tv [untitled] July 17, 2021 5:30am-6:01am +03
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across the country and a wave of re anti government protest varies anger over the economy and the handling of the demick. the government has accused us of being behind the unrest. the you and human rights body says, detain protest, this must be release. there's been more protest inside of the rock after a fi article with 1900 hospital nasiriyah kills 60 people. iraqis are blaming government corruption and negligence will mondays accident you're asking to angel. she is demanding answers from the administration. he says the government must firmly and punish those who allowed it to happen. ah, the headlines on al jazeera 126 people have been confirmed dead and more than a 1000 are still missing in the front of vanish. western europe, raging waters and landslides have devastated entire communities, washing away houses and destroying businesses. i've gotten forces of launch and
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offensive to retake a keyboard crossing with pakistan seized by the taliban as a fighting intensifies senior. i've got official guardian cutoff, in an effort to speed up peace talks with a taliban. south africa, the president says the week of violence and looting in which at least 212 people were killed, was planned and coordinated fears. i'm opposed to say security forces have identified 12 ring leaders. it is clear now that the events of the past week were nothing less than a deliberate, a co ordinated, and a well planned attack on our democracy. the constitutional order of our country is under threat. the current instability and ongoing incitement to violence constitutes a direct contravention of the constitution of our country. and the rule of law.
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the king of 14 has appointed a new prime minister, ignoring calls for democratic reforms as police crime down on protests in which dozens of people have died since june 14th for me, known as far as the land is the last absolute monarchy in africa and us federal judge in texas is brand new applications through government program that protects immigrants thought to america as children from deportation. the judge rule that the program known as baca was illegally created by former president brock obama, but it doesn't affect those already enrolled. the u. k has reported its highest number of new cove in 1900 cases in more than 6 months. they were close to $52000.00 view infections on friday. it comes days before the government relaxes, restrictions on english pumps, restaurants and like clubs. those are the headlines on al jazeera, him on con. we'll have more news for you right after the story to stay with as the world's how to a rich ticket giant leaves award,
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the final frontier. the stay with all 0 as jeff bezos, boards the blue origin. you shepherd, space flight on july 20th the millionaire space race special coverage. ah i am for me. okay. host of the stream. i was looking in the cheap comments section of last we can show i spotted. i know this is a re run viewers. i wouldn't do that to you. this is not a re run. this is the bonus edition of the street where you get to see the conversations that i have with a guess after the live show has ended. so everything in today's appetite is an exclusive ad on t v. before coming up of the series, my map and how it connects to a recent stream discussion about nicaragua. if you look really closely,
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you may will see a few clues. and this next picture takes us back to an era and us history. when residential boarding schools was set up to destroy the culture of indigenous children. it's the same boy. this navajo youngster, when he was taken to the carlo indian boarding school in 1882 right here. and then 3 years later, cultural genocide into frames more on the impact of the residential schools in america. later in this episode, let's start with the euro 2020 football championship final. last week, italy took the cop home after a tense penalty shootout. any england, there was disappointment and also pride for how well the team had played. but once we, making headlines for days is the racist abuse unleashed on the 3 black england players who missed penalties. c, j thomas joined the stream to talk about racism in british football. he's
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a presenter for office 5 tv, and a full my professional football player. in our post show chat, we tried to work out if there was any way to stop the piece of black and brown players. by some facts. i'm trying to find for the tis, but it is a tough one. is a tough one. like i said, we'll see here, and there are things going well, the villains, when it, when it's not gone the way the country wanted see. but i guess i'm, like i said before as well as those organizations are trying to when is on an ally on racism. and i'm thankful for that because the and i've been through the conversation are being big is conversations being had, i just want to see change. i want to see more change and people always ask me, what was the answer them as wow, how do we, how do you provide change? i'm like, i've never been a racist in my life. i don't know how to change it. i've never been an issue understood why people raise this, why was give me, how can i be the victim? and then be the person to give you the on the how to fix it as well,
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like that shouldn't be my job. so it's a tough when i, when we go short school and been kind of be in black and seen any discrimination, any form of discrimination. so any race will sexuality in a sense of that they, they, we are the victims, then we have to give them the offices as well and how to change. i don't think it's fair. and it shouldn't be like that. like i said before, i was born in britain, this is, this is the country i lived in a, grew up and i succeeded in a career football. what kind of career and entertainment in this country. but still, when things are gone, the way to a small minority wanted to get reminders about my race and you know, go back to the country that i was born in. is this car? how can you be races to play like, like 2nd go google image of the look him. he's so innocent. all 3 years old. 19 years old. like it pains me to think what you guys receive messages and, and see and seeing how much he go off and it's not kind of you, he's
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a 19 year old boy. he's done more than a boy. and sometimes it's hard to be an english person because there's a lot of baggage that we have and that team off so extraordinary that it makes you really proud. right? yeah. it does not know sometimes that flag, i'm so comfortable as a person of color who the british english. yes. yeah, exactly. spend your spot on the spot on is, is a sense of i, i've seen many england things by like i said that the start is i connect with this is more than any other in my life. the videos are damage in training camp, playing games of each other, doing pranks of each of all. believe flights of why the team bible teammates like how retain and cycle they are, they're supposed to be in trouble, but they're why they embraced each other. recall do they said there's no robbery here. we have one mission to the well for the country and you buy into that i put
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into a single inside and they stop so much this so much henderson stand operation inequality as low as support in his black play is never afraid to speak on their guard. southgate being a manager, they and bullying me, is wrong. we're going to continue to do the need. but there was so much that we could all buy into is england teams so much and feel for it and even done. his hair represent pull gas, going to get that from the past. forget the really good stuff. it's a little bit trouble, but you can see that let me, let me tell you this too. if i may, there are 20 players, a mixture of female football players and, and mouth football players, they all play in the u. k. they got together and they said the group is called hope united. and they just speaking out against height is have a listen that have a lot me
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may change any social media just because of abuse, daily abuse sensation when it so much, gracious, abuse, homophobia right open. you know, i do see this, anybody just hatred? not just on the page piece everywhere. one and 10 of us have received online abuse in the past year. which is why fi of created how p nighted top football is from all 4 nations coming together to tackle online and give us the digital skills we need we will have a duty to speak up indeed. but was proud to be in a position to help join hope united and help faculty online have c j respect, respect to those players. but you're saying it doesn't work right?
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this doesn't lot. let me tell you, let me tell you something. inside the i was on that sheet. i was there. in manchester, the media city would be t. i was on that shoot or double investment. so the shots you see, i was part of that. the campaign i was there, so i saw who i have this is if you got this is not gonna be a sales plug, but if you call my social media, we'll see. i haven't, you know, it's not always there. but again, it was a willing good and it is an amazing shoot. and it looks fancy and graham. but after the adverse come out and you just think, well, it is a campaign to highlight that they're against abuse, online abuse. but again, it's not enough. it's not enough because it's still happening. it's still happening . and another level, the offices are, of course, nor what about accountability or consequences. so if you are racist and you are doing online or you're sending a letter or you're sending a piece, you get sent to prison. yeah,
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i mean that would be what would be that should be. yeah, that should be the right course of action. and again, that would probably, that would probably be very effective, however. right recently got abused on line. i think it like 12 to 14 year old but. but if not in class. yeah. legend also legend monkey johns, really i'm more than, sorry, monkey movies and more than that it was very, very g, sorry, very racist. r martin, this young boy unbelievable. nothing happened. you got to delete the count. do an apology. so again it's, it's not going to keep saying that if educate ation is education education because that's what we've heard about. and when that happened, there is what about need to educate. so please educate. people are lazy and people don't want you want to do that. really, we should be doing it with education systems of in are in the u. k. it should start from that. we shouldn't have 1st lessons on black slavery. by my 1st lesson in school, i went to a white school and it was a lot of our,
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me be my and this has been slaves and you know, that made me feel that the entry point to be in black. and that's wrong. and again, what you said, the punishments we just said that, i mean if they were increased i'm sure things were changed. i present you got yeah . well exactly, that would, that would really help us. it doesn't benefit the english system. i never rules or anything about guys is financially bedroom, so it's not going to happen. former professional football player, c, j thomas sharing some home truths about racism in english football. i now remember that my back, this is how stream producer and coons pots every show. he works on, he starts on his notepad with essential premise for the discussion. and as i'm the research of the topic, he as important issues and how they connect together and see if i can find a few for you in the center. nicaragua, the latest arrest, arrow, legacy of the 202018 protests. follow the arrow down here election and then right
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at the bottom. wait and see till november the 7th election question. mark 90 describes this processed as being the scribblings of a madman. i disagree. this one, it is a work of art, a little glimpse into the mind of a stream producer. we covered a lot of the material in these my map during a discussion about the current political climate in nicaragua. after the live broadcast, i talked to the guess about the us in posing new visa restrictions on nicaraguan lawmakers and what impact that, what half of preston or take us government. what the us is actually already being closing federal rounds of sanction against the over 30 government officials, allies as well as some entity including the national as a whole. and then we're going to say it's not, it's not use us
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a user research tool which is sanctioned, of course, the fact that they are keeping on sanctioning individuals that are believed to be tied to the policy because it means that is a commitment. there isn't the pension being paid by watching on the situation. whether that can, you know, diverse the course of each one choice a really we have more data about that. but we also understand that doing nothing in this situation in particular, the election to explain if it takes place and it's taking place, the need to be an international response because in the region are looking at what it is crucial to increase the price. the cost of the abuse of power by your data and the announcement i get it. sanctions consistent
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down to the visa and freezing assets to talk. members of that, i ministration dictatorship is i think actually, neil's, it is important that those side shows also comes from europe, from canada, and ideally from democracy, see nothing. so what ortega has to feel is that his actions actually have generated reaction. i think the national level, anti transactional leader who will pay close attention to this kind of we action is important as the see i know said that what is happening in, in the cut i what is not normalized in the rest of the america. so, you know, not only because he's wrong, but also because he's going to create conditions for other leaders in the region
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with autocratic tendencies to replicate. what are they doing? you know, go ahead. oh yeah, i think that with a situation where we got our we are facing the limits of the international diplomacy and the limits of the legal frame. because the recently we got our walk, it doesn't have started today. we have being since day i came to power saying that this guy has a very clear plan has being also expressed by him that he wants to do it all the things. but already doing so, when we asked or saw this, how we can protect people from these kind of governments and sometimes the discussions and in terms of what a country can do is around hey, we have to respect the sober the of our country. but we are saying, hey, what happened with the sovereignty of the people, you know?
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so right now i think we are facing the challenge of that. and i think that ortega is a guy with a lot of experience and no house the see thing works. and that he's willing to do all this is, are you doing know in that basis going to how consequence you know, i think i think it's very clear that it's a strong possibility that in the future he get kicked out of the oh yes, he knows that he's going to receive more sanisha already have has a lot of sanctions. he can get out of the country, no one from his family. so the thing is how we create a united throne that combines a countries and very important in the bank will say laughing, america has to jump in the less of latin america, the beliefs and he has to jump in, but also has to go hand him, have with pressures in terms of economy and cutting the fonts for the police in the army. i've seen these things together came to about figuring apples to show that he
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has to be forced to bring reelections when he got our. now something that is going to happen in 3 or 3 or 4 years, which is the thing that he has been saying to myself, for example, that i'm, i don't think that it will take up or 5 year who had no result. so he has to be pressure to bring pre election as soon as possible with no political pressure on our end with watchers that are going to make sure that the selections are genuine actions in nicaragua will be held in november, look out for the coverage and out 0, find a following the discovery of unmarked graves of indigenous children of residential schools in canada. u. s. government will be conducting an investigation into the country's own dark history. the original concept of taking indigenous children away from their homes came from the united states, where they started in 18. $191.00 school found a said they serve to kill the indian to save the man. yes, mary. annette pemberton, markup black elk and christine did seem it cleave or have family members who were
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forced into residential scores after the show. i asked them having made sense to the u. s. policy designed to destroy their culture. well, you know though i began looking into boarding schools more just in trying to figure out what was going on with my family and myself and to kind of deal with our disease and all these sort of topics that were, you know, half spoken of. and so it was a real process of self discovery in many ways for me and finding out to flow. we kind of like taking apart the tapestry that was my mother in her life and, and also using the my skills as a journalist then to document what happened. and i'm actually working on a book now. i think framing, you know, the history of boarding schools through my mother's, through the lens for life and, and also my process of untangling that, and i hope that that will be informative to people as we move through those. i
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don't to spell people for buying the book, mary, by the book. book was a moment where you had a conversation with your mom and you will never forget that conversation. so that she told you about her background of attending a residential school. well, you know, from my earliest memories they were my bedtime stories, sister school stories and you know, the big story. she always told me over and over again. it was about sister mary catherine who was especially she was the superintendent of the school and shows especially cruel. and during one christmas season, apparently she felt my for my mother star, she felt on the cellar steps. she hit her head and she died. and my mother said, oh, what a silent sheer of kids did. and my mother sort of had a way of reinventing herself through these stories. and so i was never clear if it actually happened. but in the process of doing the research, i was in the archives of the catholic church and i was looking at some of this correspondence between the principal of st. mary's school and the director of the
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bureau of indian board schools in washington, d. c. and it's actually a letter from the sister secretary to the director saying, you know, this is to inform you that mother superior. catherine fell down the cellar steps and hit the button and step with such force. it drove her glasses into her head and then you know, we think that by the time you received this letter, she will have passed away and we know you'll join us in, in praying for her soul. i read that i stood straight up out of my chair. you know, it's like these were not fairy story. cecil real stories, and i think that that's that's how many of us have grown to know about know about boarding schools is, are through stories, like i said, our parents shared well it feels so strange that you attended a school that was a residential school that you teach and then you educate about healing. what is that like? are you surrounded by ghostly surrounded by the ancestors?
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how does that feel? what yeah, i think there's a real challenge to being in a school that is a former boarding school. i of course, attended there myself, but it was not no longer boarding school at that point. but absolutely, the story is like the one mary tell those stories are with us in our community. my family has stories like that that are on and go to school today. it's very, very different. that legacy is still really real and felt and it's important, especially in the prophet, but we're going to, we're the only catholic school in the country as we know that is engaging in this process. and in the hopes that the greater catholic church moves to do the same, that really there is an important in revealing up truth and sharing those stories and making a real part of who we are moving forward in order to heal. because that hard to
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have to come 1st christine robert adams was watching a live show and he asked a very simple question. that's a very complicated answer, i am sure. how can this be fixed? yeah, very simple question. very big answer. it's a complicated issue. it involves, you know, a federal trust obligation from, from this government to sovereign, tribal nations. it involves generations of families and individuals. it involves, you know, culture and it's, it's complicated. we need to focus on is having conversations that explore this at all levels of our society. and our communities and you know, to what mary and mccaul were talking about. i also have family history. my grandfather went to indian boarding school and my great grandfather went to carlyle
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and the boarding school that my grandfather went to was marty catholic indian school. and he never talked about what happened to him there. all he said was that he didn't want to step foot in the catholic church again. and that's what caused me to go and do my master's thesis on native spirituality and christianity. so, you know, exploring these things in our lives, exploring these conversations in our families. i think that's where all this. i think that's where healing begins. the end of the investigation into the residential schools. that the minister, the secretary of interior is, is leading. could that end in the us actually saying yes, this was genocide or guess this was cultural genocide? it's a possibility. it's mary you thought oh, i don't think so. i don't think you know, to me, very revealing that this question you gave, how can we fix this? that's always what, forgive me. i'm just going to say it. that's all white america wants to know. this
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is uncomfortable, uncomfortable truth. we don't want to deal with this. we want to get better. we want to move on. you know, it's like how do we fix this? how long have you got? you know, this is something we've been living with for generations. i think just being educating yourself a little bit on, in, in an area that is uncomfortable, you know, that is a start and integrating that into our educational system. we're primarily the history that needed. we tell our students about native people or their fairytales, you know, they really, really very little to, to actual to reality. so, you know, i don't really know if they will apologize and i don't really know how terribly meaningful that is, at least to me personally. i just would like to be able to know what happened. i would just like some transparency. no, i think that actually the national archives it's there. i think it's just really, you know, omission in many ways by, you know, by the united states. i think the archivist to be tremendously helpful. i think
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they want people to come look at their archive. so it's there i think are real stumbling block is going to be with the christian denominations, particularly with the catholics, who mocker. that's your cue. yes, i mean, i actually really agree with a lot of what mary had said here. you know, even though we are one catholic institution that is engaging in that you may be called for the catholic church widely or the pope for example, to apologize. that's the easiest and least that they could do the more difficult work in the engagement and the, and the opening up that record of the record, the confrontation with that. sure. history that our hope is that you are inspiration here. that that will happen more broadly. and really the catholic church, you know, i hope, had learned from its history in recent memory from their sexual abuse crisis. the answer isn't to run away and become defensive. the answers to step forward and responsibility. and i hope that potentially begin to do, and that's what we're starting to do and trying to do, christine well,
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here at the boarding school here in college and we are still calling for a federal truth commission. we believe that the commission will be able to finish the investigation that has been started by the interior and you know, from studying truth commissions around the world and especially looking to our relatives in the north and canada and seeing how the 94 recommendations that came out of their truth and reconciliation commission have not fully been implemented. we know that commissions are not the end all be all, but in addition to examining the truth and telling the full scope of the history, it does get us into the conversation of and how do we move forward and how do we repair what was broken and lost and so i would also like to point out that according to the united nations geneva convention, the definition of genocide includes removing children and forcibly transferring them to another group. so cultural genocide is genocide. there is still so much to learn about the legacy of residential schools in the united states and canada. you
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can see the 2 recent discussions of hosted about them at stream dot 0 dot com as that i show for today. and for watching you next time. ah, the striker in the tell the tale in the what the voted to the working class of his hometown and it's bullying legend at a thompson and produces beyond no record of it one of the time since it's not really adored by as fund 3 social values as many goes against italy, footballing, league football rebels on our across the world, young actor bits and organizes around them. of the motivated and politically engaged. the challenges they face couldn't be more daunting here. and beta,
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we were the one who had life on what was going on. and the way that most me media didn't, there's looking stuff that goes on is always in the dynamics formation. we have the agency to create the vibe of the generation. we changed on al jazeera, me hold him in the city in vietnam once. so i gone the old capital of san vietnam. his heart is lamb, so square, where journalists, diplomats, military staff and spies rub shoulders in its famous hotels. during the vietnam war, i was assigned to yet by the associated press and i arrived june 962. the caravel hotel burst under the headline, november 1963. when there was a military coup date, which led to the assassination of the president and his brother are 24 hour period . the center of saigon was zone. the press retreated in
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effect to the caravans hotel, and many of the story is mentioned we received was from the care of ah, more than a 1000 people missing at least a 126. that is catastrophic floods strike germany and they bring countries. ah, other mon. com is their life and also coming up africa and food choices retake a keyboard crossing with pockets on from the taliban. while international peace efforts intensified the events of the past week.
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