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tv   [untitled]    August 1, 2021 9:30pm-10:01pm AST

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to many of the vaccines but themselves he added to the passion, the success, and the popularity, and then he gave it all up for the love of his homeland football rebels. delves into the realm of footballing legend. rashid mac luthey for to the jury and national liberation front. with his feet. rashid mackenzie and the f. l. n. team on al jazeera. ah, ah ah, you're working on the job,
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i told stories. this. there's been intense fighting and lost god. the besieged capital of a son's coleman's providence, the african air force being blamed for bombing a local private hospital killing at least one person being mas routing centers announced the formation of a caretaker government. its leader, men ally will become the prime minister. 6 months after season and qu, he's promising multi party elections. millions of people across the us to be forced out of their homes within days after nationwide pause and eviction is expired, was imposed last year to help solve the state of cobra. 19 by using quoting in homes 2 of the biggest covered 19 vaccine manufacturers, pfizer and madonna, a report of the increasing the prices of their jobs for the e. u markers. the voc has joining us now live from london. need 4 more to be know about this well, as well as the developing
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a successful vaccine in record time. several of the pharmaceutical johns responsible for these incredible drugs have also been able to successfully safeguard their profit. because according to a report in the financial times, pfizer mcdonough cuts a new contract with the european union. that would see the $27.00 nation block pay slightly more significantly more. i think it's fair to say for the the drugs, but they are absolutely dependent upon. so, according to the latest figures, cited by the f t, the new price of the find, the show will go up to $23.00 from $18.00. up the more expensive slightly. it will go from $22.60 to $25.50. the your opinion is very much a captive bark at the moment because of so many indecision is and because of the slow pace of the rollouts,
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when it came to getting the right kind of drugs to the right kind of parts of the continent, there are growing concerns about the way in which the delta variance is spreading. also many countries are mulling the possibility of a 3rd bruce or vaccine somewhere down the line where more research comes back. we know that israel is currently the only country and that is company sanctions. the use of a 3rd boost for the over sixty's outside the u to here the u. k. more. busy research is underway and we may well see a booster being rolled out in this country as well. and of course i have good news for pfizer mcdonough who said to have a windfall. if that is the case, when i say come to market it's, i mean, here in the european union, there was so many concerns about the possible side effects of thought effects of the oxford astrazeneca job and the effectiveness of the johnson and johnson job
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that the you don't want to make any further mistakes, don't want to contribute to any further delays. and what are essentially doing is paying a premium price for a product that the blog knows will work. but at the end of the day, it is e u. consumers that will foot the bill, essentially, to be able to make sure that those and need the vaccines as quickly as possible. me, thanks very much. stephanie barker talking to us from london. i want to bring in doctor bruce lee. he's a professor of the city university of new york graduate school of public health and health policy. he's joining us live from new york is going to have you with us on all 0. and he was just talking about the slowness of the roll out across the you, what kind of impact do you think having to pay more for the vaccine is going to have all not roll out in the, you know, thanks for up or have me. so one of the issues right now is the focus needs to be on increasing vaccination coverage as quickly as possible to stop the transmission of virus. and so in countries need to focus as many resources as possible to
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towards the vaccination campaigns, information campaigns and actual operationalization of the vaccination programs. so to raise the price of the vaccines water further drain, those funds and resources could potentially negatively impact the roll out of back scenes and increasing the coverage of the vaccines. as he was mentioning there, it's the consumers in the you who ultimately are going to end up footing. the bill for those who do you think is most likely to be hardest hit when it comes to this. one of the big issues is that there needs to be a way of privatizing lower income neighborhoods, lower income communities to get vaccinated because they tend to be higher population densities. and therefore main times the virus can more actively spread in those areas. so if you have a situation where people who are least, can least afford to pay for a vaccine,
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but at the same time need to be cover as quickly as possible. you might have a difficult situation because of this cost is being paid. pass along all the citizens, etc, that might really further disadvantage those who are already social economically disadvantaged. the big pharmaceutical companies are produced, certainly the ones that are producing the, the, the vaccines have made big thing about the fact that they have to pay for research . and development and of course that, that is true, but it's also said you get more profits out of controlling a disease than it is about actually curing it. and if the big farmers know they can get more cash in a long time, does that, do you think mean that they're going to lose interest in financing and ultimately finding a solution to this problem? we have to keep in mind that we need to look at the long term. i mean, this certainly you know, the companies to certain credit for helping to develop the vaccines. but the baxley, the research has been under development for many years across many different types
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of laboratories. and we have to look at the longer perspective that we need to control the virus as quickly as possible. and of course, the fire is going to continue to be around, so there will be opportunities to continue to control it going forward. but really, the focus needs to be controlling it now, because that's going to hurt. you know everyone, not just from a clinical standpoint, but also from an economic standpoint to brucely. we appreciate your being with us and i'll just here as always, thank you very much indeed. all right, thanks for all more than a 1000000 children around the world have been orphaned by covered 19 a number of researches to find an additional 500 size and a loss or grandparent or another relative who cared for them in parts of africa and latin america. grandparents often act as guardians, carrying for children who no longer have parents to take care of them. save the children, is warning often or at an increased risk of physical abuse, sexual violence, pregnancy and child marriage learning. sharpe is professor of clinical psychology
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at university college london. she says, not enough is being done to protect and care for often children. well the take away message for us was a, the orphan hood and losses caregiver is really rapidly rising. and it's under the radar at the highest level says very little policy program or provision. and we think that the world needs to be waking up and responding and not just the frontline in jose. we sort of a 3 pronged response based on our research and on the evidence based prevent very clearly vaccine and vaccine rollout. we know about convex, but what about cares x. we also prepare preparation. phase family care. we know families are the best place and we have to create family environments with those electrons and protect from very good evidence. and we need to adapt to say from the
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panoramic where pitfall created tend to send proportion of funding to goes along with children and orphans. we need the frame and we needed. now, when i call, it says has enormous unless low impact and the quality of subsequent care is really very important in terms of how the child welfare and their primary caregiver is the central person. it gives them love, affection, ambition, looks after them cease to their every needs and we know that was out that they are really vulnerable. so things like developmental delay, educational loss, and more worrying things like violence and, and any form of hom lodge cruise ships and are banned from entering the center of venice. environmental has been pushing for move for years. item raining reports and the impact of the new rule. picture postcard perfection. tourists
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are back in venice, but they won't be arriving anytime soon on large cruise ships. it follows years of debate about banning mega cruise ships to protect venus's lagoon ecosystem that that be became much more heated with the arrival in june of a towering $90000.00 ton ship. the government finally announced the ban and july, after threats from unesco to place venice a world heritage site on its endangered list. the italy is promising to cover last wages for thousands of workers who rely on the cruise industry to keep them afloat. nobody moving about it, we hope the government comes up with a way for us to continue as subsidy might last a year or 2. but this decrease has ships won't pass through anymore. we need certainty for our future to decades now. which cuts right through the heart of the vin, if passing by saint mark square. and if this very artery to which the huge ships will no longer be able to pack. but that doesn't mean they'll be completely block
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from the venetian lagoon. the plan is to have large cruise ships into the lagoon threw back channel and dock at the mainland industrial port of margarita. the problem is the port isn't ready to receive crews. passengers like city council medical gas by the net, they grew up along dennis's canals. he welcomes the band but sees it as a distraction because the visible part of the iceberg visible deeper is the big ships, about many other programs and the big ships are not the only one. and what are the problems like that the city is dying them in terms of being a living place with 2 kids living in the side and not having to commute to get the which cannot give it a chance to lead them to see where we are just that to me at the main control as part of an organization that lobbied for the band, she sees it as part of a larger push to focus on long term sustainability. all of that would be done not
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to ship, to focus away from accommodating tourism to really fulfilling the needs of the local residents who def, and also on the value of a very city of the lagoon. and on the well being of the whole environment. here. the venice rose as a commercial powerhouse centuries ago to the great benefit of its people, finding a balance that keeps coffers full and residents from fleeing will take more than banning cruise ships from its waters. adarine al jazeera, venice or unesco often adds locations to its endangered list to draw global attention. many as receive montana. mining landscape was made a world heritage site last week, but it was also added to the danger list. not because of trying to resume mining operations in the area in 2019 islands and protected areas in the gulf of california, but determined to be in danger. largely because of the vulnerable situation of an endangered porpoise made worse by illegal fishing practices or kenya's lake to con
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and national parks were added to the danger list in 2018 after reported effects madame in neighboring ethiopia. and i said, are men as a spokesman for the cop $26.00 coalition, which advocates for climate action. he says shipping is just one industry for governments need to get tough if this serious about combat in climate change. these creek cruise ships are often the size of small cities, some carry over $7000.00 passages that don't huge amount of so each another war waste into our waters, the destroy valuable marine ecology at blue seas, laguna beaches, and this industry, the cruise ship industry is literally gone unchecked, the building bigger and bigger ships with more or more passengers prevent producing more or more environmental impacts, including the 2 world heritage cities such as many where they've damaged homes and businesses and of course of help cause the flooding that threatens that city. ultimately, they're only goal is profit margins while making others pay the price for this
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pollution. if we think about just this last week, the end of the floods, the famines, the extreme, whether impacts that we've seen cause havoc, all right in the world. that's still just another warning that the climate crises, not something that will happen in years come. it's a warning that it's already here and it's deadly for many. so to stop runaway climate change and the billions of lives of livelihoods are going to be infected, required to changes in this ticket. so that includes stopping polluting industries and thus not just fossil fuels or a b, a sion. it's also the shipping industry. look, one person on one of those crew ships is responsible in just one week for producing as much emissions as someone living in africa, those over old year. so, you know, cackling the shipping industry chuckling, and the cruise ship industry, tackling aviation, tackling fossil fuel. we fix enough food system, we need to do all of these things because that's the scale of the challenge that is in front of us. and unfortunately, despite all of the alarm bells, we've had lots of health care for governments, empty promises,
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but they aren't serious about cooking, their emissions, and the emissions that they need to cook. what matters is what we do in the next 10 years. controversial changes to hong kong as immigration law have come into effect . critics say they'll give the government sweeping powers to stop people travelling in or out. thousands have been leaving even before they came into force. when, as adrian bryan reports from hong kong, that figure is growing. hong kong international airport is a quiet place these days except here, the check in area for flights to london. these people are not going away for business or pleasure though. they're leaving for good feeling, a mixture of anger, guilt, and defense. they're being forced out. this is our home. why do we need to leave? i mean, i have been living here for more than 30 years already and it's my home. so it's really sad to leave the home and you see that everything is she's a finance worker and has no job to go to like others who sacrifice careers often
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for the sake of their children. we live here, so for many years we have our korean. we have family. yes. i. so it's a bit upset for for the future of my children. i think we need to do with the sex scenes and being played out daily as more people join a growing exodus from the territory where communist party rule is being tightened. in the past year, an estimated $36000.00 people have left for britain under a special visa scheme. many supported over parts of the anti government protest movement, like dark su now in birmingham with his family. he says the change to the immigration law will encourage more people to go. i'm just joking. i think the hong kong
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government speeds up the immigration plan for many home comments. for us, we did not plan to leave hong kong. it beginning, even after the protests in $29.00 team, like many others, he says he's unlikely to return to hong kong as city that still regard itself as asia's finest government denies the law gives it unlimited powers to stop people entering or leaving hong kong, insisting the amendment is aimed at screening illegal immigration at source amid a backlog of asylum claims. and that people's right to free movement will not be affected. those who go to the u. k. have opted for a new life in a country where koby 19 rates, a soaring, and job prospects scares. yet, that seems preferable to remaining here. adrian brown, al jazeera hong kong. new zealand was prime ministers made a formal apology for raids and people who overstayed their visas, nearly 50 years ago now from violent raids were racially motivated because police
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mostly targeted pacific islanders for deportation. but ignoring people from other countries from oakland, his wayne, hey, these experiences with the tears flowed as pacific islands, community leaders, and those affected by the door raids gathered in oakland town hall. they came to hear new zealand prime minister jacinta rod. durn say the words that been calling for decades today. i stayed on behalf of the new zealand government to offer a formal an unreserved apology to pacific communities for the discriminatory implementation of the immigration laws of the 1970s that lead to the events of the dawn rides the immigration quack down in the 1970 s targeted pacific islanders who had been brought here because of labor shortages. the often violence don't rage, which the government has now apologized for. so police searching homes, businesses and even churches looking for over stairs to deport the response from
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the place was welling. it was very reactionary, and it was very violent. the sense of injustice is still felt today, mainly because it was only pacific islanders who were targeted, not the majority of overstate who were at the time from the united states or europe . a formal government topology for past injustices his rare and use the lender has to meet the strict criteria, including the victims being definable as a distinct court that continues to suffer hom, connected to those historic events today. many of those affected feel a sense of shame about what happened and they're reluctant to talk about it even to their families. you would have just felt like you were trampled on in some way emotionally, spiritually, many, many ways. and i think that has been answered generational leaders and new zealand, polynesian communities, welcome the apology and they hope it will help people of the pacific islands move
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on the l. a. stand proud because of who we are and achieve the very, very basic and simple goals for why we even came to this country. that's all we want. they also hope saying, sorry will help build trust between the island communities and the government and into a future generations feel secure in new zealand. even if the apology has taken nearly 50 years. wayne, hey, al jazeera auckland's sports next and all. does it a 1st time whether in formula one actions from the hungary and rome, pre coming up with general ah, the journey to work can be a challenge on its own. but for some peruvian villages, traversing one of the world's most dangerous way is a risk that comes with
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a job. we follow the journey of the people as they get the all to survive. risking is all peruse outages era. my name jewish, my manager is on my my job due to branch to that point. if you don't you can usually just grab a manager. i've only got mine on mine. i do on august the ah
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the ah, soccer sports gemma. thank you rob. there was a big shock in the marquee event of the take your lympics, the mens $100.00 me to sprint with italian at le month. moscow, jacob, speaking to the pre race favorite, to say gold, he's the one wearing blue hand off to a great start. he carries a momentum all the way to the line to finish in 9.8 seconds that faster than you same boat putting time in 5 years ago. american fred cutty was 2nd and kind of this . andre to grasp to bronze. this is, it's lisa, the 1st ever metal in this event. well, let's get more now on jacobs from a correspondent and take the richardson. well, i think if we were to go back to 2016 when you sang both to just one 3rd of his 100 meter olympic gold medals and thought, well, who might inherit that championship?
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nobody, nobody would have come up with italy's lamont marcel jacobs. not least because at the time he was barely competing in sprint races. he was focusing on the long, jo, it's only in the last couple of years he's really focused on running the short sprint distances. he won the european indo championship or the 60 meters early. this year and here he is causing a huge upset on the track setting a personal best of 9.80 seconds, becoming the 1st european winner of this gold medal since winford, christie britson back in 1992 and it was unbelievable. few minutes on the track for italian track and failed because just before that jamal code, some berry had won a gold medal in the men's high gym and roll the bizarre circumstances sharing the gold medal with capital s a bosh. and both men perfect through to me to 37 know even could clay to meters. 39, they were given. the offer of
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a jump off by one of them would have finished with a silver metal all that be given the offer of sharing the gold medal. perhaps not surprisingly, they took the latter option. is a real moment here. i mean, when we say we've been through a lot just doesn't mean that we literally have some days as we get i know you've been job, you know, i couldn't get out of the bed. i need help to get out the bid. i need help to go to the toilet, you know, and just not even thinking of putting a shoe, i can actually do some job or something. so this is beyond the magic imagination for me and it's unreal. you can't leave the emotion, the dream of a gold medal to somebody with sacrifice his entire life or this. and it was just amazing and sharing with a friend is even more beautiful. and going to the really, i know this is also beyond sport and this is a true sport manship. and this is the message we deliver it to the young generation and everything. so guys, this is the, i would say the history in the making. so you know, my role,
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how became the 1st venezuelan, well then the when an intake gold medal with victory in the triple junk. and she did it in some style breaking on a little bit record with her 1st jump for setting a new world record, a 15.67 meters, with her final jump. american, some kind of dresser, one or 2 more goals to finish off. one of the great performances and then picks history. he clenched his 5th gold intake here in the men's full by 100 meter madly relay as his team set a new wild record. dressel brookfield reco because he wanted the mens of 50 meter freestyle. there's so much pressure in one moment. your whole life boils down to a moment that could take 2040 seconds. how crazy is like and for. and it happens every 4 years. i wouldn't tell him i ever tell myself there's during the meat, but after looking back, i mean it's terrifying. it's really fun if you can, if you look at it at a different perspective. so yeah, there's a lot of boils down to a very precise moment in time in the universe and i just happens video and things m
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o makia and is now australia's most successful olympian with 11 metals. she set to the bit records that one in the 50 meta freestar on another in the 4 by 100 meter medalie relay to make it full gold's intake with 3 from the 2. she's just the 2nd woman to win 7 medals of any color out a single games. it was a special moment, not only it says and to show the flavor of his father too. after the american one gold in the men's gulf, he beat back his rory sabatini. by shot and dedicated the victory to his dad, who was a german at the kathleen olympic ambitions were ended when he was left blind in one eye after a car accident. the wind also significant to show flight. as his mother grew up in japan and his grandparents still live there. right, britons, charlotte washington did something never seen before, and a women's b. m. x freestyle, competition. she landed a 365 flip, 30 minutes off the hitting the deck with her 1st attempt. worthington received the
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high school across the men's and women's events to take gold had of 3 time champion, hundreds of the us as completely buy me away. i'm still waiting to come back down to us because it's, it's really not going to thank him for awhile up and working towards her really long time and to be the 1st of a female elim pick champion who bmx re style is. it's a mouthful. it's heavy weight on my shoulders. here's how the battle table looks and china is still out in frontline, i have 24 goals for more than the usa. japan in said head of australia, you have the greatest appetite and a limp history winning for gold medals. italy and now into the top 10 away from the lympics asked about no call when his 1st race in formula one, the frenchman took the checkered flag, hungarian groan. freight for relics alpine team. back in vessel was 2nd. and there
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was hamilton off the fighting back from last place. how can i retake the championship needed from the step and that is what you'll support for now. i'll be back with more a little bit later. jemma thing smarty, i'm the mom is going to be here in a couple minutes with more on all these stories and more. patterson, goodbye. ah ah ah ah, ah, ah ah, lies and elicit market for the rich and powerful i was digging session work. undercover just years investigative unit exposes the inner workings and key players
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in the murky underbelly of football finance. he's a part you need to sell something like when magician has been said that you can make the innocent disappear. i have many of the lakes like brazen example. i've seen the men who so football coming soon on. i just, you know, the few, the dry chains following the removal of robert mcguffey than bob way with a country brimming with one journalist set out to record the voice of the people. instead of telling people what to think, that gives them a chance to speak for themselves and captured or haunted. not sure of the power and fragility of hope. borne free witness on al jazeera, north korea isolated and heavily sanction yet earning billions around the globe bureau. 39 is involved in everything that makes money for korea. carry different
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passwords, say, contacts, and the money this year. and it goes straight into the coffers of leadership, a to park, people empower investigation, bureau, $39.00 cache for kim park, one on jesse. ah, government forces struggled a whole territory and i've got as done as the taliban lay siege to 3 major cities. ah no i. mariam was in london. you're watching algae 0 is coming up on the program. about a russian lympics spring to 6, the protection of tokyo police claiming she was taken to the airport against her wishes calls in indonesia for more to be done to help with children
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orphaned by the pandemic and a band.

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