tv [untitled] July 15, 2021 11:30am-12:01pm +03
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this period in the auto industry, this is the time when the transition happened when the light switch, the electric switch was thrown. increasingly cars aren't gassing up. they're plugging in fully electric cars like the new 2022, ford f, 150 lightning pick up. don't have internal combustion engines. so these days, there's a lot more room upfront after the media preview shows like chicago's face, a potential speed bump when the public is invited in for the 1st time since the pandemic hit. will they pull in and see john henderson al jazeera chicago. ah, this is al jazeera and these are the top stories. an afghan government negotiation says the taliban is proposing a 3 month lease fund and exchange for the release of $7000.00 prisoners. it follows rapid telephone gains in recent weeks. on wednesday at 5,
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it's 5. his took control of the spin bulldog crossing was focused on thousands that they left stranded. charlotte bell has more from cobble thousands of people, saki, the side of it, hundreds of trucks that hello bomb still and control. talk of sun has closed it on its side. the telephone wants it to be open pockets on as close it because they say of the security issues and their concerns with security. but the telephone seems to be talking to pop the sun negotiating if you will, and a bed to have it opened. as soon as possible, they just wanted to see life continue as normal, except with it under the controller. with the government. indonesia has recorded its biggest daily increase in corona, virus infections with more than 54000 cases. helpful authority say the delta variant is responsible for more than 90 percent of recent cases. the spot in containment measures. the government says vaccine efficacy is weaker against the delta variant, but is still urging people to get an okey later to help prevent serious illness and death. alaysia has reported
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a record rise in corona virus infections for the 3rd consecutive day. 13000 new cases have now been confirmed. the government is increasing number of hospital dedicated to covered 900 patients. it's by and we'll beds and oxygen tanks is cases continued. provis army reservists being cold up in south africa to help regular soldiers already trying to quell days of violence. at least 77 people dead and hundreds arrested. the unrest was triggered by the jailing of fort president jacob's duma and has widened into anger at poverty and inequality. floods of killed 9 people in western germany. 30 others are missing out to several buildings collapsed. a slow moving storm system is causing once in a generation floods. full cost is a predicting more heavy rain until friday evening was the headline. so i'll have another update for you here on al jazeera right off the stream. officially, the life in london is one of the most important issues in the world and decisions
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made here have an impact right around the globe. and so here at algebra, right, we will show you the true impact of those decisions on people and how it affects their everyday life. we are free to put them on air and to really engage. because we know that all the audio was interested, not just in the mainstream news, but also the more hidden stories from parts of the world that often go under reported. ah, hi, anthony ok to day on the stream. 3 stories that we have been watching closely. england's last in the year 2020 on sunday has once again exposed deep seated racism that has gone hand in hand with the sport. well, the impact this time be any different. you could take a look at south the dine at 10 years old. is there much to celebrate. and finally haiti, where an assassination has led to
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a power vacuum. and now questions remain about the caribbean nations future. your comments and questions are an important part of the stream you can join the conversation live on the chief. we know you have a lot to say, we start with races in england. he's brian night. as i was by one of the races, comments, it really didn't come as a surprise to me, especially considering how widespread racism is in this country. but i think that kind of recent is thinking, i think one of the social and political issues that have been addressed in decades . but in terms of the race in the play of god, i think the prime minister secretary need to take accountability for the role that they played in encouraging the behavior. but if we ask ourselves, you know, how to kind of sold and how to move on. i don't think we can move on until people
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are willing to accept the racism is an issue in this country. and then from the space we can discuss it and find a way forward with being in denial of anywhere. oh goodness. they were selling a really heavy conversation. returning to the strain siege i told us he's a present at also fine tv and a former professional football player. the day i'm in a reflective, moody. it almost feels like the last few days to be back when i was a kid chelsea playing at home and we will say didn't do us good day to getting this right and the terrifying time. and i thought maybe somehow we would be your that we were more sophisticated or more worldly and we would a bunch of race if that's where i'm coming to this conversation from. how about you? yeah. so i mean, you know, it's sad, it's skin exhausting. have any conversations about race, both again, i'm with you from the youngest. i my, my nightly i for is gonna be different this time. and i say that because i can so
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much to the england side. marcus, respite feed in the country, given up school, giving out schools mil to the, to the needed brains, studies done up to ratio inequalities. there was so many players that like me and i looked up to an awful this is something different than england seem. i've never been able to, to associate myself with so so deeply and then, and then again, we lost and we were from heroes. and everyone cheering on the black plays to to the villains and get reminders of asking colors as it seems to be the story. all the time and i'm part of it. i really am. i'm going to show a moment because you were covering us for robbie. and this is on you. she's just going to show my where, where the premise for the show happened. like you see this, this is when it happened. we have a look. ah, it's painful to play this, but let's go the the,
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me the you complete disappointed with your team performance. but why be racist exact for me for me. ah, i wish we had the arts and so that i always say you can be critical never plus know that i always say that you can be critical. it seem like you said, i work at a f t v. it's very much part of my job to, to criticize a team and, and analyze and have my opinion been met, but ever personal. and i even said at the end of that video that you just, you just what's that? i said in my outside, i said it's, it's all for the players, mr. penalty for them to be in black. but pray, i pray and pray and pray that there's no racial abuse after this. and behold, the next morning i wake up and all the players that embrace the abused players. marcus rushford, who i said again, helped speed the country. he thought i was very close with his body double what
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a little bit campaigns he is, an absolute jennings. he's a role model, a super hero, in my opinion, dice, that's what he used to me. he's a super easy is a moment to many kids. i don't know the devastator seen his mural, b, b, dis, face and words like the n word on it and go back to your country. yes. has been great since that, but it's not needed for me. it's awful. so let me just look at the markers rush, fred euro was a bill from your at the come up. they cover up the coast was pretty, pretty quickly and the insults pretty quickly. this conversation is not just about the ugliness though, that comes out of football. i would be remiss if i didn't show this right. this is incredible. look at all of these people here, black lives matter, england, 3 lions and all of these people saying what is happening in england right now with racism against english play it. oh yeah. yeah. not right,
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does that, does that balance out your mood? because it's all, it's out the country for me. i'm going to be honest. i wish it did. well. i really wish it did. i really wish it did because it looks all lovely now and you know what look too lovely when with in the semi finals and lose women. but always be reminded of our color when it, but if things don't go in well and, and it all, it's good. everyone comes to give a free. it's a nice gesture and it's nice to see people come together, but people can't get for the movement. but nothing's changed, nothing's changed and, and, and that's the real truth of it will change really happen in my opinion known and reinstalled and got the same question that's been improved since you stood up to racism in football. and he was honest, i'm glad he was. he said no as well. there's millions of campaigns out there right now. stop online. hey, hope united is started racism red call. it kicked out. but if i'm on is if it's not, if it's not effect in the countries pockets or people's pockets,
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it's not going to chains. i was last on here speaking about the super league, the car force and right. yeah, exactly. that way, i'm not going to deal with racism anymore and they came out the same way they did for the see, believe i did what we got. do we have no talk about okay, here we are new to this is anthony brown. racism has always been here. i'm assuming, asked me you, in the u. k. it's normal now, how do you know how often that comment is how truthful is right? he's right, he's why i expected it. when 2nd mr. law penalty to an in, in the game. i get it to me. i expected it. why should i expect it? i was scared to trouble home from london from the capital to go back to my house after that penalty missed. and i should never feel like that i was born here, but he's right. there is no racism is no one is countries. it's embedded in the pillars of, of culture in my opinion, foreign culture, sorry. and,
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and the u. k. it's sad, it's sad, but well we can do is speak about it because right now don't see any changes happening. so this is a very depressing conversation earlier on j as a british parliament, the labor, the labor party leader. he has stomach boot up. this whole issue of racism in the u. k. in england, and then put primitive support johnson on the spot. and the inference is that he was encouraging those kind of attitude and he couldn't do that for a period of time, but then say this is awful, this is terrible. we're not races, this is not who we are. let me just go to parliament. but if comment from a few hours ago, have a look in the last few days, everybody a see england's black players have been the talk is disgusting, racist abuse following sundays, much disgusting. and this is really simple, mr. speaker. ease up. the primacy is with the england players in s times against
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racism, or he could defend his own record, those ministers and some of his unpaid, but he can't have it both way. the company tell the house, does he now regret failing to protect those who food england place the spot for racism? yes or no. yeah, this is because we made it really clear that no one should the england team. i mistake us. what we're doing now is taking following the bullying. the race seems to be that plays sadly. soccer on sunday night and, and thereafter, we're taking practical action. in addition to changing the banner regime. last night i met representative representative of facebook, twitter, a tick, tock, check, administer grant, and i made it absolutely clear to them that we will legislate to address this problem. is the speaker in the online home? no, unless they get, unless they get hate and racism of the classrooms,
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they will say fine. my team to 10 percent of their global revenue. and we all know that they have the technology to do of in the last just show i like a what he's saying is what there. but burst is known to say sex. this remarks raised his remarks to august times he's, he's just as bad. i guess he's covering self now because there's so many eyes on him and he's the prime minister. but if i want to, i don't see it change in. i respect the sense he said that they're gonna, they're going to look to facebook snapshot whatsapp and instagram book. again, i gave an example before when i put anything to do with cozy it on my story gets flagged up straight away and i have a song that's been got music rights and copyright infringement, straight. yeah. when it comes to races that you know, you can be left there, you can make a 1000000 accounts, and you can try and trace back to who said it we,
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it's not, nothing's been done properly by bar johnson. and i'd like to see what is that there go into action. i'll be very intrigued to see if we're at the end what is banned from, from instagram or go about your country. these people are actually really taking time to find these, these perpetrators and ignorant people and taking them down and even to take even call social media and being brought for me. no harsh punishment. so that's another issue where it's not gonna change. it really isn't to get stuck when the wrist get as many, many examples of just stuck on a wrist from racism. so yeah, i mean, i'm just, i, you can see i'm only a charge person, but i love it when they come as much person disguise themselves as cosmetic person . so humble. this is, this is, this is, this is a rubber compensation cd. let me, let me show you here to see my laptop. we have to do conductors of cambridge, the thicken by the races, abuse,
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and it just looked down here. it's actually signed by william, right? so you know, he type that tweet out himself. he didn't get his, his staff to do that. we have to say, if you, if you, if you are races, we don't want you to be part of the fan club to support us. we have hurricane here talking about the vile racist abuse. if you please, anyone on social media, you know an england fine, and we don't want you see when this is not the last time we're having this conversation, right? semi work quickly for sure. for me, when they said to the people that one of those people can agree how he came, what he does, don players when it comes to harry and when it comes to her williams and i have what was up text if you said, how are you going to say that they can say that, but we look at megan, how are you to a sion, i mean, when you were saying, actually i thought it was, but it on topic since i think yeah, it's yeah, you can,
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you can, you can be supported. but if you look in your own blood line in your family, that's been been clear representation of discrimination and racism. saying with the f a in a sense. so they've been loaded campaigns, campaigns for days. nothing's changed. so yeah, that's the, that's it on, on that those last 2 business as usual in england. thank you. right. let's move on. we're going to head to south sudan a decade ago, south sudanese, celebrated their countries independence from sea, done with great fanfare. today, peace is built on a shaking piece fire, and the humanitarian situation is dire. he is out of your mouth with his thoughts and how to move forward down in the nation in terms of the nation with hope as well as we had. i suggest that the international community
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reimagine and we commit our helps this country. let's listen to the people. let's listen to the hundreds of thousands of refugees who voted with their feet and returned home to listen to the farmers for planting against all odds and to the students who are striving for education. no matter circumstances. let's work with the people. stop so down us getting more partnership moving ahead in the nation. i guess that is a positive spin on what's been happening in south sedan for the last 10 years. we're doing now by out as it was a morgan, a true expert uncovering style so that i have it's so nice to have you here because i remember that 1st day when south sudan was created as a country, there were so i was, there was relation, there was excitement 10 years later. what is your take on how south sudan is doing? where south that is right now?
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i mean, it hasn't really grown up has, i know that there are lots of issues that still remain unresolved and not just from 2011, went out that i was born and created no issues that were not resolved since from 2004, 2005, when the comprehensive piece agreement was signed, we're looking at issues of reconciliation, healing truth between the various factions, between the various things and tribal communities, insults about. so those issues were not addressed by the comprehensive agreement. they were not addressed with the birth of south sedan and 10 years on, you know, they were, the main reason behind the fracture is behind the so many splinter groups and the group that were created in 2013, just 2 years after that and independent so up to date, when you look at that and you know, you've seen 2 piece agreement that we'll find the last one that's currently still holding, but very, very shaky. they still know move to try to reconcile the various arm groups, the various tribes that will fighting against each other. so it's,
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it's like something that has not learned from the past. look at this piece agreement that they've kind of trying to implement. and then you look at the comprehensive piece agreements, there were many shortcomings in that. he's agreement that is again merit and this one. and it's going to keep south sedan on this shaky path that it is on right now . if i was really struck by how the president of south sudan and the vice president of south sudan, march the 10th anniversary, they were into very different places. and that says something about their relationship, but also how seltzer on his phone right now is to have a listen into what they said. on my part, i assure you that i will not return you back to work again later on where to go to recover the laws decayed and put our country back to the path of development
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in this new job, our celebration today is very important as the whole world looks at us. every commemorate this tempt independence anniversary. would have to be fed started on is a very young country. and there were lots of challenges when it was being founded. so where do you think the country is going now? are fat mentioned where we've got young people, we've got farmers as potential. it was looking at the potential. yeah, i mean, it has always been bear, you know, when you look when i was creating 2011, the potential was that the youth were there. but the foundation is what was my thing, you know, i me, you look at civil society, they were not really strong enough. they're growing stronger. the youth are starting to make it clear that you know, they want change for the better they want
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a better future. they demanding justice and enter corruption and enter the conflict that has phone south on the far. but they also demanding justice, accountability reconciliation, truth healing between communities. and that's where you can find the key to the south and what i think, i think the fact that so many people are against each other. you know, people now identify themselves based on their committees and their tribes and really shaking self and parents self and a far it's actually. but the good thing is, you know, when you look at the youth and you speak to them, they seem to understand that this is where the weaknesses and this is what we need to tackle to be able to move on forward. and so civil side is going stronger, the youth responding to talk about it more and more. you know, women are fun, talk about their rights based on talk about what they want to see something in the near future become. so if they're, the potential is there, but then the thing is you have to take a step to get there right now again, back to the be think remains very shaky. the to 5, you know,
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you've heard from president over here, the vice president. rec, much are 2 sites that were fighting each other for years. you've heard from them, but then they didn't time together on the day south. and 1st, the 1st day they will not together, everybody was in different places to give very mark than their speech on the they, they need to show some kind of unity. they need to at least so that their forces on the ground. there are people in background also try to mirror that, and if you don't that you're united. if you don't show that you think get over the years of leg animosity with you, you can't move forward. thank you so much. just reviewing the the past 10 years, a south saddam, we really appreciate you. i know you'll be back on the stream in the future. and now the have tea. it has been one week since the assassination of president jovan now moist in his home than showplace through the country. he's parliament is torment and now to man a claim to be the country's prime minister. how does haiti find its way out of this
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situation? his mccovie niel. so when i think about what this means for haiti and what's next, i'm thinking beyond to the media rush to go help katie and bring aid that we see so often play out moments of crisis for 80. my thoughts are more on how haitian can actually drive a new narrative for haiti. right. what that means is that we've been seeing as patients in haiti and haitians, and i asked for that and talk to patients to write our own history that were done with the new york colonialist policy. and apparently the policies that have led to have current and ongoing crises. joining us now, professor john decent, paul, he is the founding director of the haitian studies institute at the city university of new york. and he's a political and cultural sociologist. professor,
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what i want you to do is ask you about the latest news, but ask you about this idea of the haitian narrative owning it as haitian. because once again, we have another headline making international news and it's not good news as a haitian. as a professor, as it says here, is that so much that you can help us understand about what does haiti do and how does he get into this situation and how do you get out of it better. thank you so much for having me. that's a good question. i do feel like how do we get there important briefly to inform our people in that he was the 1st black know today probably by different black in via, in 18 or 4,
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but the haitian lucian was the only successful. and we, and so, since that, lucian, that it will lucian was into the for, for the do this or do master deal would do copy them. so did he have been as related we not our day had to be 20 be on dollars to do since to fraud to let it go. yeah, exactly. is extraordinary. say are you saying then professor haiti is still paying for that in multiple ways? because then how do you change the narrative? bring not forward witness to now. so it's not the 1st. we have to change anything.
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one thing that we have to chance, we have to speak with. sure. so i don't mean it's not giving demands to me that he is do with county and deal with him. you see that it's for that is not true because you have with county india within hemisphere. i wanted someone to explain to me, why do you one of the most important the ambassadors of the you with in have so he is not so we we have to do a better job. he's not doing most do with counting, do so at this in the end and we're paying for 2 men, but also the dimensions. i mean, i never thought that for instance, was 19 you do us over by he between 934 and distressed. that do you with the constitution?
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is it chaos if, if i may, because are almost at the end of the show, is it just a p r issue that haiti has because the president was still assassinated. there wasn't like there was a cholera outbreak. there is a lack of resources for haiti that there were many, many of these are you saying that it is a p r issue or something else? just one final thought is it can be an issue because you mentioned the way, but remember was the voice to lead you to the way it was the former you with, with you that be great. so we can see you now, we still have, you know, those kind of new hulu and policies again, so, and haitian people. now, believe me for this over because you know,
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for john 80, some poor. thank you. what do you do to help us think about it in a very different way from the way that even awesome puzzle. now to 0 are telling the news from hey, people will get you brought because we have more to talk about. but for now. thank you very much. thanks for watching everybody. see you next time. ah oh, stories that need to be told. find away and demand to be heard. the opening the window into another light and challenging perception and personal endeavours in epic struggle with the colossal sacrifices in individual journey witness showcase it inspiring documentary. the change the word on al jazeera, escaping a war, who finding a new identity,
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confronting the reality of racism. religion and the struggle to be accepted, al jazeera, tells the story of what it's like to be lebanese, and call us trailer home. once upon a time and punch bowl on al jazeera, we understand the differences and similarities of culture across the world. no matter why you call, i'll bring you the news and current affairs are a mineral central to the quest for clean energy. a key ingredient for the production of electric car batteries, cobalt extracting. this is dangerous, profitable. with global demand set the skyrocket. people in power investigates,
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claims that industrial mines contracting the precious material needed for cleaner energy, are in fact, poisoning the environment with dia, health consequences for those living in their shadow. the cost of coal, both people in power on and just, you know, i taliban proposes a 3 month sci fi with the government, the release of $7000.00 precision. ah, father and kimbell, this is elder. there live from home also coming up indonesia records the biggest daily increasing corona virus infections with more than 54000 cases. south africa, the government calls up army reserve. this in response to days of was read on risk
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