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tv   [untitled]    July 2, 2021 6:00am-6:31am +03

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young activists and organizing are on the move. okay, we do the work in the 1st of in the series, 2 people in new york city use different to me. suffice institutional racism and police brutality. this is indeed a wide problem that wires a systemic pollution generally can change on your game. oh i donald trans company and it's finance. chief, i'm charged with fraud and tax crime. ah, hello there, i'm just talking. this is alex life durham, also coming up fine destroys the village and canada just days after recorded the
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country's office temperature ever thousands of people are moved to stay for ground in the philippines as the lat level for volcano, there is rain. oh, good already. i mean, a 2 year old set to become the oldest pass the blood into space, fulfilling and vision starting 6 decade. ah, donald trump company and it's finance chief, are being prosecuted for what's being described as sweeping and audacious tax fraud . alan, vice burke has denied 15 charges against him, and the trump organisation cable is under, has worn out from you. and many of the other groups of donald trump likes to brag about the trump organization. having often says it's very successful and his pride and joy. but a grand jury in new york has another word for trump's family business. criminal.
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after a nearly 2 year investigation, the manhattan district attorney in dated the trump organization for financial wrong doing prosecutor say this man, alan white and berg, the trump organizations chief financial officer, was one of the top benefactors of the alleged crimes he worked for trump for over 40 years he now faces 15 felony counts. prosecutor said he orchestrated a 15 year tax avoidance scheme, allegedly avoiding paying tax at $1700000.00 in income. he pleaded not guilty, and the judge released him on bail. his next court appearance is september 20th. the 25 page indictment which was unsealed thursday afternoon, read in part, that weisel berg attempted to conceal his actions by falsifying records with the help of top executives at the trump organization. who are the other top executives?
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prosecutors are not yet saying publicly. trump organization's lawyers, as speaking, after the court proceedings ended, said the charges do not rise to the level of a criminal indictment and are politically motivated because they involve the trump name. this case should have never been brought. it is a political prostitution, political prostitution where people are targeted criminally because of the prosecutors disagree with their political belief happened in corrupt. it does not happen in america. it's an american. it should not happen here in new york city. donald trump also issued a statement saying that charges are a political witch hunt. it's important to point out that donald trump has not been charged with any crime. but legal observers say that if, why, so a bird has damaging information and he's willing to cooperate with investigators. that could mean bad news for the former president,
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but it will all ride on why sober? i think he's been under pressure for the past 23 years to cooperate. he'll continue to be under pressure as the month and year to year progress of this prosecution progressive. but the important part is whether he has something to contribute and whether he wants to contribute it. and if he does, perhaps cooperation, is that something to look forward to in the future? for now, there are still a lot of unanswered questions on where all of this could lead. is this the final stage of an investigation? or could this be the 1st of more charges you have to come against others? gabriel is hondo jazz eda new york? on meanwhile, a $130.00 countries have agreed to back sweeping changes to the global tax system once implemented. that deal would see multinational companies like google, amazon, and apple text at a rate of at least 15 percent from wherever they operate. the organization for economic cooperation and development which hosted those talks says that could bring a $150000000000.00 of additional global tax revenues annually. now moving on and
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fire has engulfed the village that's just recorded canada's hottest ever temperature. people living and listen in british columbia had to abandon their homes. on wednesday, the man says 90 percent of the villages destroyed. he says it took 15 minutes for the flames to overwhelm on time to about 250 people. listen, is that the center of a heat wave after sweltering and 49.6 degrees celsius heat this week? well, let speak to jody vance. she is a freelance journalist and she joins us now from kamloops in british columbia. jody einstein, you at your holiday house, about 2 hours drive from listen also how we will coping over well, then i can tell you that at best it has been unnerving and worse. it has been downright terrifying in british columbia. we drove up here to kamloops yesterday for our vacation and saw a plume of smoke, so big coming from linton all that distance from here in kamloops. and my son said
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to me, is there a volcano erupted over there? it was stunning, shocking, and certainly something we are not accustomed to here and what is largely temporal rain for us in the pacific northwest. the temperatures here in british columbia have been off the chart some 20 degrees warmer than what we're used to. as i said, very unnerving for residents in british columbia and canada, that matter is this ms into albert, our neighboring father watching some really extraordinary pictures of the fire and smoke from listen. what are you now seeing and hearing from authorities? i know there are also a number of other fires burning on the other side also not terribly far away from you. not far at all. there are some 99 fires that started in the last 24 hours alone in british columbia, our premier here john horgan address immediate day to try and calm nerves. it was just 2 days ago that the state of emergency that had perpetually been react over the course of the cobra. 1900 panoramic that came to an end now were facing perhaps
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another state of emergency. this time one associated with wildfire. there is another fire, i just, north west of kamloops and the lake behind me. this is the clearest, have been all day. it is been almost a wall of smoke. it is affecting the weather. we're watching the sunset here and it is a very red sky. it is unusual say the least when we drove here yesterday, it was 47 degrees in kamloops. and i can tell you as a born and raised british columbia and vancouver, i, i've never experienced 47 degrees here. i have in other parts of the world, but certainly not in my home province. and joe, do you say just how unusual it is? i mean, there has been quite a lot of expert speaking about how climate change is progressing much more quickly than many expected. how people they're having conversations about what they're seeing happened on the ground. well, british columbia is a very, in tune and natural. we are often called tree huggers here because of our,
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our brand cathedrals of trees and old growth forest. and just absolutely, it's a beautiful corner of the world. we're used to it being cool and down if not a little bit too rainy. and that is just simply not been the case in recent years of the last 5 years. we've come to know, july and august, particularly august to become ma guess we get this sort of drape that this low of smoke from wildfire that sits over the major cities in this province. and that has not been the case until very recently. it is very real here, and for those who would choose to perhaps deny climate change are certainly learning a very rapid lesson right now in british columbia tried events halfway on trying to less joining us from kamloops in british columbia where she's on holiday sturdy, thanks. so much for joining us, and i hope you and your family do stay safe. thank you as well in the united states, california is also being affected by the heat wave. 5 fighters in the north of the
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state on boxing, to fires and ground crews there, as well as the california national guard are among those assisting residents. the city of lake head have also been given evacuation orders. extreme temperatures are contributing to the potential for more new fires. people being advised not to use fireworks on the 4th of july holiday, or may not mass evacuations also underway and villages close to the philippine capital manila. after a volcano. this spewed steam and toxic gas, nearly $15000.00 people are now being moved to safe areas. and a smug has also blanketed manella with residents that being warned to stay indoors . well, let's speak jamila alan dorgan that she is in tall or near that volcano. jamila island, i understand this is a relatively small volcano. how unusual is this social volcanic activity? well it's, it's considered to be one of the smallest active volcanoes in the world am going to
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step aside. so you're able to see exactly how that look looks like. now this is the alvo's k. no, it's several. kane, within a crater from you know, which is about 3 hours north or south of the capital manila. what was once a beautiful, you know, favorite tourist destination, which is now, you know, largely been close off for over a year now. so it looks relatively peaceful compared to what happened thursday afternoon. but i'm not sure you're able to see the smog that blankets in many parts of, you know, many sounds here, but as also a mug that has reached the capital manila. now, health workers, whether experts of also recorded, you know, one of the highest levels of so for oxide emissions this week. this is why a lot of communities are living here or been advised to where you know masks and to stay indoors. but this is quite difficult because about 2 towns have been evacuated since yesterday. that's about 14000 residents. about $400.00 families now scatter
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digging shelter in about 11 evacuation centers. so there is a concern that at the level alert level is reached to 3. that means from evacuation of those dipping within 77 kilometer danger zones, they need to get back to with more people. and the issue here at this point is how they're going to be able to implement coven, 1900 protocols in many evacuation centers. of course, jamilla, i'm curious as to how authorities are dealing with the scale of this and how all of these evacuations going, i imagine there's also a lot of panic. well this has been this area, but on this province, i've had a really rough time since early last year. early last year, the volcano erupted displacing more than a $100000.00 people. this is a community where the tourists are. people are dependent on tourism and agriculture in particular, fishing for their livelihood. so after that explosion, you know,
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just when they were starting to return to their homes, the pan demik actually happened here. so this has been largely close off. and just about few weeks ago, you know, a lot of establishment here of close i'd started to open up and, you know, people were hopeful that somehow they're able to return to, you know, to the lives that they once had before the explosion. but now again, you know, this can exhibit the threatening this relative calling that they've had over the last few months. jim and alan, doug, and they're on the ground for us in town near that volcano, be speaking to us throughout the day. thank you so much. miller fella had few here on algebra, homeless people in brazil found a temporary shelter, intense, but now i'm going to have their story look at how software is being developed in south korea in an effort to try to reduce. so if i
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choose has been flooding. rain from utah across the plains, states to the midwest for last couple of weeks is moving south now. and the biggest story of heat is still witnessed. witnesses extreme, if you remember this specific northwest, particularly washington oregon, where temperatures were breaking records and that's particularly more so in british columbia, western canada, where lytton hit 49.6. now you see the forecast the heaters moved eastward systems, extreme and thunderstorms taking the place in drop temperatures. but that's a forecast and saturday for the next 24 hours is still the problem. 5 that broke carriage cover, heat, and lytton was completely surrounded by fi of this. hopefully will help at least in dumpling, down. now the picture in winnipeg whether he's going his temperatures will rise, the record is $42.00, so don't expect that to be beaten. but the average 26. so again,
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this is rather poor by day and by night is too warm. it's dangerously hot in fact. and he's moved to the right dancer, the u. s. stays down towards the golf. stay leaving dry behind, which must be a relief for many or i have to say. and that just keeps going south during saturday, leaving dry behind the temperature still high. those you know, i've been winnepeg the the world's lungs are being seized. the amazon rain forest is diminishing the rate of 2 football pitches a minute to meet the market insatiable appetite for logging mining and farming. as both scenarios, government seek to relax conservation laws and increased production indigenous communities on the brink of extinction. no, it's the bite of their life. people empower brazil's amazonian battle on al jazeera. ah
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the me again, i'm sorry to handle that. remind you about top stories here, the felon. for me, you as president donald trump company and it's finance chief, being prosecuted for what's being described as sweeping and or de should tax for the trump organization, allen by full. but the nice gaming to help top executives avoid paying taxes on the benefits. fire has engulfed village that's just called a candidate office to every temperature people living and listen and british columbia had to abandon their home. it's at the center of it. heat wave off the sweltering and $49.00 degrees celsius. pete. mass valuations also underway in
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belgium. close to the philippine capital, manila volcano, that steam and toxic gas. nearly $15000.00 people are now being rude to safe areas and a small g has also blanket at the capital manella. now unemployment in brazil, latin america's largest economy, has been at a record level in the 3 months from february 14 point 8000000 of it's 212000000 people were looking for work. many in the country can't even afford to pay rent anymore. teresa has the story. we want to please to live chant these people in religion ego. they were recently evicted from attend city in the area over. hundreds of families had moved their last may, as they couldn't afford a place to live. but their stay didn't last long. police were sent in to enforce an eviction order of howards. nobody injured them. there are no armed people here.
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there are no drug addicts here. there are no traffickers were just homeless people with just one. alright. the eviction removal follows the code decision in favor of the landowner procedure state. run oil comp, he pedro would ask some wisdom. williams, my heart are demolishing the structures and when we are done in the land is empty. without the people who invaded the area, we are going to turn over the line to the owners. wilson controls the area. no. as long as you go to handle the residents call this place. 1st of may refugee camp. that got a while. oh says she has lost everything. well, you get that today. i'm unemployed. i'm homeless, the not housing. they took away everything that it was. i was latin america. the biggest economy has been hit hard by called at 19 a record 15 percent of the working age population is unemployed. people here say they're desperate. they don't have a job or a home to live. many were left homeless,
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buy up and demick that refuses to relent. it if i will, i'll just see to our search teams have resumed work at the collapsed building in miami, with more than 140 people still missing. the cham plaintiff is came down a week ago now. earlier presenter biden visited the site and met with relatives of victims, as well as emergency crews. at least 18 people have now been confirmed dead. john henry reports from south side, president biden visited the rescue workers and relatives of those lost in the crumbled concrete and twisted steel of the surf side condo collapse, offering help and hope. jim, i want to know that we're with them in the countries with our message today is that we're here for you as one nation. we believe that cert continuing searching is something that's very, very important. so we are, or the department of transportation engineers working. i know that that the fire
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department and the county are, are getting the different options on how to handle this. but of course we're going to provide whatever resources they need to be able to allow the searches to continue. biden offered consolation to the families of victims ranging in age from $4.00 to $92.00, including the 1st 2 children found sisters whose parents also died in the collapse discovered on wednesday. biding thank. the 1st responders who cope with fires, rains infrequent pauses in their work. due to lightning storms and he offered federal help, the same agency that investigated the 911 collapse of the world trade center is investigating this incident. but they say it could take 2 years to complete that investigation. those rescue workers frustrated after days of sifting through the debris, face trauma of their own. i bet it's probably searching for around 11 years. and this is in emotionally the most difficult thing i ever happens or i think
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a lot about including myself, a lot of our passports members, i work with are separated from the missing people by one or 2 degrees. as the president returned to washington tropical storm, elsa spun menacingly offshore, threatening the florida coast and potentially forcing rescuers to divert resources from the building collapse to storm response. i promise you, we know we know what you're doing here is incredible having to deal with uncertainty, worried about you know, the families. anyway, the workers had hoped to find signs of life beneath the rebel for the president's visit. with de 8 of the search went much like every day since last thursday, without a rescue, and time and hope running out for survivors. john hinder and al jazeera, surfside,
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florida, or canada is having a subdued national day this year with rallies in solidarity with indigenous people replacing celebrations in many cities. and so follows the discovery of more than 1000 unmarked graves and recent weeks form of schools where indigenous children are forcibly involved. the schools were run by the catholic church and funded by the government. prime minister justin trudeau said this is canada day was a time to reflect on historical failures. now, major supply route use to deliver much needed food to eat. european water and region has been destroyed. it's not clear who destroyed the bridge over the case. the river that relief work is saying it's a major set back. some 2000000 people have been displaced since fighting broke out last november, and about half of them are in desperate need of food. meanwhile, the government, which the suite declared a unilateral cease fire once to grind armed groups to lay down their arms,
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the gray people the ration front cause that sees fire, a joke is his physician of was still it you, you need. the sensation of charities was taken naturally from our side. however, to implement this by a fully, it nice to to tangle, the other side has to react properly for this to work. now but i believe that richard branson has unveiled plans to beat a fellow billionaire and rival jeff bezos to space branson's company. virgin galactic announced that he will be on board the rocket powered plane should you have to take off on july the 11th, and thats just 9 days before amazon found the best also plans launch both brands and as all have been developing and testing rockets to take wealthy tourists, the short trips in 0 gravity and that one of the 1st ever women trained to become an astronaut will soon become the world's oldest person to be shot into space. we lead gently on the desert surface. we opened the hatch and you step outside was the 1st thing you say?
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i was say, honey, that was the best thing that ever happened. well, well, the fun will be traveling with amazon boss jeff bezos when he adds into orbit later this month. funk passed astronaut training in the early 1900 sixty's, but she never made it to space because of her gender. i didn't think that i would ever get to go, i think, resigning my way while you're a girl. 2 you can't do that, i said guess what? doesn't matter what you are, you can still do it if you want to do it. and i like to do things that nobody is john loved every 2nd of it. i get already way. well that's not bringing emily spec, she's as space reporter for w k. m g online and click all under dot com. she joins us from orlando in florida. emily, while the funk sounding incredibly excited about her trip. she is 18 to those are presumably she does need to be in fairly good shape to fly. what sort of things my
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passengers need to be able to do some pretty basic things, actually blue origin. they accepted some bids for this 1st space. flight them on bed, $28000000.00 to take one of those seats next to wally and jeff bezos and his brother . and some of those requirements were pretty basic. you've got to be able to put a seat belt on in about 10 seconds. you need to climb a couple of flights of stairs, and you need to be over about 5 feet tall. you are probably going to experience a few g forces, but you know, they will have some medical evaluation. so it's, it's not all that much. while he's suddenly looking out for that, it does look like with all of this action, the space tourism race has been heating up. how soon could the general public found the booking slides? that's still a ways off and we really don't know the full cost of how much that's going to be, you know, this blue origin flight. this is their 1st crude flight. so they've done the 15 other times without people and now they're going to fly people for the 1st time.
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and we don't yet know when they're going to fly other paying customers and virgin galactic, they're still quite not there. and this is not the general public. these are people with a lot of money to throw down 1st a flight. and you mentioned 15 flights that i'm curious. i mean, that's not that many, all their safety concerns is this begins to open up. i know not all the test flights have gone terribly while speed flight is dangerous and there's really no other way to put it if everything so many things have to go right in order for something not to go wrong. you know, like i mentioned there, this spacecraft, blue origin, new shepherd, rocket has launched and landed 15 times. and all of those flights have gone pretty well. but with other companies and many other rockets, other things, you know there have been tragedies in space flight, but i can say that i don't think that blue origin would be launching people, especially someone like bali funk who would be absolutely horrible to lose unless
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they thought they were ready to do this and ready to launch people. you mentioned that bit of $28000000.00 to fly with wally and bizarre. is that indicative potentially what it's going to cost the people? i mean presumably, competition might drive prices down, right? yeah, that's a really good point. so we're still talking about a few amount of competitors to want to launch people in space. right. and that $20000000.00 that was through a few weeks long bidding process. and i do think that at the end of the day, blue origin has now able to look at that and say, okay, can we set our price point higher than before? so it's very likely that you know, the 1st few space flights paying customers might be hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars a month just in terms of the money. i was taking a look at some of the numbers and it looks like the space tourism market. the whole market is expected to be with something like $1700000000.00 by 2027. i'm curious about how the economics says tax. i mean, given the huge investment that these companies have had to make,
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will it have been well? well, it's going to take a while for it to pay off. you know, this is the 1st crude play for blue origin. virgin galactic still hasn't flown paying customers yet. so it's going to take a few years for that to pay off, but there are people with virgin galactic who already put down some doubt down payments. so the return on investment is going to take a little while and that's kind of one of the risks with space quite especially with space tourism. super interesting industry, which will be watching closely here when i was there. emily spec that a space reporter to w k. m. g online. thanks for joining us and sharing your insight. 70. thank you. now to the pandemic and portugal is imposing a coffee for its capital. lisbon, as well as several other municipalities on thursday, recorded 2500 new corona virus cases. that's the highest number since mid february, hospital admissions on out at a to mom high already is, are blaming the highly contagious delta vary for this right. meanwhile,
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the chill is scheme, mountains of opened up after more than a year of closure. that's due to the pandemic. some measures that are still in place, such as limited capacity, face mask and social distance thing. but the industry is hoping to recruit some losses despite still being out of reach from any international tourist. sheila has been leading in latin america for an occupation and unity as capital hasn't placed on the partial lockdown after seeing arrive in cases there. the new measures include a ban on social gatherings into dining and sporting events for 2 weeks. many train is in hospital is already at full capacity with medic. unable to cope, paramedics and south korea's capital pioneering especially develop software to reduce the cities. large number of suicides. south korea has the highest suicide rate of any developed country. from pride reports now from phil. the multiple bridges that spanned the han river passing through, sol,
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witness many of the city suicide attempts at a rate of more than one day. a dedicated team working from a control center monitors numerous cameras around the clock, and they are now helped by artificial intelligence. as in this simulation, physical sensors trigger and alarm of a possible suicide attempt, but now that will be supported by a data analysis program that quickly detects visual signs of someone who's about to jump don't home with our 20th hall through image analysis, we have developed software that is based on deep learning that can detect and predict when a suicide attempt is about to be made. in the past, sol has tried different measures to deter people jumping from its bridges. it's experimented with messages of hope such as these. and by installing physical devices to make it harder for anyone to climb over the edge. now assisted with this new technology,
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it's hoped emergency teams will be given extra seconds to intervene. either talking the person out of their action or if they do jump to be able to rescue them quickly, thinking to go and have her as a new acknowledges are applied, we will be able to detect attempts much earlier so we can respond much quicker. we believe that will help us rescue more people. an application of artificial intelligence that could mean the difference between life and death. public bride al jazeera, so ah, hello, this is al jazeera and these are the headlines. for me, you as president donald trump's company is being prosecuted for what's being described as sweeping and dangerous tax fraud. and financial chief alan wife will burg, has pleaded not guilty to fraud and beth charges. there are 15 counts against him and the trump organization. they are accused of illegally avoiding taxes on company
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parks like cause apartments in school. tuition fire has engulfed the village that's very recently recorded canada.

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