tv [untitled] July 3, 2021 5:30am-6:01am +03
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to sing for a military parade in high heels. now these pictures are released by the fence ministry ahead of celebrations next month to month 30th independence. several furious politicians showed up to parliament with high heels and encouraged the defense minister to wear them to the parade. one and demanded a public apology for humiliating women will $30000.00 ukrainian women have fought in the own gang conflict in the east of the country. ah, your channels is there with me, said hall robin in doha. reminder of all these stories, the united nation says more than 400000 people and are suffering simon in ethiopia to cry reach. and it says the situation is, was dramatically in the last 2 weeks and more of more fighting, despite the c 5 declared by the government diplomat together to james base as more from the un. well, certainly it, i think,
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highlighted how bad things have got into gray. we heard from top un officials, we heard from the acting head of the humanitarian part of the un, the emergency relief coordinator, 400000 people. and now living in famine and they fear that figure is going to grow . we also heard from the top political official of the united nations, with a real warning that they could be, or there was a potential for a swift deterioration in the security situation. so even though some council members didn't want this public meeting, they certainly heard, i think things that will certainly make them think about the situation going forward. now the us military has pulled out of dollars bounce back from ab ace, the epicenter of its war to topple the taliban and hunt down the al qaeda group. after the $911.00 attacks us, president joe biden has set a september deadline for full withdrawal and says,
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the finance is on track. brazilian prosecutors have opened the corruption investigation into president eyeball scenario. he's accused us failing to act on evidence that one of his allies tried to embezzle millions of dollars as part of a corona virus vaccine deal. delegates us back talk to pay the way for elections in libya, failed to find common ground. the week long negotiations in geneva were expected to confirm the terms of the presidential parliamentary vote. a new unity government was for last year for the sar agreement. following years of fighting and malaysia as tightly pandemic restrictions in color poll and some surrounding areas, the country is under a national lockdown and reported almost $7000.00 new cases on pushing holiday stories on our website, south the dot coms, updated through the day. more news and half now, next is the stream to stay with us. talk to al jazeera,
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we roam, did you want the un to take and who stopped you? we listen. you see the whole infrastructure and being totally destroyed. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on our sera. ah, i me. okay, welcome to the bonus edition of the stream. it is the director, scott. that means you know, great conversations behind one of those gc chat that we have with gas after the show right here. in this episode, coming up an uncensored conversation about the 100 anniversary of the chinese communist party from audi 0 correspondent, katrina, you. you'll get to details that citizens in china not allowed to talk about. we also talk to the moment on screen when jewish comedian. no, i'm just slipped from comedy into activism while discussing how humor has
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a power to bring this rainy's palestinians together. let's start with the writer and poet, clint smith, who appeared on the street and to talk about his new book, how the word is passed. i reckoning with a history of slavery across america. after the show, we talked about the deeply personal reasons that dr. clint, to write the book, and as he's also an award winning spawn poet, there was no way i was going to let him go without doing a reading. take a look in orland, there are over 100 schools, road and buildings name for confederate labels. every day, lack children walking to building named after people who never wanted them to be there. every time i return home, i drive on the street name for those. what if one and me and change go straight for 2 miles on gravity, we take a left on jefferson davis. make the 1st right on clayborne translation. those paper to miles on the general slaughtered hundreds of black soldiers were trying to
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render a less on the press in the confederacy who made the torture of black bodies, the cornerstone of the new nation. the 1st right on the man who permit the head, rebellious place we put on state to spread across the city in order to prevent the others from getting any idea of what name is there for this sort of violence. what do you call on the road? you walk on his name for those who imagined you under the news? what do you call it? one of over your head? it named after people who wanted the bricks to crush? you are so personal in the ways and tell the stories, i feel what you're feeling and you've got this one memorable moment where you say the muscles around your mouth. twitch, you didn't even though you had muscles and that particular part of your mouth when i'm thinking, okay, now i get, why did you write like that? because that is the writing of a novelist. not necessarily of
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a historian. yeah, i, i appreciate you. thank. so i came of age of the writer as a poet. my 1st book is a collection of poetry. and i think part of what poetry does is it teaches you how to pay attention to pay attention to the world around you to pay attention to what's happening inside of you inside of your body. and, and i attribute my, my life as opposed to the ability to write this book in this way i would have felt like would it help dishonest? so write it in any, any other sort of way. and so i want to incorporate the best of the history, the best the, the journalism, the best of the literature about the poetry that i've spend time with and sort of bring it all together to create one. what i hope is one contribution. it's really rich body and work exist from scholars and journalists, writers across centuries in this country to help make up what i hope is helpful
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intervention in our discourse. and to do it in a way that feels unique to my sensibilities and how i sort of see in what does it mean for you to be doing the work you're doing with 2 little ones, a 2 year old and a 4 year old. i'm surprised you don't have more gray hair, but anyway, what does that mean? what does this mean in the context of you being a dad? look everything. i mean my, my children are, you know, i mean it's cliche, but i guess everything we schafer, reason it, they are the center of my life and the dedication says this book is for them. i, i wrote this sort of book that i would have wanted to read when i was growing up, that would have been really helpful for me and that sometimes makes sense as well. and i think we're broadly i'm, i am what i hope that they learn. not necessarily right now that we're into,
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but ultimately is that we are part of the tradition of people in the lineage of people who fought for freedom. that they knew that they might never see themselves why people were fighting for freedom in this country. black, both for generations. from the moment we arrived on the shore, which means the vast majority of and lay people against freedom or for freedom rather, never had the chance for themselves. but they thought what anyway, because they knew that someday someone what and what i, what i want my children to understand it that, that our lives are only possible because they were people fighting for something they knew they might never see. and what responsibility to that, i still want to fight for a more, just more equitable, more beautiful world in ways that we might never benefit from ourselves. so we do it. but as people have done it for us, and it is our responsibility to do it for others. seconds after that conversation had ended, my copy of how the word is past was gone. the word was passed. and that's because ed hale, he's the stream steady can operator was so moved by how passionately painted,
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talked about black history that he asked the boy, my copy. you can watch the full conversation as stream dot out his era dot com. known shasta is a jewish comedian who has managed to find comedy in the fraud relationship between israelis and palestinians. as stories told, the new witness documentary reckoning with laughter, no shifter returns the israel. know, makes me laugh. in the documentary, you really get a sense of how warm a slight, you, wicked, and say kiera. after the lie shy, would know of the film's director, amber cyrus. i want to know how i managed to capture so much comedy on camera, because not all films about comedians a funny. i mean, no, i'm just translate like no, i'm just trying to send sort of all of that and her just her whole being and sort of funny and related will. so it's not anything that i had to do. i just point the
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camera at her and let her go, but i think, you know, one of the things about non is a, she in her whole lake sort of being, embodies this world that we all live in that is like so inclusive and it's funny and warm and is motional. and so you know, as a filmmaker there's not a lot that i have to do. i just have to, you know, to her. yeah. you how amazing it is when women work with women and what is the reason of women? you know, it's very common, you see jewish filmmakers make documentaries about posting ins or arabs. but the fact that ember is an arab filmmaker that he's making some but me tons a lot of meaning in a context. and what we're doing, and it's very very, you know, everything always non, non but it's very complicated with amber is doing. i'm all over the place. i'm all
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over the place. i'm doing a 1000000 things and i don't even know why i am an amber manager to grab this piece and this piece in this space until in a story that make sense. so amber, like, no one would ever like what i'm doing and in doing it's a whole really and what not like what non says it's a whole team. it's not just, it's not just me. we have a producer, rachel, the a john who's amazing documentary filmmaker, director and producer, and our editor who is about has yeah, the pelting in citizen of israel who she speaks all the languages, hebrew, arabic, and she's also the editor of my last last them or so i mean, so making isn't a singular thing, it's not just me, it's an entire team that come behind behind it. so, but, but this team is predominantly women. and that's really something special. the team
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is in our special ed and we did live in the palestine for 7 years. and and, you know, i see my role in an israeli due in my, my role is being part of the struggle to liberate, you know, not only the palestinian from this brutality in aggression and in justices of the patient, but also us from this and, and, and it's really a responsibility and the mission that i carry on my shoulders, among many, many things. any time that we speak up, it's time that the world knows that there are not only posting in need to be as the of course, you need to be at the forefront of their liberation. but there are allies, and there are people from within the system. the oppressed them that are saying know enough, this is the,
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we're joining you because your liberation is our liberation and it's my role is really do to do whatever it takes to speak up. and this is one of the outlet. so if this is, you know, this is what it takes, totally, there cares. i'm not ashamed. and i'm proud to be an ally in food. really dies with me. and i said out loud that i didn't serve in the army and i resist and i resisted, you know, military service. i use my arabic to break this 2 races system. i encourage you to learn and use their arabic not for military and intelligence purposes. and it's time to change the story. it's time to be it. you know, it sounds like a cliche. be the alternative. speak about change enough. it's really not. so this is for me, it's a time where finally, you know, my voice is my, my voice is getting stage receiving stage,
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but i hope that i'm speaking for many other people. yeah, and i think that's a really good point with no, i'm just sad about ally ship and when we're talking about in the context of the issues globally, but how do we be in digital communities? how do we be and i live in our own countries, and i think gnome is such a great example of that. i mean, i'm canadian, myself and we all know the issues that are going on in canada right now. and i have to ask myself like how am i and i like to the indigenous population of canada. and i think that is one of the things i really love about norm and this project is that it, it really trans and israel palestine. and we can all take something from it in terms of our issues we're dealing with in our own country. amber, phil, reckoning with laughter, is now streaming at al serra dot com. just look for the witness path. at the top of your computer. the united states has been out war in afghanistan for decades, but now troops are finally leaving will the departure of the us military from
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afghanistan and mean for the country. that's the question that just rushing off while hosting the stream this week. it was a huge conversation and i guess we're more than happy to continue it after the live show. there was actually some video comments i wanted to bring on. one is from a history professor at stanford, robert cruz who sent us this, this comment, and i want to try to get you guys to respond to it after we play it here. the u. s . withdrawal has created a dangerous political vacuum. when do you feel about that? hold on, and then you tell me on malicious us last much was leverage, i was hold on, but it's just filled everything in the power to counter. so went on and to try to over the waters of a war. it must push the government to become more inclusive and responsive to the public and it must create incentives for our neighbors to engage in peace and find a regional peace agreement. finally, do s must do more to protect monitor all civilian populations. reggie from the i think as our community to journalists and intellectuals and while defending and
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women's rights to the school to work and to gauge and politics. so it's also prepare for a refugee crisis. this could be the beginning of a massive refugee displaced civilians situation really crisis. oh, what needs to happen in terms of civility is displaced in the country because of the taliban. she will, regardless of the political message of the places people that they're living, their house and their shelter a just today we know that more than 3000000 afghans are facing that crisis. and that means like almost 10 percent of the african population, it will really bring more crisis. and we're may damage more society to build up themselves back and we're gaining for the government, the trust of the people. so that that's
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a clear message. people don't like the taliban beside of tap. they are looking for a safe place where they should fit themself. ational really easy for someone to trouble village. that's everything been destroyed or needs to be destroyed. so people have a choice between saving their life or their shelter, and that's the most worst we are facing lots of crisis, comical crisis. the kobe 19 crisis lift, natural disaster we are facing. and that's another crisis, which is, i've got some can not tolerated. i think the government shoulder is extremely heavy to carry on all that pressure. i do believe this is the time that rather than, let's say political points of view, we have to think things more and a humanitarian perspective. so security is important, but human security is more important. that's what we need to cooperation. it's been
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20 years. is the government ready to stand on its own and people are asking, right. and that has a government prepared for this moment, you know, in 2015 john mccain came to on and on. and he was talking about the us need to continuance war and so on and so forth. and i remember i had as far as you know, dc planning for 5 years down the line, 100 years down the line for, for us with troll. and is anybody in the whole planning for it? i don't remember. but i think the question, this is precisely the problem is that people don't feel as if there is a concrete plan, you know, if they can rely on this government, you know, people feel caught up between a corrupt government and
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a barbarian terrorist organization. and so now is the time for the government to come up to show that it can be included. people can eliminate eruption that it can provide security that he can do something about the economic situation doesn't need to constantly rely on the outside house. and now it's really up to the group. finally, we had to china where the communist party is celebrating. it's and tina re, katrina you out to 0. as china correspondence joined josh, rushing for a candid conversation about the successes and failures of 100 years of the party in china in the u. s. and at least not going to make circles here all the time that this is going to be the chinese century. but the last one was the u. s. century now can be the chinese and treat as kind of amazing to think that it went from that kind of backwater agrarian society to it. in 100 years is going to be a monic kind of country for early. so what, what people looking toward is,
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is there, i know that there's probably a lot of pomp and circumstance around that narrative in the success of that. but i'm curious as a journalist, you know what stories locate told today that it took to, to get there. i can stay and basically in the lead up to this event, we've been hearing nothing, but about this. said henry, for months now since the beginning of the year, the government's liking it, and this is, i mean the chinese government is pretty heavy on public and it's pretty heavy on pushing communist ideology. but in the lead up to this event, it's kind of been on steroids. i can say it's more nationalistic patriarch. patriotic cyber is reaching this fever page crescendo today. in arm it's kind of where it's in the newspaper. it's in. it's in t v dramas. every cinema is all around the country have been commanded to show
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propaganda based film like on a regular india. so what you are hearing is this message about success, this message about achievement, how the chinese government was able to get things together for the, the people and deliver, deliver in, bring millions of people out of poverty is what they say deliver by making it so that people's standards of living has increased astronomically in the past few decades and, and many people in china when they're 1560, they, they believe it because they, they lived through that time where they couldn't eat, they lived through chaos of the cultural solution. so for them, there is a lot of reasons to party, you know, they went from not to go to school, not being able to have access to a follow right ball of food q. now, living in a way that you know is compare, but it's relatively well compared to a lot of,
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lot of the worlds, certainly a lot or the asia region. so you're hearing all about that pressure. and they're doing it at tenements where yes they are, they're doing one big celebration in tenements where, but just to your point what you're not going to hear. i mean, exactly. yeah. so there's to do what you're not going to hear is basically any failure to come to the party or blunders. so you're not going to hear about the 1989, cracked each in square after the mass pro democracy protest, which was a huge tragedy. and we don't know how many people were killed, thousands who are not going to hear about all the blunders and not the don't the greatly for 1919, the late 9900 sixty's, where millions of people actually got
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a famine because of this horrendous policy. you're not going to hear about mistakes that were made, which led to the ad governing the chinese government is controlling information so . so strictly. so this is not going to be, i'm to reflect the communist already could have done better at all. and when you say they're due to him is great. i mean, to me, it seems like a bit of our, the, when you mentioned t n square around the rest of the world. there's a singular image that comes to mind of a guy standing in front of a long row of tanks. and today's image i assume will be very different now. just thing because that's definitely what i think about and what i thought about before i came to china. but you have to remember if the nasa murder talks about the tenements where my track down here and nobody like no textbooks mentioned that the internet is sent. it rolls, you can search for this. so most people would have never seen this
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image of tag that gentlemans, where people i just not aware. and it's kind of crazy. my friends, who are of my generation, one in the ninety's they found out because they weren't overseas, or there was a time, you know, i come in and talks about, she went to my university one of those prestigious universities here at the top university in china. and he had a professor who, you know, she was going through history of china and then had one powerpoint or whatever. type in a slide account man and said, i'm not going to talk about it too much. you can go to the library and find some information about 10 minutes class. so this was like, you know, 20, you know, 1015 years ago. so now you knew that that would never happen. you would never have a professor show a slide like that. you wouldn't even have any section of the library. certainly any sanctions university have information about gentlemen square. so for people living
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in china, gentlemen square is simply a huge government and it's the center of power here in china. it's across the pond where she lives. it's across from the, from the city. it's a historical man. market surrounded the square. it's not that huge. it's surrounded by the great hope to people, which is where all the important meeting meetings take place. and the other side of it is nationally seen the china and then the patient, the forbidden city. so what 10000 square means, the chinese people possibly different what it means to most people outside of china . so interesting. and so what would people basing know about what's happening in the last of the leaders? okay, and so for a while, they didn't know much until this year because we had so much internet criticism trying to begin responding and, and fighting, and biting back. we've had this prize, one of the stories that i've been doing recently is, is rise of the so called, what we're diplomacy trying to basically having this tough sort of completely
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unapologetic on many of its policies in the policy towards the treatment of a week or so because we've had trying to come back and put forth its own perspective on the story, that is what the people in china know about. so they know that for decades there was separate violence in job that there were people attacked. a lot of people died, many of them had chinese, that it was chaotic. they know that that be the many people living that follow as well, but they don't know what extent it's about that the message here is that it's about counter terrorism. it's about brief stability in order back to sion, john that these are not re education cancer. the there is no human rights abuses that this is vocational training centers to improve the economic opportunities of
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the week. and then they, you know, people see media and the government here, like fashioned bunch of numbers and a bunch of figures like look, people make more money than they ever did. people they actually have been one of the things recently that they've been trying to push with the sense of saying actually the numbers of the leader population of actually grown since our policies . katrina you talking to josh, rushing on instagram live the a a stream instagram life series as monday through wednesday at 2030 g n t at if you fuller a day stream on it's live, you'll get alerts every time we go live with death. and that's i show for today. i will leave you with photos from china, 100 year anniversary celebration of the communist party watching the annex ah news
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. across the world, young activists and organizing around the moon. i knew the work in the 1st of the series, 2 people in new york city use different to me, the fight institutional racism and police brutality. this is indeed a wide problem that wires a systemic solution generally can change on your game in the story as them bob way . in her words, she is always told from the perspective of the great man, whether it's david livingston, the robot mcguffey. my responsibility is to tell,
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is involved in story, in a way that it hasn't really been told before the ordinary. everyday life was involved with the people. i'm writing about a tina gap out of darkness. miser bob way on algebra. me each and every one of us have got a responsibility to change our patients for them in the we or we could do this experiment. many of us could increase just a little bit that wouldn't be worth doing. but he had any idea that it would become a magnet, is incredibly rest asking women to get 50 percent representation in the constituent assembly here and getting this pick up to collect the segregate to say the reason this is extremely important service that they provide to the city we
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we need to take america to try to bring people together trying to deal with people who left behind me. oh the the un warns of a deteriorating situation and t gr, i, more than 400000 people now suffering from famine despite the ethiopian government sees fine. ah, hello there, i'm still here. hey, this is al jazeera life and also coming additional curve at 19 restrictions come into force on the indonesian islands of java and bonnie and neighboring malaysia tightens cubs and to read.
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