situation. the problem is so big that whatever had they tried to do from local government, from regional government, from the state government it's, it's not the, it's not been up. so that's why a lot of the, the people that are suffering, this is problem. and organizations that and unions that, that had been on that i really, really worth while you didn't. excellent job documenting all of this. and hopefully at all is up somewhat soon. thank you so much. thank you. the india when one of the worst hit countries in the world when it comes to coven 19. but there's another threat in the air pollution. air pollution is the 3rd highest cause of death in the country. a new delhi is ranked as the most polluted capital in the world, and people there have just grown used to it. and this feature writer and andy, mr. talks about how air pollution has become an accepted part of life in the city.
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you can also listen to a non these article on our long greed podcast. let's hear some of what she had to say. dust is every waiter north india make a tree left behind by the development mocking it's territory. it doesn't even leave us alone during vacation. on the highway in our food, in the wash room. the dust is on the present. in 2021 in the midst of a region pandemic, north india is also experiencing away with construction. living and working in delhi, it feels like there is more dust accumulating than ever before. each time i cough, i feel a children's, the dread of a disease or a long standing illness waiting to take over my life. before the panoramic because of the dust, i was limited in my interactions with the outdoors. now stepping out is even more draining the india,
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their pollution is just one example of how difficult it can be for governments to protect the environment and keep the economy healthy at the same time. but after 18 months of locked downs, there's an opportunity to do things differently. will government's invest in a more sustainable future. that's a question that nick clark to 0 environment correspondent has been considering for between us. it's an online series where altos, air reporters, tell us their experience of covering a story. the climate change sticks out for me because it is the story of our times and everything depends on how we handle it from the way we live. to the way we eat, to whether or not we can live on a sustainable planet, whether it's peace, whether there's war, everything depends on it. i'm not clog the environment correspondent for al jazeera and between us this moment in history is
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a real time of opportunity. state of climate change right now, i think his parents, it's a clear and present danger. the past decade has been the hottest on record and everything that man has made now weighs more than all living things plants, humans, animals, the whole lot 70 percent of animal populations. have decreased in the last 50 years, and if that is not a crisis, i don't know what is one of the biggest challenges is getting people just to engage with the story you've really got to tell the human story. it's about how we inform the person who lives in manchester or in boston or in moscow and explain them why they should worry about what's going on in bangladesh or in the pacific islands. because sure enough, the effects of climate change it coming to a neighborhood near you. we go to places like car basses or palau in the pacific islands and show what's at stake and care about everybody lives on these thin
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strips of land and slowly but surely, they're moving further and further in because the sea is chasing them up and soon enough to see will just close over the top and these people will have nowhere to live at. all the nation will just be submerged. that's going to happen in the next few decades. unless we do something about 4 people are in the teeth of the climate crisis. the fishes, the farmers are facing the biggest challenges of all cycling with heart and when the locusts will come through when the wildfires passed through, they're the ones in the global south that hit hard. it's the environment's in my bones. i was born in towns near and east africa. my dad was a civil engineer. these accounts projects around the place out into the wild. be times when we were camping in the chair and getting kilimanjaro in the distance in that be wild animals all around us. and this is wonder and amazement of the natural world, i think, really struck me then certainly stay with me. this is one place called lulu such
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where this incredible glass here flows down the shelves of glass here and it's the glassy of it produced the iceberg to sunk the titanic, the 1st and i went back in 2007. there are 4000 also sled dogs everywhere. and i interviewed an l guy and he said, listen what i said, i just have a dog. and he said, we come back here in 10 years time. it'll be different. so we did and he was right . there was nothing like the coffee of noise that we heard back in 2007 because the ice that these dogs hunter in winter is disappearing. shane marked that it was, you know, i used to keep dogs outside my house, but i stopped using them 5 years ago. and that really brought it home. having children just changes everything. there was just this realization that suddenly what life is like for them once i'm gone and the kind of planet we leave behind,
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really matter places i've seen in the animals that i've witnessed. i really want them to be able to see, but it's going to be increasingly hard for them to do. so. there is a tipping point was suddenly people are engaged. why? why do people where, how serious this problem is and how important it is that we deal with it straight away. we have got to completely rip apart the way we power the world. we go to completely transform the way we from completely transform land use completely transform transportation. then you have renewables which are getting cheaper and cheaper and slowly but surely the transition is beginning to happen to us back into the paris agreement. everything has changed when it comes to america being involved . that means it provides the momentum for the rest of the world to get stuck in and do what is necessary. the optimism lies in how we deal with emerging from the
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pandemic is a great opportunity here with all the stimulus money there is around to throw that into the pot and make sure that we emerge in a sustainable way. it's almost a perfect storm of opportunity to be climate change as a colossal risk or colossal threat and state care. and we need to send the message out that this is a fight we're fighting. ah, i . so according to nick, we've got a great opportunity for the environment as we emerged from this pandemic. i caught up with him here and go home to find out how he thinks world leaders are doing. so i suppose your message there, nick, was that the pandemic has offered us this incredible opportunity to think about how we're going to build back with the environment in mind. do you think governments are actually seizing this opportunity?
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no question. there is a real opportunity here. it is a pivotal, mainly, and that's an understatement. if we don't see the opportunity, we're heading for a whole world. trillions of dollars a be invested in re booting the global economy. and if we do that and the sustainable wave, the half chance of stopping labor will be put us thinking the heart of global warming. science says that's what we've got to do. the economists say, that's what we've got to do. this is a burgeoning growing grass roots movement, tens of millions of people around the world supporting this action, saying this is what we've got to do. the problem is political, an action that we've seen for decades on the whole climate thing. the recent g 7 summit, a lot of great words were spoken. they were talking about this bill back of the world thing, which is kind of low rhetoric and very short detail. there's lots of other arenas where we're lacking big time climate finance is one nation's ambitions and reducing
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emissions to a sufficient level to keep temperatures down as another. so they've really got to step up and do something about it. there's a, there is a chance. there's not much time because this is a crucial year. next up is the g 20 summit so they can reconvene and with more countries in bold and try and get more momentum them as the un general assembly in september them as a big one, which is the climate some of the climate summit in glowers go in november and that they have got to succeed, they've got to find a way because if glowers go fails, then all bets are off. obviously, the storytelling here is hugely important. and as our environment correspondent, where do you think the reporting needs to be focused on ahead of these important summits like the one in glasgow. what we got a lot of things time for gloves. you know, one thing we're going to do is go to greenland because the arctic is one of the areas of the, well that's in real trouble, it's,
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it's facing and global warming and the pressures the global warming more than anywhere else. so will be that will be examining the effects of communities and ways of life. but i was really important this time is to, to really tell the story because it's so hard for people to engage in the story of climate change climate crisis. if you're not actually facing like this intangible threat, so we need to engage those people and tell us, or in a way that, that makes it real for them. and i think the way to do that is to go to the cities and tell the human story there. because if you think about it, the cities is, is the front line will be the front line very soon. if nothing is done. while it for seen those reports. next, thanks for coming in. that's it. from portal this week, you want to check out more episode that between us and fly on the wall. you can visit our website. you can also find a link there to all of our podcasts. and of course you can fab to date with everything we do online by following our social media pages. the next time.
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ah, news. news. news. ah, it's time for the journey to winter sponsored by kettle airways. you guys had a day off, but that band of weather coming for the sax through brazil is on its way to uruguayan. i think bonnie today might just get the edge effects of its still cooler crow, a 30 degrees, but not as much as it was to north of that as the season range are gone north,
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so they're still studying in northern part of brazil. the state of amazon ass rathermore. right. and you might like, but not a big surprise, i suppose. but the main rain is through columbia and to the north of that, and just off the coast of mexico developing yet another tropical storm, which will probably become a hurricane very soon if it isn't already to be honest, it will stay on the shores of the winds or at their worst shore, but along the coast of mexico, she includes acapulco flooding. rain seem very lightly and elsewhere throughout the gulf, mexican caribbean, widespread daily showers or thunderstorms. and has been so slow moving heavy rain for thunderstorm from more or less missouri towards illinois and beyond. that's going to keep going in the summer heat. but the real heat actually is further northwest, both in the us on the pacific coast and in british columbia. it looks like all these records could be broken over the weekend and beyond.
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sponsor cut on airways. i care about healthy us engages with the rest of the world . we're really interested in taking you into a plane. you might not visit otherwise at feel that you were there. ah, this is al jazeera ah, the time is $1300.00, gmc hello on come all santa maria. welcome to the news are here on out just the ra contingent hospitals i fails to 100 percent capacity and beyond. corona, virus infections reach and other records. i want to get my control system before the family that's with us police on.
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