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tv   [untitled]    July 10, 2021 5:30pm-6:01pm +03

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games, as the movie said, if you build it, they will come and they'll be following in the footsteps of their heroes. and because i always see on tv, they're playing cricket, like, shadow in my mom has, i'm on and they are much clearer. and i get the idea from there. i want to play this game. jona whole al jazeera, barcelona ah . headlines on al jazeera police in bangladesh have arrested the owner of a factory where 52 people were killed in a fire. he and 7 others have been charged with murder. the whole minister has warned no one will be spared, is signs of negligence. are found. tanveer chandry has more from the scene in rope conch bought up the relative dab later that one of the gate exit gate was locked. supervisor,
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that fact didn't allow them out saying the fire will be doors very quickly and they were trapped inside. that is what they're saying was a main cause of so many that the people of course jumped out of the building at 3 people died, run the bell to the ground. i talked to the left hand corner of the fire brigade, he's operational chip. he said that, so every car about $49.00 char board is and 3 people died because of the fall in somalia, at least 8 people have been killed in a large explosion in mogadishu, a car bomb targeted a government convoy carrying senior police commanders. it was a 2nd major bomb attack in the city this month. haiti's in trained government has asked the international community to send in shoulders to have satellite the country after the assassination of president juvenile louise. but the us says it has no plans to send military assistance. 80 senate has nominated joseph long to serve as the new interim president until the elections are held in september.
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russia has reported its high single day record, of course, 19 related death seats recorded more than 25000 new infections down slightly from the previous day. the latest outbreak is being blamed on the delta of variance. the european union has reach its vaccine delivery target of 70 percent for adults, european commission, president lavonne, delay and phase the blank will have delivered 500000000 doses by sunday and to confederate statues in the us city. charlotte vill are being taken down for years after white nationalists demonstrated against plans to remove from a car was driven into a crowd, killing one count a protester. many see the statues as a reminder of american history of slavery and racial oppression. those are the headlines on al jazeera that fit for me fully back to bo dairy navigate. i have more news after the st. i live in an unconventional capital
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city. ever changing and yet forever defined bytes turbulent tossed. stephanie deck meets bananas and takes you on a journey. exploring the identity and legacy of europe's rebel capital. took out his era. ah. hi, emmy. okay, welcome to the bonus edition of the stream. and now you get to watch the stream every day of the week. hash tag, you're welcome. so what do i have for you today? coming up, the captain of the refugee paralympic team takes us on a journey from being a baby born in afghanistan without arms, a refugee who fled his country to training for the tokyo paralympic games. the stream checks in on the battle of wills, playing out between demonstrators and columbia. the government's 3 guests bring up 3 memorable stories that capture the protesters. demoss. let's got in canada where
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the recent discovery of mass grave site solving business children has been refill reminder a former racist government policies between 1890 and the late 90 ninety's. more than 150000 indigenous children were forced to live in residential scores. the aim was to extinguish that culture at assimilate the children into canadian society. guess brandy, morgan, charlie angus, i'm tanya dick have spent years trying to get justice for the survivors and their families live pool cancer was emotional. and we continue the painful conversation after the show tanya picks up here explaining how the residential school system impacted not just her parents who were taken away, but every generation that yeah, just really kind of realized in my as i was in my younger adult life and going into
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my adult life that, you know, my parents grew up in the system that was violent and abusive and really beat their spirits down and their bodies down. and they weren't given the opportunity to be properly groomed to be mothers and father. and they weren't given the opportunity in space to be properly groom to fulfill their cultural traditional responsibilities and roles within our community and our traditional ways of being. so they lost so much in that. and when i was hearing my uncle talk and he's a resident school survivor to, he was like all i wanted in that moment to fear was to steal my mother's arms around me. and i just started crying because i remember so much of my time just wanting my mother's arms around me because she couldn't even be the mother. she probably wanted to be because of her lived experiences. and what she knew from 5 years old on and didn't know how to parent didn't know how to nurture. she only
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knew how to survive. she only knew how to survive. and that was her main focus. and then when she had us, as children really struggled with that, and she really, externally put all of her energies into changing the world, became educated, became a nurse as well, and a strong which i activists for digital rights and indigenous peoples, particularly around health. so i feel like i didn't have a mother because of the experience and then there's a bunch of other, there's a whole bunch of other systems and things that come with that package for myself as an individual and not having that a not being. i don't know my language, i don't, you know, i wasn't groomed and brought up properly that i have to reclaim and revitalize or re learn. and that, that itself is, you know, huge. and also the point that somebody did this deliberately was a strategy, was a policy. they didn't want you to know your language. they want you to be hung up
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by your mom. they didn't want any of that. they want to take the indigenous person out of you. yes. what i find remarkable is that canada was canada was going towards the direction where they had a true for reconciliation commission. they knew about these horrible stories. they knew that there would be co raise. there was a list of recommendations, almost a 100 recommendations. i just have to share that with you because it made me feel so sad. this was testimony from the true for reconciliation commission. and the survivor is apologizing. have a look, have a listen, be worth anything. i really do apologize to my family for what i put the i could i could tell me granted. or if i could
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tell my great grandson the of the but with my own tailored, i kept it hurts. encourage leaves, i think both what i missed well crying, right what the what how do you where is the justice tonya? how do you get justice? i think the my parents both, we've had this conversation and they both have said that they will never get justice for what they've experienced in their lifetime. they hope in generations to follow that we can find our way back to our kind of traditional ways of dean and
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our traditional knowledge and our own traditional governance system which we struggle with and strive for. we have generations, you know, after me who are so keen and just kind of radical in many ways that make me my home phone. but, you know, i think it came down to land and resources in the beginning. and i think that needs to be a part of the discussion as well. i think with the friends that god and everything else, like what churches were given lands on our territories. like there's a whole plot of land in the territory that belong to the anglican church. and why, and how did that happen, and why is it not coming back to us? it was it a part of the agreement to build that residential school on the land and that they could look after it. if you do this for us, we'll give you this. i don't know, that's the kind of stuff that i need to know and want to know and back to the lands and resources again. we are underfunded. i think charlie talked a lot about it today. and when we talked about canadian, this is the historical,
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it is happening today every day in our life, our, our, our education system on reserves continue to be underfunded. our children continue to be removed and into children and families. services. you know, our health systems are under funded, our nursing stations under funded, we're not, there's no parity there with general society and of course that reflects on the disparity of quality of life and overall health status conditions to can i can i just say, yeah, you like it the underfunding and the inequality and the oppression across the board . when you asked the question to charlie earlier from if you were about, you know, how canadians to blame for that? well, i just like to say that canadians benefits off of the richness of the resources of the 1st people's office land. so since this so called canada was established, canadians have, you know,
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become wealthy and let have these high standards of living. meanwhile, the 1st peoples of these last live in poverty like you use it everywhere, like i live next to some 1st nations communities preserved. and it's total segregation. and the community where i live in town is like full of millionaires and prosperous. and you go just a few miles down the road and the poverty there is just dawning. we're talking 3rd worlds living conditions in these communities. and at the average canadian, if they understood that their tax paying dollars are supporting, you know, governments and institutions and corporations that continue to exploit the lands and resources of the indigenous peoples. while the indigenous peoples are
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reaping very, very little of those benefits. that's how you contribute to this on, on going crazy. let me show you. one more thing, charlie, i'm going to share this with you. if you don't mind, this is from justin to go from this week. okay, from the last 24 hours he posted this, he went to see one of the math grade and he says it's hard to find words that are enough. but to all those effects, i know that i am here as your partner to the path of reconciliation and right these historical wrongs. and yet the canadian government are in court right now. he's pushing back on some of the recommendations that were made at the truth and reconciliation commission. these 2 things do not go together. charlie, what am i missing? canadian, are really good at symbols, and this prime minister is the king as symbols. so he talks about historic wrongs
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he refuses to admit the ongoing wrongs as it's been really clearly articulated parliament just a few weeks ago, ordered the prime minister to end his court battles against indigenous children. and within 5 days, he was back in court. fighting against this generation of children, and to understand how all this is connected, if you take in my region, we have, we've had some of the most frightening suicide crisis among young people. we have some of the highest suicide rates in the world. you put any community where you had a huge shocking number of you, suicides today, and you put the names of perpetrators from the residential schools. and they will follow on the black axis from community to community, to community where the perpetrators of the abuse were the intergenerational traumas today. and as for resources, they built a massive diamond mine in my region, where there were no roads. and when they found diamonds, you know,
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they were flying in from london, they were flying in from south africa. they built a world class mining operation to get those diamonds out and just down the road and little up a scott, it's like mine is. it's like haiti at minus 40 and we had little cree youth leaders like shan, include stash and threatening to go to the united nations to get a school built. they couldn't figure out how to build a school for these children, and this is, this is the can canadian issue. canadian, canada will never be the nation that we could be until we realize that it's not the oil. it's not the diamond, it's not the copper that makes our land and our, our resources rich. the resources that we have is this young generation of indigenous children when you see them. and you see that spark in their eyes. but it's cindy black stock who's she's like the martin luther king of this generation. she says children only have one childhood. once it's gone, it never comes back. we have to protect that childhood now. so the prime minister. yeah, no more symbols,
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no more teddy bears justin get stop fighting in court. commit to clean water miss scanned to go 26 years. children have grown up and are having their own children with clean water in the country with the richest water resources on the planet. you do that and people will take it seriously. i know i'm going to, i'm going to end with cindy black. so because we are actually in danger of doing an entire new tv show, i so allow me allow me to wrap it up, but can yeah, and charlie and brandy. you are now some friends of the stream. you have an open invitation to come back anytime and with cindy black stop. thank you so much appreciate you make which wilful and reckless discrimination in a worst case scenario, causing the unnecessary family separations for 1st nations harm to children. and sadly, the desa some children. this isn't a quote from a 100 years ago. this is from
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a 2019 legal decision against the canadian government. the canadian government provides on equal fair barrels public services for 1st nations, people and amex, a far harder to recover from the trauma, residential schools. this generation appreciation kids goes into foster care 14 times to read of other kids. more kids in the cares in a residential school. let's make sure this generation doesn't have to recover from their childhood. so that gives you some insight into what aliens are talking about right now regarding their residential schools and the legacy wants to for stream episode as stream. but out is era dot com. it has been a while since protest in columbia have made it international news headlines. demonstrations began at the end of april in response to the government's plan to raise taxes. the tax plan with quickly dropped but protest is didn't go home. instead they expanded their list of demands to include major social reforms to
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during the live shot, the gas and i discussed some of the key demands and the government's response to them. after the bull cost. i also get to share one surprising story about the current protests in columbia. i think i would definitely have to start with 4 or 5. jessie stands here, which is a protest i site here located in boca. it's a place where you mostly, you have organized and come together to create a space for dialogue to create a space for community for democracy. and what really struck me were some of the democratic assemblies that they've organized there. what they ended up doing was inviting the community to come together to decide on what would be their demands that would represent their community located in kennedy,
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which is located somewhat on the periphery of focus. and what was really impressive to me is that not only they came up with a list of demands, but they also came up with a a referendum that they financed. and that 3000 people in their community participated in which is something that i had not really seen before. and that was completely organized by protesters who are mostly between the ages of 20 and 26 years old. nationally. it's they think one of the point where before i came in there, we had well that people, we had, people mean good. and then we had mix people in the south and then we had the prefer from the economies. and then we had all the strings and there were joint
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forces and thinking to each other in sure, in before, in the, in the pace. and they up from the, or those to be before, you know, the only how putting us right. knowing curly they came from process there have been in this place for the big case, and they just train the troll there. you know, in this only here because of this try and go to the try. it just things that we know that we've been there for the cd because we know that are going to really corrosive. so we know that we need to start for me, for money to cation people. that can be part of the people, but also neither in their neighbors and neither their community. and elizabeth
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this toward that i briefly want to share is, is from a place called at a, in the south of, of columbia. again, this protest movement has not only been urban, but also very much a rural phenomenon as well as in the city in san jose to what we added, which is the largest sort of small town in a rural area. different far amaris in small hold farm. we called them here, come pacino's, came from many different regions and joined the protest in just one place with all this coming together. it's solid charity moment in which everyone sort of put their stories out on the table. and many of them are there for the very 1st time. what really struck me about that is but one of the most significant groups among the protestors there was a group of ex combatants from the park who had to be mobilized with the peace process. and who wanted to sort of show that they were now committed to a peaceful change for their country. so for many years, of course were fighting and it really move but, but now i wanted to show very much that was a peaceful demonstration that was going to change the political future of the
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country and to see them demonstrating side by side with the community was extremely powerful and show the promise of the way forward. if the people are really can, can take its hold and be fully implemented. wow, that's extraordinary. i'm just wondering, natalie did the laugh. laugh. so i had, is there a protest song that rings rounds cally the everybody's things or, or a child that everybody has that you the brings everybody together? if there's something that you want to share with us, i'm trying to think whether these awful person will be home. but i see one day 3 mary. amazing news. wonder save me, go auto. oh, gotcha. somebody go through and they all, we all seen
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a green and also the up in the, in the car that was in the play and everybody say what, what about what, what we want to hear in our tv. finally, i want to say i cannot start watching a bass creamy is an athlete, a refugee from afghanistan who was born without arms and a very soft swimmer. have a look. the
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thought was about the racing at the 2019. well para swimming championships. he's now in training for the toko carlene bates coming up in august. a brass is one of 6 athletes in the refugee paralympic team. he took time out for the training schedule to talk to me about swimming. i majority, that's taken him from being a bully, teenager. all the way to the summer paralympic gapes ships fight for dreams and goals to be something in his work. that's what is all about. people will notice that it's the a stream and at refugees, which is the un, which is the un refugee agency. we are collaborating and coming to us via that instagram handled. and that's important because i see you regularly say i am representing 18000000 refugees. god is a lot on your very strong shoulders. bringing with you. why do you say that?
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why is that important? because you know, i be, i'm or if i've been refugee for many years, when i represent 80000000 displaced people and millions of refugees in the world. you know, it means i'm representing my, my, my, my, my life and what i've been through my story, millions and millions of displaced people has been through the same journey that i've been through. you know, so we just want to show the world that you know, we want to fit in society and make the society and the world a better place and we want to net. are you competing at the tokyo lympics? yes, i'm competing at the tokyo fall of the games. i'm very excited to represent needing and displaced people and millions of refugees in the world. and it's not just you
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on the team you have you have 5 other teammates have you met each other? i know i've, i've seen you on together, but have you actually bring together yet as a team? not only are athletes doesn't know if you have a swimmer for him. i met ahead of me personally and we've been together for 2 time . so many championships. there is, i talk with one of them, but i haven't met them in person. very excited to be going to be exciting. it's part of the refugee pylee p t that off 6 t make you have to qualify, and you attaching of that team. how are you going to lead your teammates? you know, to be a good represented her in the preventative fin up for me, i'm focused on myself, of course, at the same time one where he makes, you know, we support each other with chair for each others. that when, when it the time comes in my race,
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my responsibility is to be focused on myself and do the best performance of my life . i never done before. so that's what it's about. you know, i focus on my own lane on myself and give everything i got. and i believe that i'm going to win. but you know, anything can happen, but my goal is my mindset. my belief system is, you know, to just focus on myself, give everything i got, everything i've done in the training will show up in the, in my, my competition. if you have to tell your younger self one, say, what with that one thing be around the younger service. to know that, you know, life means something with purpose, you know, find your purpose, find yourself. don't chase people, you know, spend time when you, when you felt that who you are, you know what you can be, you know, being
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a human. what you can be more out of that thing should be positive. you know, always choose the hard leave, the easy things for someone else. the heart of the heart of goals says high goals, those things will make you a better person. those, those, those things will put you to the next level. and that's the only thing that i have to tell them that, you know, have a vision, a clear vision, goals, whatever you want that you've in your life go for it. doesn't matter what it takes, you know, just have to know what to give everything, even if it meant something to give up everything in your life to achieve that goal . right? you think that goes, you will feel so good about yourself and that means everything you know, and then you can make your society better or your country or people. you know, you can spread positive, they're all around the work of ask me athlete and captain of the refugee paralympic
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team. good luck, team a care every waiting for you i that wraps up our show for today. thanks for watching the next time with me. the corona virus pandemic has altered modern society as governments have grappled with soaring cases, contact, tracing, and huge data collections are causing concern amongst civil rights activists. people in power investigates the ever increasing powers of government and businesses as they access peoples most personal data and asks, what is being done to regulate the flow of sensitive information. under the cover of cove it on a jessina escaping a wall. finding a new identity, confronting the reality of racism, religion, and the struggle to be accepted,
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al jazeera, tells the story of what it is like to be lebanese, and call us trailer home. once upon a time in punch bowl on al jazeera in the midst of war, a generation grew up in exile. more than 13000000 syrians, that half the pre war population remain displaced inside and outside the country. and as the conflict enters the 2nd decade, with no political supplement incite, there could be further displacement. home for many has been informal camps like this in neighboring countries and lebanon's because the valley life has been one of poverty and uncertainty. areas, economy is collapsing and international aid organizations are warning. it is pushing millions deeper into poverty. many our job listen hungry. the united nation says 60 percent or 12400000. serious. don't have regular access to enough food,
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despite the battlefield, being largely quiet for a year. agencies say the daily suffering of syrians is worse than it has been at nearly any point throughout the conflict. and the hardship has not stopped at syria's border. i me, this is al jazeera ah, here was him in his our life from headquarters in del heim, daddy and abigail coming off in the next 60 minutes facing murder charges, the owner of a factory and bangladesh and 7 others are arrested after a fire kills more than 50 people, the us reject haiti's appeal for troops to help secure the country out to the nation or president jovan alamo. eas.

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