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tv   [untitled]    August 8, 2021 4:30am-5:01am AST

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something like one in addition has been said that you can make an elephant disappear. i have many of a brazen example. i see the men who sell football just ah i don't know. he didn't, don't have the headlines on al jazeera, the taliban says it sees they seconds. provincial capital in afghanistan as fighting escalates across the country. it comes just a day after the group over run the city on the runs. the government sends and reinforcement to re take control of a, sharon doing that, but the enemies of f canister can not arise the history of a gun, a stone, and they cannot take our owners away from us. and clearly my promises that we will find the killers and god willing,
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we will punish them. poor. everyone should know that we are standing in place like a mountain. their waists will be broken because they have no message other than evil. they fill coffins with young people and send them like savages. this is not humanity. we stand for the humanity, life and dignity of afghanistan. and this is our vision. you know what the 3 large, wild, far as a burning across greece threatening several times and cities locals on the 2nd largest found of if you have been joining firefighters to battle the flames. hundreds of others have been evacuated by boats. as the law leader has done this rather has warned the lebanese group of metalli 8th against any future israeli air strikes. it follows an exchange of rock at far between hezbollah and these re the army. thursday's air strikes, the 1st targeting lebanese villages since 2006, tens of thousands of people in france have joined protests against the new co with 19 health sauce. for monday they needed to get into cinema's, restaurants, bars,
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and other public places. opponent say it infringes on their civil liberties. the u. s. says nicaragua, as upcoming presidential election has lost all credibility. that's after the electro tribunal disqualify the main opposition party from the embers thoughts. it's vice presidential contender has been under house arrest since wednesday. the effects to states says president daniel ortega is trying to cling on to power at all costs. colombian officials are allowing stranded migrants to leave the coastal time of nicole clee, or 10000 people have been stuck there for weeks, waiting for boats to take them to the border with panama. the turn has traditionally been a transit point for migrants headed to north america. with the headlines oil, the locked in is next in 2017,
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a book was published called the great level. it's written by wal push idol and austrian historian. he provides a detailed analysis of the forces in history that have proved powerful enough to transform society and reduce inequality. he writes for different kinds of violent ruptures, have flattened in equality, mass, mobilization, warfare, transformative revolution, state failure, and leaf appendix. child spaces is that shock, events highlight inequalities and justices and absurdities. bringing them into public consciousness in ways that can force processes of change where clearly know when near whatever transformative change this corona virus pandemic might lead to. we're still in the shocking phase where every way you look, it's glaringly evident that the social and economic inequality that surround us much deeper, more pervasive, and much more problematic than we thought. the
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in india, the 2nd most populous country in the womb, the code, the 19 treated looked down, sent shockwave across the nation. it became instantly obvious that the virus is much more brutal, and those who have less marginalized was systematically impressed. i spoke with alter an activist. ern duddy roy, who's been spending looked down at her home in delhi, where it's behaving with society exactly the way behaves. the body amplified the diseases live to inequality, tearing them in the near to mattie read it,
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displayed it on a single day. the day aren't speaking about is march 24th. when an 8 pm prime minister or inger moody delivered a televised speech and announced a strict nationwide locked down who did visually ards. at od bought out by some one day to make some warner logged on when a data, a country of 1300000000 people had just 4 hours to prepare for a period of stringent physical distance. it would be a shock for everyone, but particularly if you are among the indies we were doing for us to prepare for this most punitive law down in the whole world. since it was the 24th of march. people hadn't got this salary. landlords in the crowded indian gentleman from the city of monterey there, of course they were not so people just began to walk. the vast majority of the 10s
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of thousands of indians walking amidst the locked down were internal micro men, women and children who gravitate to cities for work. picking up in formal jobs in construction, manufacturing waste collection and scrap sorting with businesses co used in mass transit at hope. this massive floating population of laborers was lifted drift with no choice. it was the biggest mass movement of people in the country to the partition of india and pakistan in 1947. this was like the chemical experiments, the the city tooting working on and sprawled across the hive and network of india, men, women, and children have been walking at all in search of a way home. my con, every now going to pass on the f bomb. you get to me, you get the buddy i went out
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and walked some of to the bordo. when i asked him what their idea was us despite us . and what happened. he said, what does it matter? because we don't have food, we don't have water. we don't have any way to escape, so whatever it is for us, this is the problem, not that. and some of them will pretty angry about the fact that you said, why didn't they just stop the rich people. one day the ones were bringing it in. why didn't you just lock them in and not all of them are or style to more government. so one of them said, maybe nobody told him about, you know, maybe he doesn't know about. and that was really heartbreaking. the government did announce a $22600000000.00 relief package to hand out cash and food assistance to the poor. however,
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it was only implemented $45.00 days after the lockdown began. and then when you miss bureaucratic hurdles and getting aid to people, according to the stranded work is action network, a relief organization that conducted a survey of more than 11000 migrant workers in the weeks following, the locked down more than 90 percent had not received any russians from the government on may 26, india supreme court admitted that there had been quite inadequacies and certain lapses on the part of both the national and regional governments before i don't even help them, you'll see that all the people out there on the government doesn't fund submitted to broadway every day. they've completely their faith. bridgewater wilson is one of india's most relentless activists for the countries poorest and most neglected people. when i called him, he was in the midst of organizing the distribution of food packages. and russians
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meant that they just then tell them, want to be there with their family and your role though, that the 64 international flights will be operating from thursday for one week to evacuate. indian started in 1200. when the board want to go back to their own, why do you, how much prorated the kids that we are not giving it? if we're going to want to, we want to actually actually, i'm not understanding the very read the book isn't us, that we are not considering them of the didn't at the heart of any lockdown is the need to stay indoors, stay at home, stay at home, and could sit and get her up when a good man he left. but for millions of indians, not only can they not afford to remain indoors without a daily income to ensure their survival. there is no home to physically distance in . in the indian census,
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the latest one was conducted in 2011. the homeless accounted under the seemingly contradictory title, houseless households. the official definition is bracing in its bluntness. these people who live in the open on roadsides pavements in pipes and flyers and staircases. when the opening places of worship, railway platforms, the official figures put in the homeless population at around 1770000. however, civil society organizations estimate about one percent of india's urban population is homeless. that alone is 3000000 people. and it doesn't even begin to count those who are homeless in rural areas, the imagination of crime in the school and the government and this world and that offer a lot downs. and i'm so don't you saw this contagion somehow done not. it was to the poor guy excited from this, but you fear that you're one of the you on monday you're not go. i'm to speak to
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that. people read very as it comes to the what the, my good. you have my pain before declaring why not really that lee. there is no way that i think the people without that you're going to be making a whole country as a one day. i mean, if you look at places like which is the biggest room by where you can press 2 to 2 square meters and 200 people share the toilet divided. oh, so sure. this thing are locked down for most engine means physical compression, phone use coverage, and there was plenty of the jeopardy india's poor wearing. it was the endless flu, viral images and videos online that illustrated just how sharply inequality cuts through society. food is taken in new delhi, listen,
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a month after the doctor had been announced, made clear what was already obvious. that for so many indians, there was no possibility of staying in doors. distancing themselves on a train platform in the eastern state of b ha, a video was filmed, the child, unaware his mother was lying dead of starvation. they just made it back to the state after days of cross country travel. and then there were the videos of people being ill treated by authorities. some of it seemed to be nothing more than power trips like police in the state of per day punishing people for violating lockdown rules when in fact, been out on the street was the only place they could be a nice video taken at the border between 2 states showing people being hose down in diluted bleach as some sort of disinfection process after they traveled days to get there, to get to the left to how we kill in our field that remain. and the
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children that all and the dish is on the why the mission by the diversity we are creating a human being like very human. there is nora, not the gravity for someone to think of just using non human object that peaks lot to how people are seeing other people who they think off below this issue and. and when you speak about people thinking of others as being below the station, you're referring to the cost system, right? the sort of social classification of people, the engine that runs in the social hierarchy, which is given sort of divine sanction cost. so you do have a society which preventative dividing mastery and then really kind of
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green hierarchy to people who are total and the idea of inequality. any nicotine, you somehow institutionalizing this, you all have someone to a chris and someone to be oppressed by. that is, what does best water campaigns for the rights of indian legions of manual scavengers? these are people who physically enter and clean last sections of the country, sewage system, often without protective gear. he has an up close view of what it means to be a dollar, or the lowest, a lower cost in the grip of append to pay for the more of the value of the way in the cycle. if you're doing what we got into it and doing the cut on actually the annotation that's coming down the cleaning of the hot sun every day. even it can flow is no bob. good. that is, that is nothing. but we are facing the what's the we will bring them into
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one division and you throw the loading. this is all drama. the engine does what is waiting on the 20 when i can i get off b, c, b, t, c. and c l is not set up. so let me know. josephine martinez is a historian and gender equity activist in spain. i spoke with her to understand how coded and inequality working in economic and social context, completely different to that of a country like india. but we began with some of the issues that have played out similarly in both countries. for him,
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mostly in that us who asked me what you see national what amount what amount of what handler. so maybe some similar to so i know my time, you know, people are gone. we see let's see let's it. but i
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thought the can then it was really hammered home, some of the realities of the imbalances and divisions that exist in our societies. for instance, laid upon the hierarchy of label divisions between blue color and white color, non essential, essential workers of the politics of gender. women form a vital segment of frontline workers, according to the un, they make up 70 percent of the global health and social care workforce. recent data from italy, spain in the united states, showed a $2.00 to $3.00 times higher rate of co infection among female health care workers compared to their male counterparts. women also perform more than 75 percent of unpaid care work, and almost 80 percent of domestic work globally affect largely dominated by migrant workers and other marginalized groups of color match the gus
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in finance on a lot of that or to the meals that are some critter much for the shops on my door and it will not be in that is that it will, it will cost me see if you know, get a government decrease declared these people essential work is didn't they? why did it start? backlash bundles and
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they don't notice the soul so well, let me talk to chose people next young necessary to inequality, leaves the shop imprint wherever it's measurable. and it's also not possible. take the city of possible where residence of poor neighborhoods has been 6 to 7 times more likely to contract the virus than those in wealthy areas. in april, the rate of infection in the market area of thumb survosity was $77.00 per 100000 inhabitants. meanwhile, just 6 kilometers away. look at this. the rate of infection was 533 in our prep, the oregon and sun here and said deliver jets working class satellite towns just outside of barcelona. the rate of infection was even higher still at 604701 per
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100000 inhabitants respectively. manual franco is a professor of epidemiology and public health at the university of color and madrid . and then john hopkins school of public health in the us, i asked him what might explain the differences between the neighborhoods. one of them, what is the quality of housing and the amount of people living with you within the same household unit? what do we know? so far is that if you live in a small, flat 56 people, it's pretty much impossible to keep the social distance thing that we are right now . encouraging people to get the way our cities are segregated and organized nowadays. and he doesn't matter if it's madrid, barcelona london or new york is some people get to choose or to pick where they want to live and others don't get to choose. and that's because of also where he started for the reasons, it's not a fancy area with that, with lots of renewal, then it's the perfect pays were low income people and kneeling begins are going to
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come list. so at the end, you have an, a mixture of low income, elderly people with immigrants from different countries of origin getting to live in these areas where we are seeing high rates of infection and then get the money when the initial well, the also law for the proto sally, you that'll be in your mas. now, there must be so familiar bonus in the un. my shortest. well took us. we need to get to my we tend to think photographs the picture in one moment in life stuff,
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but that's not the reality of our students vibrant and one of the highly dynamic and those dynamics sometimes means for the better sometimes means or worse. the real social distance in terms of health, in general, and very particular in this demik is how are we stratified and how are we layered and organized on our society? at the end of 2017, the world health organization issued a report in which it said, at least half of the world's population, cannot obtain essential health services. and each year, large numbers of household were being pushed into poverty because they must pay for health care out of their own pocket. what the w h o report was pointing to was that preexisting any qualities, be they poverty, race, or gender. they will compounded by the fact that the systems and institutions that a meant to provide a safety net for the public have been chipped away up for decades, making them increasingly unable to provide the services they were created to
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deliver video. feel up going to the book, but also what is the pick up and it goes because i'm be in a come on the last they did up the la hotel today. we really held emergency before you know, so how will it again, that is something that has been undermined over the years. dr. days. this is the total hoping you seemed to consider that people have a right to him. i mean, almost a 1000000 to die every year or diarrhea and the
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hydrogen. you have a 1400, a day, dine off to work. so all of these crises are deepening now because they're not being careful. no matter where you work or what country you're in, we're all at risk of the corona virus. however, that doesn't make the pandemic. the great level of some would have us believe. it does not even add inequalities because although the virus doesn't discriminate our current social and economic structures do that 2017 book i spoke about at the start of all this, the great level, the also head side appendix is a force that could in the long run even out from inequalities. how was it in the historical data he studied? it was a catastrophic loss of life that pushed the changes. many more people have died of covert 19 and should have. but if anything's going to push for reform and change post grown of ours, it's going to be the acute, an inescapable realization that are unequal systems, not only on just
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a completely unsustainable in the early months of this year. aren't you wrote a piece calling this pandemic, a portal? i asked him what she meant by that. so what, when i said the damage to the portal? i said we can choose either to walk through it, dragging the caucus to the own up page, you do to buy yours and we can go to like, leave it a new imagination. right now. those who are responsible for the data ideas are consolidating and they have to begging to drag all of this and all of us with them. the gum. so people are dying of scolded for people who didn't never cared about who have been and now, because just because it's contagious,
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because the half of the of sex can reach. that is the reason. but perhaps we can really move towards the situation in which we just do not allow the lender to continue. we have a good imagination is not going to fall into another. we're going to have to fight long before the cold crisis broke, the world was grappling with another global crisis. the climate breakdown, destruction of nature can lead to destruction of all hail. the lockdown examines links between these 2 crises and asked why it took a panoramic to bring on changes that should have been made long ago. all these things, we would tell him a complete impulse suddenly become connected. the wake up call that can't be
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ignored. on our job news news, news, news, news. hello, nice to see you. i want to start with an update on the wildfire. this is the dixie fire, the largest wildfire in the u. s. right now, and there are nearly $100.00 wildfires. the 3rd largest in the state's history, it has decimated the town of greenville. and you know, the forecast shows not much relief coming. the tender, dry conditions continue, pull out, give you a wider look of north america. some of the storms we're following toward the great lakes, the midwest, and we've got a firehose of moisture, but the bulk of it will stay out toward the atlantic of washington. d. c. was
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impacted by it just a few days ago. for central america pretty much anywhere from mexico through to 100 . we scooped up anywhere from $80.00 to $100.00 millimeters of rain. and we've got daytime heating storms across the caribbean. and you know, for trinidad and tobago. northern portions of the island have been dealing with flash flooding. speaking of flooding, venezuela, we've seen intense rain over the last little while, so river levels there are reaching dangerous levels. wanted to also talk to you about a cold front sliding across. it's going to knock down temperatures big time in a sophie on. so we look at the next treaties. look at your temperature drop going from 35 on sunday, down to 16 on tuesday. that's your weather update catch later. the join the debate do not have vaccines reaching those who are most of the needs and amplify your voice. it allowed
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a diverse community and how and array of different story know topic it's of the table. it's such a tough ethical debate where there is obvious discrimination and systematic discrimination of play. people are thursdays for new wasted. this stream where a global audience becomes a global community on al jazeera ah, in 2011 al jazeera gains rare access to the young gang film academy. and some of north korea's brightest young stars. ah, what did it take to serve a national propaganda machine? ah, a compelling portraits of the privileged lives of the countries elite, rewind, north korea. cinema of dreams. analogy 0. we understand the differences of conscious across the world. no matter how you take it
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out here. we're bringing the news and current affairs. ah, out there on the news. ready taliban claims they've taken a 2nd provincial capital within 24 hours for africa and government forces trying to regroup, to find the advance. ah, how am i using? and this is al jazeera. so, also coming up, the battle against fierce wildfire continues. injury and turkey was widespread, devastation sizes of people forced from.

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