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tv   [untitled]    July 30, 2021 10:30pm-11:00pm AST

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alarm along environmentalist, they're blaming this on pollution from a nearby industrial park. one expert says the color is from sodium sulfite, which is used by fish farms, and that no fish or wildlife can now survive in this water. not the 1st time in particular reservoir near the southern city of true has changed color. this time though, a shade is more intense people living the by are also reporting a foul stench. ah, quite look at the main stories now. and you as president joe biden as welcome the 1st plane load of afghans who worked alongside american forces. at 221 people including 57 children and 15 babies of on board the flight. they were taken on bosses to fort lee military base. the state of virginia, 20000, others of applied for special immigrant visas and what's been a long and complicated process. many of them are in tupper says,
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who are considered a major target for the taliban? meanwhile, inside the country view and main compound in western afghanistan has come under attack, at least one person was killed as been intent fighting between government forces and the taliban in and around herat. diplomatic edits a james base has more in this now from cobble, according to local report. is this fighting on the road between herat city and herat airport? we believe the airport is currently closed because of that fighting. we're also hearing the un compound, which is all that road from the city to the airport has come on the attack. i'm hearing from local sources that no un stuff had been killed or injured. but there were guards working for the african government around that compound. and there are reports that some may have been taken injured, the reports been taken hostage. there also reports, some have been injured, and i've got one report that at least one has been killed in the headlines. unicef
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is one that more than 100000 children integra could suffer life threatening acute malnutrition in the next 12 months. unless aid is allowed into the if you're in region. you as children, fun says half of over pregnant and breast feeding women and take ry are acutely malnourished, leaving them and their babies prior to sickness. fighting between the therapy and government and the temporary people, the liberation front has intensified in the past months. well monsoon reins of triggered even more landslide in northern india. at least 7 people have died in a line fight. and how much, how much will pradesh date more than $200.00 a missing an abridged collapse. and rhodes caved in in the indian administered territories of general and kashmir under the 60 people have died in the past week because of torrential downpours. the stream is next looking at racism in u. k. policing. they went us flat news.
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news, news. ah ah, i am from you. okay, welcome to the bonus edition of the stream. it's a compilation of conversations that i have with guess after i tell you, for us, thanks for watching you next time. there is always plenty more to say, as you're about to find out. coming up journalists in india, being intimidated by the government. it's an accusation president modi's administration denies. but i guess have evidence. the stream checks in on indonesia desperate battle against coven 19. and i'm going to wrap up a show at ocean,
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keep watching, to find out why next starts in the u. k. where police forces across the country are looking at how they can better deal with racism amongst their ranks. you'll hear from sound a theme, a regional director for the independent office for police conduct or i o. p. c. for short. kimberly min garza who is campaigning for the release of her daughters yonder from prison of the she was the victim of a racist attack. and former metropolitan police superintendent leroy low, good, evil, totally. after the life broke off the call address racism in the police effectively until there's a why the conversation about wisdom in the u. k. this country has a problem about race. it has been like that in slavery, imperialism, colleen and postal, and they need to have a conversation through central government and other agencies because you know,
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express the rating is not being dealt with. and that's why the slightest reasons the race has come out and trade, mary, how the people in the sports or whatever. and then you know, people having terrible experiences, public services including the police. no, i occurred to me as i was thinking camilla was do you think having more black and brown police officers commissioners, do you think that would make a difference? i think it would make a hell of a difference. and my personal belief of the experience of dealing with the i p. c for a. yeah. that needs to change completely. and 8 needs to not have 40 percent of ex police officers in there. you know, i think yes, it needs to be more diverse. it needs to, you know, how it's going to happen. i have not got the answers, but i believe that, you know, that needs to be a complete overhaul. it needs to be diverse. the police force me to represent their
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community and we need to be able to see a policeman and, and see and see or, and know that we are safe and we are being served by the police. and the i p. c needs to be independent and i'm not be led by the police started departments because a lot of the public don't know how the i p c work. and unfortunately i've, i've been inside to that on. it's a very complex system and even the stuff states a complex system. and i me personally, i don't, right, there i a p c. it's all the independent office of police conduct io. p. c cell. if you haven't been stopped by the place. yeah ive been stopped attached i she had the vehicle stop coming back from scotland and i drive a flash car. the officer stopped me. doesn't have they just wandered around the car and then let it go. i didn't know why it's been stopped. the law doesn't require
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them to explain why they do a traffic stop. and that's something we're actually looking at in terms of doing some national recommendation and that space. so, you know, i've got own lived experience of some questionable encounters when the police and, you know, i understand that, you know, camilla had, you know, an experience with those which hasn't given us concrete incentives. and i will walk in that we will deal with some really difficult situations and difficult cases. you know, my passionate commitment and the city is that we have to get off the circle. we're talking about the same things that we, where they asked us to go to the color. you know, i get racially abused online outside, you know, i'm not exempt from it. and i'm, you know, we're doing the work behind the scenes, but it will come out and public getting hiring practices. yeah. i hear you. i'm not
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even going to ask you, have you been stopped by the police? how many dies? have you been stopped by the yeah. well actually so the small series and the one played by somebody who is playing me. one blue little leroy myself called is 30 years old. was stuff on the school precinct, just finished band practice. so i was traumatized from those days, but it didn't stop me from joined the police because i knew i'd bring an experience . i know if it's not just about road cops, there are road cops who influence the more real offices. well, i was going to going to say is that should be the good cop, challenging those drug clubs and some will tell you a lot of times offices don't speak up against those offices, right? the evidence to say, oh, there's offices wrong, and the completion by the silence,
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or even conspiratorial in making up evidence or agreeing on false claims or whatever it may be. and i think camilla's point is around that. those officers didn't investigate that. they probably already cited with the white people who were laying into a daughter and as a result of that you've got miscarriages of justice and this in hundreds of hundreds of them just because the rogue, the few that are in there. not being chinese by the good cops. you know, it is a bad apple and some of the barrel is bad from the good. i was like you saying anything, and that's why these. but after you continue doing what the doing, sometimes i think it's an orchard. i'm not sure of a bad apple. i want to show you this because this is the question that we started off with. can you k stump out racism? it's policing. that was the question. it's a difficult question. i'm going to give you one sentence. so that question,
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so use doubt we will need to shine a light on racism. what then please saying i wouldn't be doing the job that i'm doing. if i didn't think we can work to eliminate the problem, the goal, gosh, that we need to had to me why. i don't think police can be left to the own devices to deal with racism within it. it has to have political will when the labor government, boardman 50, they had the political will to deal with it. this government doesn't have that. and so please crime commission on not holding chickens or account. so they've got to bring back that political will to change it and recognize that unless they deal with it, we be talking about these issues. the next 102030 years. i need to write them
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a has to be dealt with. and kayla. i'm reside the police at the cockpit meeting that they still institutional racism and actually, you know, confirming that that is a problem and they're willing to, to saw that i am the lever, said the political will also need to be there that know, we're not going to be able to stop the i think has to come from the top without admitting you failures. nothing's going to change camilla mon garza on stumping out racism in u. k. police forces. find out more about her campaign to get her daughter released from prison. a free sienna dot com. in india, the government is being accused of making threats against journalists who report on stories, not to their liking, monitoring their phones, and intimidating them with threats and tax rates. the stream invited 3 indian journalists to share their experiences. their accounts was so disturbing, it was clear to me that appearing on out to sera, was an act of courage. the fact that i just spoke to you about the income tax or
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quantities, i mean, i'm not supposed to speak about it, but this has been going on for the last month and a half that i'm being close to the income tax office. they me for 12 are the go to my bank account, they go to my bank and they asked me about every transaction. make me been humiliated to me, make me feel like a criminal, but doing what we're doing. relief work for people for doing the job that i want to . so i feel like the government is trying to humiliate me every other person. i like that the bread jones is we are living in one by in delhi. i saw the cases that you mentioned a just for me, but i'm go to the front station because we have been telling the world or the young man that the more the the he does not believe in the freedom of freedom of speech. but the word took a long time because the world has been calling him as a man who believes in development of heat oh, believe and development. there was
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a walking up to this, but they didn't want you to wake up to the fact that the was likely to mock was he is going down until it's to unless it's i'm good at that some of the find a job by the done swami who was one of the best human rights back there was died because he contracted with 19 because he was incarcerated for an a conspiracy against the prime minister. it took me with, i'm good for me because i've nothing is right now. it certainly with angle. it's frustrating because every day in this machine isn't everything that we've done by us, but it seems ironic for india is always described as the world's largest democracy . and yet we have spent the last half an hour discussing the issues with press freedom. oh well yes. that is true, but you know, i don't know. i am such a die hard optimist. i know everything that is so much that is going wrong and
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especially someone like people came, entered the world of journalism because i wanted to be the life of the white people . or rather, you know, a facilitator for the marginalized people to have a why it's now, you know, i really don't want to make everything about myself. and just about journalists may have said, we are privileged people. haven't put me to between. there will be a few 100 people who will retweet, they will be a why is why they will be a few people who will support us, maybe feel more, you know, our audience does. but just think about those people are like, you know, new organizations like mine and journalists like me. i have a should be part of which means which translates as b to our india and which is primarily to read the whites of the community, the tribal, the religious minority, you know, about gender died about you know, what embodiment abuse. so it's just like me of suppressed and my organization does not is not given the space to speak truth and report the way it should be reported
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. it does about the people's right to know their right to know the unfiltered truth . so i think eventually all of this comes down to people of india. there's 1400000000 people and the right to know, you know, trust me. but i'm saying that this is no exaggeration, that if the journalist will you be and few of the 3 are build you out on your show . if we are not there, india is going to turn into this one, the black hole. when more information comes in and nothing was out. so i think the can be really call the democracy in the last the statement i said that if there is no, you know, free press, they can be no free nation, no fee, democracy. so i really feel for the people who bought about, you know, i have taken it upon myself and i feel my organization to, to convert the people who do not have, you know, the very embalming thing called the mike or, or, you know, i mean, even the relationship good works, most of them are uneducated people,
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so all of this is going to turn into just a medium of the privilege people that they showed themselves. and we turned into an equal chamber. so as much as we are talking about free speech and this whole crisis of media freedom in india, i would say there are enough people. there is a whole new crop of journalist, young journalists, who are putting everything at stake to bring you that small piece of new. and so i am, i wouldn't say i have lost whole. i'd say it does the wire and the news organizations which is working in 2021. we will part of the consortium. so it's also about testing your limit. i have not are full. i want to bring in one voice. this is a model of the pool. she's a reporter for court india. she talks about what it's like to have ongoing surveillance. and then off the back of that ne, how i want to know what keeps you going? what gets you out of grade every single day and keeps you going as a journalist here is man of the names of he didn't journalist on the big
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list. it's only the most recent example off press freedom in india. the country, thanks poorly, on the word press, freedom index, and 140 do 180 journalists have been generated and continue to languish in general, despite demik is online and use media. houses like news click and then i need to loadings from government agencies. yet the government has dismissed this ranking in the past, claiming that injury from the west and bias. it has also claimed bottom, increasingly that i have no issue. when i press freedom. i do want to see what you just said. i do want to say that this is a hot day footboard support or what do we think? i'm sure that they're joining them. i put them on the back side more difficult,
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particularly because a lot of me didn't mention with all those. so there is a lot of sense to shift because of the human action by the got to follow bob. i also want to see that why what keeps going? i don't know all 3 of these invite so much online. he's the only one who many people, the guy, the implications we've seen in our own life offline. i think we need to see if we can do it better. we also, i just want to add to what i said that we are optimist. and the reason why we are seeing the doctor because jonathan india lot stopping off stop doing what to do, and which is why the attacks doing that also tells us that even been regardless, i want to trash the existing democracy under democratic structure. the,
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the john live on the down to the court is on the down. the act will make to make everybody pushing back and which is by the last 7 years, even when we see that there's high number of trying to seeing bingeing. we have seen that you've seen widened in quite a bit has been seen that are the most recent being the fall will fall month, the thing on poor thing and again, so the, some people lots of last month by the goal would be thought the dc. it's not like people are not pushing back online. the press freedom in india episode got a lot of reaction. one journalist tweeted, thank you for this pertinent news and for inviting feel us women run a youth. may i dictate an offer 100 shawnee? i couldn't put it back to myself. we had to indonesia next square covered cases
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continue to rise in a single day last week. the country recorded nearly 50000 new infections and over 1000 deaths. but these numbers are likely to be much higher after the lie show, the gas, and i stopped talking about statistics and focused in on the personal stories they wanted the international community to know well, i have a friend recently who's husband died because of course, at 19 am he had a co morbidity, and if only he got the vaccine in time, he might still be alive today. and she was a doctor as well. and it's an imaginable to lose someone you love. when, especially when you're health work and you thought you should be saving them, but you cannot even say your own family. and so heartbreaking moment and vaccine might not be the only solution, but 6.6 percent in coverage reach is just appalling. really.
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so i, i have a story my own, i mean we're very closely lead to mine in, but they are so much island and they got coffee and they got coffee. but because my, my medical doctor, because they that i could contact me by calling me and you know, they don't, they don't have access to. this is the best, the best thing. even though i think that's the one they just know. and they are in, they have to have like maybe 3 hours by way of like like probably to get the maintenance to get the maybe sit with the situation just close the job. surely the job, i'm not, not by not, not in the middle of you know,
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floors or something, but when they come to the city, this must look easy to even do having the really, you know, made me said, so you know, the, the access to the test even though i think this one is very important and also then the many said this, you know, i was of the java and this still not there yet. i mean miss, look guys is i actually start, i hear your frustration. jessica. you know, for me it's so hard to think of one story because right now there's this sense of collective grief and sadness and anger at what is happening and we see it every time we go out to report that you mentioned that little boy and what has happened to him, it's so horrific. but in that boy's situation, he does have his grandmother. he has some extended family to look off to him. and
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that's actually not the case for all children. and i think that's what will stay with me. the impact on, on children who have had the education disrupted for more than a year. but beyond that, the children who are now often who will have to learn to look after themselves. i think there's, you know, to, to see the impact on someone who is so innocent and has no role really in controlling the pandemic is so awful. and we've spent a fair amount of time at the we have covered 19 cemeteries here in indonesia. and every time we go that i'm just struck by, you know, we set up to do a live and people are just so being and crying and there are children, they're crying for their parents. and there's just so much sadness. and i feel like every time we're about to interview someone, people just on the brink of tears, i don't think i'll ever forget this period of grief and nothing could have prepared
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me for this. not even though we saw what happened in india. i, you know, we did anticipate that things would be bad here, but to see how things have panned out and to think of the impact beyond the help health implications. i think we'll be dealing with this for, for years to come out there. a correspondent, jessica washington, who help the stream bring you the story of code 19 in indonesia. thanks jessica. finally, the ocean trip. i promised you earlier. oh, shana is the largest international ocean advocacy group in the world. recently i spoke to matt little john, a senior vice president of the o. c ana, and we talked about how important the house is. the oceans is to all of us, that kind of data tag, talk on instagram live. he's really good. then he surprised me with a science quiz. i think the thing about our oceans is, you know,
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in some countries i don't as the case for everybody watching right now for spain and, and this event. but, you know, a lot of us, you see food is sort of something that you have every once in a while and the nice thing. but for hundreds of people around the world, they depend on the oceans for their livelihoods, right? that's, that's how they've been, they've been fishing and they've been processing fish. they just, they need it for their to survive. and the thing is, what happens is the oceans heat up, you know, fisher, animals that are sensitive to temperature. so they move, and this means that the fish are moving, the scientists have, have, have, have actually shown, this is already happening, right? they're moving from the craters. and this, this just disrupts these communities that have, you know, lived for 100 years off of, you know, sustainable wave in many cases with these animals. and so if that's super important, it's also important, you know, because the oceans are, you know, are kind of
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a big ally in terms of dealing with carbon, right? they, they taken most of the carbon out there about, you know, something like 23 percent. you know, on, you know, base of the oceans are doing that and do you know why the oceans, why the oceans, how the oceans do that? why are they able to absorb carbon? what do you think the answer to that? yes, i and question. now you put me on the spot. well, able to still go, do you think it it is? is that the lot or what is and the live is come help me. maybe i got an answer to see if i got any interest in the ocean side. we die like cats and 2 times the carbon oxygen calvin system give you what there's plants and there's a lot of plans in the right crowd to the question. there's, there's so the ocean is not the water, there's plants and the ocean, right? there's plank. and there's fido plank and their sea grass bad. there's mangroves,
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there's this stuff. think about that. we know that the amazon right plays a huge role in kind of retaining carbon right big for us. you want to protect them . the oceans are like, call them the blue for us, right? they absorb tons of carbon because it's the life in the ocean. so protecting life in the oceans, right? protecting life and having more animals to like, so the more animals you have, the more fish, the more the more plants are going to, right, because just like an a for us than they help fertilize the whole thing. so that's why. so helping protect the oceans is important for maintaining its ability to help us get what this increase in a problematic situation with climate change. now you know what happens when the gas stop asking the questions. you can see that whole conversation on instagram, on the a stream instagram account, and that is i show for today. thanks for watching. a
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news news. news. news where total technology can help tackle the spread of code at 19, but our tech solutions, the best solutions we are starting something that seems like it's in public health, very quickly becomes about measuring what date is being collected. whereas it being stored highly re, looks at the limits of time and the potential of other creative ways to deal with the issues we face. target when tech to go viral, episode 3 of all hail the lockdown analogy. 0. moses is big news in libya, but staging cholera by credit here comes with its own particular ring or clock
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couldn't take part in the 2016 rallied because we were fighting a war in cycle sir. i'll just do a world travels to the libyan, just to see how we can be a unifying pool water country. lydia. a rally for home on al jazeera, the, the health of humanity is at stake. a global pandemic requires a global response. w h o is the guardian of global health delivering life saving tools, supplies, and training to help the world's most vulnerable people, uniting across borders to speed up the development of tests, treatments and the vaccine keeping you up to date with what's happening on the ground. in the ward and in the lab. now more than ever, the world needs w h. making a healthy, a world for you. everyone. a
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diverse range of stories from across the globe. from the perspective of our networks gentlemen, on al jazeera, the news. hello, i'm mary. i'm new mazda in london with all of our main stories now president joe biden as welcome the 1st pilot of afghans who worked alongside american forces into the united states. 221 people on board the flight and were taken by boston for the military base and the state the.

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