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tv   [untitled]    August 2, 2021 12:30am-1:01am AST

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7 decrease ah ah, in 2011 al jazeera gains rare access to the piano gang from academy, and some of north korea's brightest young stars. i. what did it take to serve a national propaganda machine? ah, a compelling portrait of the privileged lives of the countries elite, rewind north korea. cinema of treme analogy 0. cut out one of the fastest growing nations in the world. i needed to open and develop back into national shipping company to become a team, middle east, and trade and money skillfully enough out 3 key areas up to about filling up from it, connecting the world, connecting the future on the cut,
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cut to gateway to whoa trade. ah a i'll come back watching the news, our life from london, our main story afghan government forces are facing and advancing taliban, which is now targeting major cities and provincial capital in the country. rockets of rain down on kandahar airport while group is also launched a campaign to take control of the vital city of lush car, the capital of homeland problem 6 months after seizing power in a qu, in me and mom military jones, her is naming itself a can take
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a government with anita on, lie coming, a prime minister at the same time you think multiparty elections and an athlete is requesting to stay in japan better? russian sprinter. christina, german of sky was seen at the airport in tokyo on sunday, asking japanese police to help her. thank she'd been taken against her. well ah, now millions of americans who are behind on rental payments face being made homeless off the government decree, binding evictions expired at midnight on saturday. a democratic lawmakers joined, protest is camping outside the us capital building in washington, korea bushes upset that landlords can now throw that tenants out off to colleagues in congress, refused to vote on extending that moratorium. it was brought in last year to help. so the sprite of covered 19,
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i preventing over crowding and shelters. the night was it was necessary to continue this awareness because we need, we need, are the powers that be to understand that we're not just want to let this go quietly. when the why have actual people that we are supposed to represent like, like actual whole people like human being actually are every, by this policy. this is so was a lack of boy. so we're out here are, here is shambrika. nancy is following the story and washington and joined us now and so at obviously this could have consequences for millions of americans. why? why did law may cuz they're allow this band on evictions to expire. indifference. i mean, that's certainly a conclusion of
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a lot of the progressive members of congress like car bush, like alexander your cars. your court has a look. this is completely the result. all the democratic leadership awfully failing. they control the houses or congress that control the white house, and yet they did nothing. we knew this is going to happen for a month. a month ago the supreme court said that the cdc had overstepped its authority when it instituted this this, this moratorium on evictions on. we should be clear, it's more of tauriel on evictions, it wasn't rental forgiveness. so what that means is now millions of people have months and months and months of back rent to pay with interest. and so many of them it was hard enough all at one paycheck to actually make one month's rent lead, learn 67 months rent. and yet we knew this is going to happen and yeah, the white house and congress about that. there's absolutely nothing. it was any on thursday that the white house said what we call wait to see what congress has come up with as they solve this problem to which the congressional leadership said what
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we thought you were doing this. we were not doing this. we thought you were doing this and then we went through this terrible charade on friday night with a democrats. went through the motions of trying to pass something very quickly, but they didn't have the votes. again, we should be very care. it's all just republican democrat, but it's because i plenty of centrist democrats who either don't believe in a social safety net, all of very willing to take him a lot of money from lobbyists, from property lobbyist, real estate lobby, as developer lobbyists. and there is a property boom on right now, they don't, well, they want people to get evicted so they can sell property or redevelopment so they didn't get anywhere. and then they just went off holidays for august. the white house, the white house now says look, it will try and do so, thinking of some good ideas being floated like. for example, making sure that any landlord, he's trying to evict a tenant left must apply for federal aid for the rental. for the rental deficiency, for example. great. i did. why didn't they do anything before now? i mean it, it's, it just boggles. it boggles the mind in what progress has long been saying was ok.
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the supreme court said this is unconstitutional, but i have another executive order. i don't fight that in the courts again, because at the very least then while that's working its way through the course, it buys more time to keep people in the homes while an existing system that's already been instituted, which has some $46000000000.00 in it. of which only about only about 6 percent has been disbursed. you can try and make it a terrible system. so many hurdles in it, very difficult for people to get the money, but least we could try and make that work. but instead, the white house and congress basically did nothing, and now we have millions facing homelessness. ok, thank you, shop or time. see, following that story in washington. thank. shall we go to hong kong, where controversial changes to the immigration law there of now come into effect with critic saying it will give the government sweeping powers to stop people from coming in or out of thousands have been leaving the territory before the law came into force and his adrian brown reports from hong kong. that numbers seems to be
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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 are leaving for good feeling, a mixture of anger guilt, and the sense that being forced out this is our home. why do we need to leave? i mean, i have been living here for more than 40 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 for the sake of their children. bolivia. so for many years we have our korean, we have family. yes. so it's been upset for the for the future of my child. and i think we need to do with the sad scenes
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and now being played out daily. as more people join a growing exodus from a 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 think the hong kong government speeds up the immigration plan for many hong kong. as for us, we did not plan to leave hong kong at the beginning, even after the protests in 2019 like many others, he says he's unlikely to return to hong kong as city that still regards 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.
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illegal immigration at source, amid a backlog of asylum claims. and the people's right to free movement will not be effected. 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, now and all the news were following aid work as if intercepted, a boat crowded with migrants of tenicia coast. the engine had failed and it was taking in water. it took 6 hours to rescue nearly $400.00 people. some of them it already started jumping into the sea on board, were mainly men from morocco, bangladesh, egypt, and syria. the international organization for migration says more than a 1000 migrants of dive in the mediterranean this year. well now to new zealand, where the prime minister is made a full apology for raids against people who overstate the visas,
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nearly 50 years ago, the austin, violent raids were racially motivated because police mostly targeted pacific islanders for the port taishan while ignoring people from other countries. from oakland, wine, hey reports. these experiences with the tears flowed as pacific islands, community leaders, and those affected by the dorm raids gathered in oakland town hall. they came to his new zealand prime minister jacinta rod durn said the words that been calling for the 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 19th stephen teeth that lead to the events of the dawn rides the immigration quack down in the 1900 seventy's targeted pacific islanders who had
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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 response from 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 over stairs who were at the time from the united states or europe, a formal government apology for past injustices his rare and use the lender has to meet 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. would have just felt like you were trampled on in some way emotionally, spiritually, many,
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many ways. and i think that has been answered generational leaders and new zealand, polynesian communities, welcome the apology and they hope it'll help people of the pacific islands move on, dallas. they're 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. what were you more now on afghanistan? because some weeks we have been watching the taliban mate, territorial gains in the country, actually it's been carrying on for quite a while. as us forces count down to the final withdraw, it's triggered another refugee crisis. tens of thousands of afghans are estimated
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to be leaving the country every week. among those fleeing on members of the has are as she, minority group and one woman who worked the u. s. and the african defense ministry spoke to al jazeera, about how she escaped to turkey. this is her story. is this, my name is lisa. i'm 32 and the jose from government province and combo. i worked as a taylor for an american company and then at the afghan defense ministry. but i had to leave afghanistan. i go below my didn't bad man. i received a threatening calls and we were followed even in the car, it was dangerous. one of our staff buses was blown up by a suicide bomber with that on by the me to my work was in the shock area of cobble where the african into office and the u. s. embassy were also located. i was traumatized when i saw the bodies of the journalist killed in the time that i would, but there aren't jobs are a good working environment for most women in afghanistan. i was 6 years for the
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government, but it was hard for me to continue in my work environment. it was mostly men. didn't say that people would talk about us. the taliban would also follow our staff car or bus from the ministry. so i left recently about 25 girls were taken by the taliban from the mildest on district of guzman province. and they were forced into mary did miss gilbert in the 3rd. i arrived in iran on a visa and then we were smuggled into turkey. the journey was very dangerous and difficult. i was thinking at one point i might die, but god help me from iran to turkey. we paid $1000.00 each. then in the middle noon, i want peace and prosperity for my country were tired of wars. so ma'am, it should go, but that's all i've seen since i was a child and i don't expect peace enough, dana stone, and a time soon. i want to move to a safer place where we can live in peace,
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that it will be better for us. still had on our 1st time, winner informing one we'll have all the actually from the hungarian ground, free coming off when i joined the debate, do not back scenes reaching those who are most of the needs and amplify your voice in allowed a diverse community and how in array of different story know topic it off the table . it's such a tough ethical debate where there is obvious discrimination in systematic discrimination of the play. people are thursdays for new wasted. the stream where a global audience becomes a global community on al jazeera. from the world's most populated region, the un undue story from across asia and the
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pacific to discover the current events with diverse coaches and conflicting politics. ah, one on one eastern on out there. ah ah large cruise ships are now banned from entering the center of venice. environmentalists have been pushing for the band for years now. i was there as adam rainy reports from vanish on the impacts of this new rule.
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picture postcard perfection. tourists 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 venison lagoon ecosystem that the bait became much more heated with the arrival in june of a towering 90000 ton ship. the government finally announced the ban in 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. what a movie we hope the government comes up with a way for us to continue a subsidy might last a year or 2, but this decrease has ships won't pass through anymore. we need certainty for our future today. now which cuts right through the heart of venice passing by st.
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mark's square. and it's this very artery to which the huge ships will no longer be able to pass. but that doesn't mean they'll be completely blocked from the venetian lagoon. the plan is to have large cruise ships into the lagoon through a 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 gasper, 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 problems and the big ships are not the on the one. and what are the problems like that the city is dying them in terms of being a living place with super cents living in the side and not having to commute them to get the job which can not give it a chance to live in the city right we are just that to me that may control as part of an organization that beat for the band. she sees it as part of
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a larger push to focus on long term sustainability. all of that would be done not to shift the focus away from accommodating tourism to really fulfilling the needs of the local residents who flip and also on the value of a versity 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. time now fall this fall with gemma. thank you mariam. there was a big shock in the marquis event of the take your lympics, the mens 100 meters sprint with italian month marcell jacobs beating 2 of the pre re favorites to take gold. he's the one wearing blue here and off to a great start. he carried the momentum all the way to the line to finish in 9.8 seconds that faster than you same boat putting time in rio,
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5 years ago. and back and fred cutty was 2nd and kind of this andre to gras. bronze is cities of 1st ever metal in this event. let's get more now on jacobs from our correspondence into 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? nobody. nobody would have come up with italy's 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 when said christie of britain back in 1992 and it was unbelievable few minutes on the track for italian
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track and failed because just before that as a marker, some berry had won a gold medal in the men's high gym and roll the bizarre circumstances sharing the gold medal with castles as a partial boatman perfect. drew me to 37, no even could clay 2 meters. 39, they were given. the offer of 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, alot just doesn't mean that we literally have some days as we kid. 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 these. and it was just
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amazing and sharing with the friend is even more beautiful. and going to the really, i know this is, there's also beyond sports in this is a true sport my ship, 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 tomorrow have became the 1st verify in women who and then pick go metal victory in the triple jump. and she did it in some style breaking analytic record with her 1st jump before setting a new wild record. a 15 me to 67. we have final jump now to some strong words from americans from really king who's imply that the russian athletes shouldn't be allowed to compete against. it follows us teammate ryan murphy's comments after he took silver and the 200 meter backstroke on friday saying he was unsure the race was clean after losing out on gold to a competitor in the russian olympic committee. i think the world needs to do better
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in terms of citing doping and never mentioned this specific athletes. i never mentioned a specific country and that's how it was taken. and that is, that is disappointing to me that it was taken that way and, and some of the messages that i received that my, that my family members receive and my girlfriend received are not ok. and that's what it is. i was a, you know, racing, anyone from a country who should have been an instead got a slap on the rest and rebranding of their national flag. so i personally wasn't, wasn't as affected, but ryan was as long as there's been athletics, there's been doping. so obviously we're working on clean that up and there were, i'm sure a lot of people from certain countries competing this week that probably should have been here. murphy was part of the us team who on the 4 by 100 meter
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medley, rely on sunday in a while in a world record time kind of dressel, some of the butterfly cuz he clenched his 5th gold of the games to finish off one of the great performances in an unpaid history area. he broke the olympic record as he won the mens 50 meter freestyle, m, a mccain is now australia's most successful employment. with 11 metals. she said to eliminate records that one in the 50 me to freestyle and another in the 4 by 100 meter metal relay to make it for golds intake with 3 bronze is 2. she's just the 2nd woman when it's 7 medals of any color at a single games. it was a special moment, not only for them to show flavor for his father to after the american one gold in the men's gulf. he beat back is re sabatini by shot and dedicated the victory to his dad. he was a german catholic, whose owner and pick on bishop were ended when he was left blind in one eye after a car accident. the wind also significant to show fly as his mother grew up in japan and his grandparents still lived with my dad and you know,
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this is my dad. aspire to have one of these. at some point in his life, he dedicated a big chunk of his life. for quite some time to obtain a metal and that was taken away from him and you know, my ties here with my grandparents living boy and my mom grew up here as well. there's just all these things that sort of, you know, motivated me to, to do better be better and, you know, maybe i put more pressure on myself, but it was sort of, you know, more than just golf for me. and i'm just really, really happy, unfortunate to be sitting here. tennis laid out exam, vera was another olympic davy thought to win gold. the germans thrashed rushes a current hatchet in the men's singles final 636. 1 is the biggest part of his career having never won a grand slam. great. britain's charlotte worthington did something never seen before in a women's a. b, m. x freestyle, competition. she landed a 360 back flip just 13 minutes after hitting the deck with her 1st attempt. weddington received the highest school across men's and women's events to take goat
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out of 3 time world champion 100 robot from us. it's completely blow 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 for the next 3 stall is. it's a mouthful. it's heavy white my shoulders, you know, go men far. so was one by australian logan martin. he went to extraordinary lengths to prepare for the event building, escape park in his backyard to train on which cost him is $51000.00. money well spent has to be said his how the metal table, extent of china is still out from they have $24.00 goats for more than the usa. japan in the head of australia, you had the greatest every day, and a little history winning for gold medals. italy now into the top 10 companies. melissa gonzalez reached the semifinals of the $400.00 metre hurdles and she's married to a foul play. david blau, he got very excited watching back with his detroit lions,
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teammates the away from the olympics. and oakland was when his 1st race in formula one. the frenchman took the checkered flag at the hungarian groaned pri for rena's alpine team, so that the investor was 2nd, but he was later disqualified for failing to give an adequate fuel sample off of the race. and that moved louis hamilton up to 2nd and carla finds the 3rd, hamilton retakes, the championship lead from max the stuff that we bought from a mariam w. thank you so much, jama. well, that's it for the news hour. but i will be back in a couple of minutes of the full bulletin for you are going to bring you much more on all of our top story thing today, of course that i just on afghanistan, as the taliban focus that efforts on 3 major strategic cities in the country have
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worn that a couple of minutes. they with us. i me with energy to every part of our universe. more small. to continue the change all around the shape by technology and human ingenuity.
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we can make it work for you, and your journey to work can be a challenge on its own. but for some peruvian villages, traversing one of the world's most dangerous is a risk that comes with the job. we follow the journey of the people as they get to survive. risking it all peruse outages era. my name jewish, my manager is on my my job, find the beauty of brands to the point he doesn't need to put usually just we just grab a manager. i've only got mine on
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mine, i do on august the we know what's happening in our region. we know, have them get complete the, the others and not as far as i said, i'm going the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. ah, government forces struggled whole territory in afghan as dawn, as the taliban lay siege to 3 major cities. ah, no i. mariam was watching al jazeera also coming out. are calls in indonesia for more to be done to help the children left orphaned by the corona virus on a battle russian and big sprint as thinks the protection of.

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