tv [untitled] July 12, 2021 12:30pm-1:01pm +03
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english side, politically, rhetorically italians in italy itself seems to get on board with that. but the truth is, there's a lot of racism that bears its ugly head here, even in one of the fan zones court and off when some of the black players were on screen for the one side, you heard races, booze, people comparing them to monkeys. awful things that has not disappeared here and it probably won't. you just don't see this much because the tally inside is basically all ethnically italian and there isn't a diverse crowd of players. so thanks very much for the of the adamant that force in room a single there with me to hill robin. and reminder of all top stories jordanian court has sentenced to former officials to 15 years in prison for plotting a coup against the monarchy. they were accused of pushing form at the throne, prince jose turn to the king of a one. and when this bid in which it was regarding the 1st criminal bass, him
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o adela, the court has sentenced him to temporary imprisonment for a period of 15 years for the 1st charge and 15 years for the 2nd charge. only one of these 2 rules applies to him, which is temporary work for 15 years, starting from the date of his arrest in april with, with regard to the 2nd criminal sharif hassan been said, the court has sentenced him to temporary imprisonment for a period of 15 years for the 1st charge, and 15 years for the 2nd charge, he shall be subject to any one penalty which is 15 years of temporary imprisonment . be highly contagious. delta vary and has been blamed for a rapid rising cro virus infections in se asia thailand has gone to lockdown for 2 weeks in south career as imposed tougher restrictions. cuba has seen his biggest anti government protests in decades. thousands of march difficult economic crisis scripts, the nation government handling of the pandemic and sanctions are being blaze. the us extra stages warning china that any attack on the philippines to the south trying to see for draw a us response syndrome mutual defense treaty. he made the comment to him on the 5th
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anniversary of a ruling against china's claim to the territory and just trying to see an international tribunal from china had violated the philippine sovereign rights by interfering with fishing and petroleum exploration, which china rejects u. k prime minister boys johnson has condemned online racist abuse of england black players, marcus rash for jaden sanchez, but k a soccer were amongst those targeted the missing spot cakes, the metropolitan police say that they have also opened an investigation. the football association is issued a statement condemning races to bes, the largest wildfire of the air in the us state of california is partly contained firefighters working in temperatures. nearing 40 degrees have been able to gain some ground. those are the headlines course. you follow those stories on our website, delta care dot com is updated throughout the day. more news and half now with can. but next generation change johannesburg to stay with when i was there. i live in an unconventional capital city. ever changing and yet forever defined bytes
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turbulent tossed, stephanie deck meets bananas and takes you want a journey. exploring the identity and legacy of europe's rebel capital took out his era. but i think a history of activism is rooted against now the born fee generation believe it is there time to fight for more people and just decide the welcome to generation change global theories. and it tends to challenge and understand the ideas and mobilize around the world. i'm and a chinese and independent journalists based here in in this episode, we need to women for working towards radical change to address challenges and very day tend to be violent plots and racial inequality and climate change.
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mm. kids middle point, author $94.00 at the end of apartheid. what do you think people don't know about the role of women in the struggle against the part? i really think the way in which history is told it serves a purpose, right? which has also to reinforce, you know, a male dominated a presence and power structure, right? basis, reinforcement of these marches. i think men who come and save as vulnerable group of women which is inheritance the wrong and false women were organizing church, top self paid union women when the treaty carrying the country back from shoulder, history continues to omit bed. and i think what that does is that it continues to
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alienate women and their contributions and making society with a political social, even economic ah, we here at constitution hill, in harrisburg, and particularly in the structure, we are at the women's jail. why it was a significant space for you when i think about the, the caliber a woman that we incarcerated in this case, you know, it literally just brings me in, or it's the persistence of women writing themselves into history even in the absence. right. and for me, as a young feminist, as a young actor was, that has been really pinnacle in grounding my own activism as a new generation. as a woke generation, we must never ever get tired of developing resistance strategies. i mean, if these women were able to organize themselves,
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i know probably one of the most difficult conditions. i see no reason why i'm able to achieve, you know, the idea of bullying. the biggest feminist global movement you are now 26, was an activist since he was 17. what was the sort of compelling fact that made you think, you know, i want to be in? there was a case go by the name of i mean poison and western cape. she was made them to pick . and she's like, oh my gosh, i'm 17. she 17. she got killed on the lights out and i was thinking about all the times. i like to jump to go out with my friends, right. what happened to you happened to me? those are so much uniqueness and similarity almost a decade later, you know, the chain found on the black woman quote because i i put
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a feature that is. 2 tangible shows what ultimately black woman coca seeks to do is to really create a supply t feel via we don't. once enough the violence prevents society over time. we want to become so. i mean i'm, i want to be able talk to other people, johanna space and not worry about am i in the a 17. and you've already been an activist for a few years. how did you start? and what was it that me just started in 2018 when we would talk to do some research on climate change. i grew a lot of cabinet di, tc mall the facts about how we have limited time and watching my future fade away. health of our environmental kind and what ignited my activism was the society to do everything in my power to create a change. well,
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i mean, some people will say that you know what? this stuff is for people who can afford to have 5 different been recycled buds. you know, you spoken to the fact that it does affect people who live in the townships 4 people . the time i came to realize the seriousness behind environmental racism. when i spoke to a friend of mine, said when she was very young, she had to live with a grandmother, was stating. so when you say she develop breathing difficulties. and if you do, when she moved back to the server, everything was fine. and that's when she made the link back to the equality in a way to was so terrible that she the really fast enough on that. and you can make that link with a pulsate how to oppose the government, basically that people in one area and in another area and,
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and gave like people that land that belong to those citizens that they just areas. and even though we live in a post a polity, south africa that neglect is still carried out what have been rewarding and that you would consider a bigger mall in achievement that you've been able to kind of get to with your with so far. i think wanted to win, said to make a big impact on my life is when someone will come to me personally and say thank you for teaching me this. i've learned and now i know better and now i can do better. i think the biggest achievements are making up appreciate a lot of activists around the world that has that and his mind. so being able to stand up in front of college and think your mind as the privilege and also
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the good evening when you, once again year people listening you years of responding to come on articles there at your 17 and keep them in your 26. i'm wondering for both of you what you feel be defining values and elements of each of your respective generations. activism. ok, so firstly i belong to the 1st cohort of the born fees. you know, that chin ration that was just born after democracy in south africa. and i think for a large, you know, to a large extent, our activism is really sensitive and crowded around, holding our democratic government accountable. right. hoping for a significant change in the living conditions of use and just the population more broadly. so we do or a lot from the anti party struggle in terms of the music,
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the songs of kind of the struggle songs that you thing. and also some of the organizing and mobilizing strategies, you know, we're really still focus in terms of mass space movement building. and this is quite evident with the feasible for student properties across 26 institutions of higher learning, which saw university students demanding for free. the colonized high education, but of course, you know, the success of moments such a season before i launch the attributed to digital and online activism. and how that has also helped us in terms of shaping our own narrative, syria, you know, something about that. but what would you like to add? yeah, kinsey, we grew up in the age of technology, the world of social media. and that came with a lot of benefits in terms of with mobilizing people internationally. and especially now during append to make what social media is also brought is lots of inclusivity because you moving away from just that mainstream media narrative and
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embracing a diverse range of narratives. and you getting to include so much more with the new activism. so i think the $270.00 that social media has brought has been a key and defining factor with gmc, so after the most recent use led to mass movement towards fisma school, which as you mentioned earlier, was the fight to, you know, gain wide access for free and d, colonized tissue education. what do you think it was about that movement? get him into that made it resonate so widely with our generation. i think a big part of fees mer for beyond issues of x is, was really holding government accountable to say, to what extent are you prepared to sacrifice an upcoming generation of young leaders and activists? purely on the basis of keeping or be deliberate about keeping it commodified a cup of coffee as a racist system that continues to marginalize and exclude lex children
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specifically from institutions of higher learning. there are you about 12 or 13 when this was unfolding on the news media? what did it mean for you on a personal level to see young people really, you know, rise up on such a math scale. it was really inspiring and was watching history unfold. red before my eyes, and while i didn't understand how the, how complex the issue was back there, and i understood the surface level of it. but diving into activism, the feasible will activist. so one of the most inspiring activists that i look up to, i mean, the fact that some of them are still in jail to this day fighting for cause they believe in just shows how empowered they were and how inspired angry and passionate they would give you permission to be angry as well. 100 percent. and like i said before, that anger just ignited passion to stand up and fight me. do miss your,
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as you, should you the found a, in fact of the black women's caucus, which among the many mandates you have is looking into eradicating to the base violence. can you talk to me about the myriad of violence? is that for african women right now of a thing. i mean, when you speak about in the base violence, of course, you know, the mostly needed understandings around sexual and physical forms of violence. you know, and this is, and this makes sense. i mean south africa as seen as a raise capital globally, not privy. take to have. and by the way, our famous side rate is 5 times higher than the global average. right. and so understanding around in the business and famous that has really been within the conceptual framework. however, as black women coke of we're saying that is to serve as well as to reduce jenna based violence and fame aside to only physical and sexual forms of seattle political violence, economic violence, environmental violence, social violence,
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all violence is that country peach. the vulnerability of women, and it's important that when we find solutions and we propose solutions that they must be multi pump and they must be sexual so that they're able to address the sources of violence. so can you give me an example of what that work looks like or how you bring the solution to the public? of course, a lot of the steps and research done in south africa around in the base islands has attributed to a women's economic participation as a message. dr. ability to gender based violence and fame effect. so in 2019, on the 13th of september, when we march to the ritual square mile in africa and sent and demanding greater participation from private states in terms of, you know, their response to that. the silence were ultimately things you need to also be able to, you need to be held accountable for women's economic vulnerability. because largely
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when you think about drape and famous, i always think about it within the confinement of the whole. right. but the moment we made the business issue and economic issues were ultimately saying that the continuous subjugation and violation of women number one cuts the south african economy between 20 and 40000000 read annually. right. and that also means that part of our active part of our mobilize ation and advocacy requires us to make structural changes. it looks like you had something 100 was in it need systemic change. if you just bring change on one census, that's of his is widespread. and in order for structural change to take place and the most effective change the case, it needs to be systemic. it needs to be institutionalized. so only addressing every level of the problem. yes. 100 percent fair, you started climate warriors and you're a part of the collective movements. tell me what collect his movement is and what
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would you do with him? so the connector movement is a youth delayed into sectional time and group. and we aim to achieve crime, a justice through social justice and vice versa. so it's a group of young activists and recently i work has all been on social media and online because of the pen demik. so this year we working on climate change through pad an african context. so interviewing or having discussions with activists from uganda and kenya, and just broadening our perspective on the climate change and how the policy making takes place in different areas around the world and different challenges and coming up with solutions. and then also spreading awareness and advocating and pushing forward the climate just as charter movement to educate as many people on the climate change issue and exposing the intersectionality needed and bringing about
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inclusive between within the time and justice movement. why do you think politically in the south african context that climate justice has taken a backseat to other issues such as, you know, the ones that get and i was talking about. so i think in the past, obviously if you're looking at a pre democratic south africa where people are fighting again, so politics, redeem and fighting for liberation. come a change, understandably so is going to take a backseat. when you fighting to be free in your own country. but if you're looking at a post apologies africa when we living in a democracy, i think there's a huge sense of apathy from those impala that firstly, the people empower putting profit before the people we living in. we stuck in this capitalist mindset. another issue is the climate literacy rates in south africa, extremely low, and that comes down to an educational issue. so apathy and the lack of climate
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literacy course. what do you think of the intersections between climate justice and the kinds of justice that you know your work drives really interesting. hey, i really like the fact that you know, preaching climate justice and social justice. and i think for large, you know, for a long time we've thought about climate just as a stand alone kind of struggle. you know, it's like sitting in the corner and nobody really wants to deal with. busy it, but what has been very important and has been quite a big eye opener for me myself as a, as a feminist is the work has been doing informal settlements. and how, when you spoke about literacy, environmental literacy. how, you know, we still struggling to make the connections at community they will between the environment and social justice plan example, one of the communities that the word came is called castaneda park informal settlement for water and sanitation breakdown in infrastructure and just
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listening to you. i can already see, you know, how climate justice fits into that, right? but i do believe that to a large extent, the climate justice movement has positioned itself as quite a white lead to movement, right. it has struggled to deal with the very concrete conditions that an ordinary person in south africa facing. but i think in a country like south africa, we need to be able to who's in crowd of ideology and our advocacy in the lived experiences of people on a day to day basis. still, what do you say to this climate change for the longest time? it has seemed like a very, a privileged issue. if i'm struggling to put food on my plate, why should i care about the quantity? why should i care about a little on the beach? and i think that come down to the needful climate, conscious media and was kind of conscious media inclusivity. so looking at climate change across the world. and also understanding that solutions that may
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work in the west on going to work in africa for various reasons. we have different economies, different policies, different governments, different histories, it just would fit. and i think was very vital when looking at climate justice and time. a change is looking at it through an intersection of lives. so instead of separating environmental factors and the social factors, bridging them together could common justice and social justice intensity linked together to bring about positive change by testing one. that solution is going to affect the other in either a positive or negative way, depending on what the solution is. so if you're looking at time to change geographically, climate change is going to disproportionately affect poorer black communities. so within your activism, you need to take within climate activism, you need to take into account classism, racism, sexism,
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homophobia. for example, if the natural disaster were to strike those communities would be most vulnerable. and if you look at the way society treats those communities now imagine how much was it's going to be when aid due to natural disaster is needed and needs to be brought to those communities. so advocating for human rights, you can pick and choose no form of oppression exists and isolation. i wonder what you both think, you know, the possibility of achieving your ideas and what a just world looks like. what do you think the implications of at elizabeth has on the word that you do? give me the, what i'm picking up and said capitalism, inheritance lee, you know, glorifies the individual, its limitations. however, in activism is that excess isn't, is not a one man show. right? and unfortunately, capitalism has created and is continues to co opt of civic action and civic and
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civic interventions and presents them as one man shows, right? we have the model that comes out, you know, this, you know, the intended sensation that comes out and is going to save the world. you know, i think what that does is that breaks down organic movement building strategies, right? i don't think we have any strong tangible movements that are being, you know, that are being nurtured, but instead, what we're seeing, we're seeing individual acts of as rising and listen, i'm not saying it's a bad thing to have the popstars of the movement image. they're important, they keep the movement fun and dynamic, but i do think it's important that the roots are activism in communities because these alternative realities every once you know, the empty capitalist reality that we want to simulate into sectional reality that we want is not going to be fostered by an individual, it needs an active, you know,
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it needs to from a collective in order to drive that mandate. and i think this is some of the critiques of capitalism infiltrating cervical activist work, 100 percent. community community based change is the most sustainable and effective change in the long. and if you're looking at capitalism in a capitalistic world, the most ideal position you can be in right now is to be a white man. and that breaks down so much, it breaks down the feminist movement and breaks down any movement laid by women. capitalism breeds the system of inequality. it's always going to be if i'm winning someone else's losing, and like you said, it's a very individual, a glory, 5 individual work. and that is extremely problematic. it's also very problematic to have one face re present a home. and because it excludes people that don't match that face that don't match
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their demographic. so yeah, definitely not carbon capitalism is the main cause to climate crisis. sorry. can i just add onto that? you know, i mean, i'm reflecting, reflecting such an important aspect of growing and as active as we should never stop reflecting. and when i think about, you know, the 2 parties movement. firstly, i know for a fact that many people who participated in those movements in those forms of resistance were not participating because they were individuals that they were idolizing. it's because they felt a strong sense of, you know, personhood. i mean, the issue is affecting me directly, therefore i need to actively participate in finding the solutions. and i think you know, the idea of the glorifying of the individual grubs as of it. and i think our communities of v to hold is grounded to hold us accountable, and to make sure that we are working and living within the ideals of the,
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of the movements that we represent. well, i guess in closing, i'm curious if, if it's not clear so far what you both hope to achieve and if you feel optimistic about, you know, being able to actually achieve those things, keep them i will, perpetual optimist. firstly, as with the scheme of so i definitely do think things will get better. i do think that you know, we need to intensify our demands and struggles, but also change our size of, of, of oppression and fighting. right. i think so many times you know, what activism and how we traditionally, you know, activism to be said, we take to the streets, writes to get our messages across. and although that is important, we also need to see some radical advancement and transformation in the policy in covenant cia's right. and so as black women coco's, you know, at the heart of the solutions that we propose as a social movement,
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is the realization and strengthening of feminist movements, which are going to foster feminist leadership. we need to see an emissions of new radical feminist leaders. really shaping the world to where we want to take it. right. and i honestly believe that we've got the right energies. have got the minds, we've got the heart and this do it. like i said, any as climate and diety. and the only thing i can thing onto the cabinet is optimism towards the future. it drives me to constant the wake up and make the decision that this is what i'd like to change. and this is way, you know, that could be the change you want to see an advocate for the change that you'd like to see. so i think the main goal is to just get the same urgency that we're carrying today with sending that to the hearts of our government and our leadership to demand the common emergency and to attack all of the social issues that we've unpacked today. because once again,
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social justice is climate justice and vice versa. so i think unification needs to do a case like today, between the generations and just, you know, keep the energy donated di, i feel going up with social media. you see activism turns into a trend and it reads a lot of performance of activism and every year and every month there's a new hash tag and something use trending. and, and so treating activism and social issues as a trade make it, keeping that advocacy along constant action that lives within your heart. sarah, thank you so much for joining me and innovation change. thank across the world, young activists and organizes around among the motivated and politically
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engaged the challenges they face couldn't be more daunting here. and we were the one who had life on what was going on in the way that will mean to me to do them. there's looking stuff that goes on, there's always in the dynamics formation. we have the agency to create the vibe of the generation on al jazeera, this light may look like a city from the sky, but their fishing vessels just outside are gin. tina's exclusive economic zone, the united states launched operations southern cross to combat, illegal and unregulated fishing in the southern atlantic. argentina's coast guard say, the main task is to control the movements, so they do not cross into argentine territory. from this home argent time authorities can monitor for what's happening in economic to fit those. but what a 40 here are saying is what's important is to regulate what's happening in
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international waters power. it finds out a lot of new babies were dying. i didn't know thing about people and power, investigate, exposes, and quincy, and they used them to be of our around the globe on how to ah, this is al jazeera ah, there can vanelle. this is the news all life from coming up in the next 60 minutes, a jordanian court sentences to form a official for their role. and an alleged talk to destabilize the monarchy. fed up cuban ventnor anger at the government and some of the largest protest seen in decades.
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