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tv   [untitled]    August 16, 2021 2:30am-3:01am AST

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had to be disrupting some senior official, the governing party came out. is it also remember that these are just 3 provinces? we say, but i've probably confidence that new me who will win this election international observe as a vote and they was like b p for the problem with doing campaigning. we. they say that opposition party weren't allowed to add some parts of the country outside the opposition party had some of the people who support today are confident that he is going to win. electron additional fits that they'll carry on county. they hope to now consult my son. blaze. it could be monday or maybe even tuesday is the reason why it's taking so long because you're counting the want to make sure everything you've done property. they've said they don't want to turn around and say that the other reason why zambia was on fire did they didn't do the job properly. ah,
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i'm on the inside. with a headlines on al jazeera, the taliban has taken over the presidential palace in the afghan capital kabul. it comes at an end of a surprisingly quick offensive during which the fight is took over most of the country. the taliban says at once a peaceful transfer of power when the world mcbride has moved from couple at this has been a day that yes began with the circle months the siege of cobble pulling the noose tighter. if you like around the city, the cold, the nation of course of weeks of games by the taliban across afghan, it's done taking probably instruct problems, gradually. forces falling back as provinces fell and all of the focus, all of the attention, all of this great momentum that the taliban built up, then being focused and directed towards cobble itself. president
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danny has fled the country and they were chaotic scenes and couples, apple just on this also tried to leave the u. s. and the nation still have food since they're working to evacuate the citizens and afghans who have supported them in all the news. haiti's government says the death toll from saturday's earthquake has risen to nearly 130-0000 more have been injured. many of being treated in the open rescue. teams are desperately trying to search for survivors. some his main opposition leaders having closer to victory in the presidential election. okay. in the dilemma, it's hundreds of thousands of votes ahead of the incumbent leader edgarland grew the final results of a presidential election. i expected in the next few days. those are you headlines coming up next is a stream stay with us on counting the call europe
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pete fund to fight terrorism. then counter china and russia in africa. activists say it will provide weapons to dictate the climate emergency costing billions, displacing 1000000 counting the costs. well, now just choose hello, i'm rachelle kerry stepping and for for me. ok, who was on a well deserved holiday. welcome to this bonus edition of the stream tech you behind the scenes. so you can catch the conversations that take place after the broadcast ends coming up. what was pakistan to, to put an end to violence against women at all, get the discussion over the potential risks and rewards of deep sea mining. 2 years ago, indian prime minister and a wrench, remote government revoke the special status given to and in administer kashmir in 1954. the government says that in the past 2 years, things have gotten better pointing to improved infrastructure and are not kick in
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social development. but journalist and activists argue that the economy, human rights situation and security all gotten worse for kashmiri since 2019, i recently spoke with a member of the b. j. p, a journalist and a historian to ask what the revocation of special status has meant for kashmiris. it was a conversation that deserved extra attention. so after the broadcast, i shared a video from one of the streams, viewers with our guess. this is far the sheer have a listen to what she had to say and then how the guest responded in the last couple of years. me don't only feel for them. but with all markers of identity, go on, such as the constitution and the flag with new laws implemented in the play, such as expediting off domiciled laws or opening up business opportunities to non local. where does local have no access to internet, it gets to a different kind of wish me,
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these are in our face to face are confronting and impending what time that the off identity and impending mortality of the land of their home. and it gives rise to a different kind of fear of how much more last one has to endure in the near future . i don't want to put words in your mouth, but based on some of the conversation we had, i feel like you disagree with her, which i guess you're entitled to. but you can't really negate that people actually feel that way. some people at least yeah, definitely some people, but we can say the majority, we can't compare what to few people feel about abrogation and what changes dsp? what future they see? i see a better kush me. i dropped off a better schmidt. since i've seen, what would you say to those people? what would you say to them?
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how would you reach out to them? definitely see, we have always been shut off leadership and monkish me. that has been a be drain drain militancy, activity killings every day. i think since i am aware about the world, i have seen shut down. i have seen calls from the separatists go. that could meet under lock down. the change is there's definitely just one bedroom sentiment. what we have lost can knocked out all the time. we can not lose our loved ones. we have grown our graveyard. every corner german bush. me is what i'll be fighting for this article 370 or debating when all the cash meet is will be killed by their own people who will go and pick up guns who are
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militant for killing that. ok, so all right, ok, hold on. ok. okay. so city, what would you say said that she is trying to make the case that, that this was necessary and, and quite frankly, it has been kind of a gradual while, as it felt sudden at the time, i'm sure, very jarring and traumatic hadn't been a gradual sort of moving away any way once, once he got to the point where article 370 was revoked, wasn't this a gradual thing? frankly, i mean the article 370 and it's derogation because it has not been abrogated. it's still on the books and it's still on the books because it is very complicated to, to get it off the books. it's speaks to the structure of the thing of the indian constitution, but i think that the gradual is, is true because i think that the,
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the d p as i did on its agenda ever since its inception, or the inception of the ology represents which is you know about 995 years old now and it has been so yes, there's been a gradual tendency to try to try to come towards it. but i'm, you know, more curious about, you know, talking about, you know, the killings and so forth and how she wants it all to stop the easy way to stop it . you know, if they take away the, the military forces that we have over here. and the kind of draconian laws that we have which allows the notary to act with impunity, you know, towards anything towards any kind of protests and so forth. she has a new did several times to the fact that, you know, there has been nothing or lessening of protests since
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over the last 2 years. it's very true and there's a very good reason for it because it was, it says shoot inside atmosphere. and at the very least, you can be taken away if your phone protests and even if you're protesting about not having electricity or not having water in your village, you can be taken away and locked away. and a lot of people have had that done. so, i mean, you know, it's, it's very hard to describe what it is like to live in, in the kind of atmosphere that we have had in the last, well, i mean, the last 30 years. but i didn't specifically in the last 2 years because the impunity with which people can act has been you know. ok. i think multiplied
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several times. okay. gore. so go are obviously said he and he or are describing 2 different environments. how would you characterize, how someone living in india to administer kashmir might feel now? is it fair to say that some of them might feel hopeless? it is actually, you know, it's, it's not only hopeless miss the, but it's a despondency i would go on to extend that it is the fed is so much that it's the fed about identity. it is the fed about that this vast majority that it has been b, d, p, civilizational, and ideological agenda. memories of muslim kush me to it ain't got a job to raise identity and it, they see the boss of majority sees it as a smash and grab operation. and you know, access now is a deli based and job. it's tracks internet shut down and it said,
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550 date of 55 day long internet shut down. i was witnessed in june when could meet and then our friend miss said that everything is hunky dory. and of course, continue to ignore habeas corpus. petitions even a former chief ministers who were locked out and even in the political parties, every one was behind the bog. the ministry of home affairs, india told the parliament that they had 7357 people were arrested, detained, or placed under house arrest. and if that is normal, i mean, i leave it to your imagination if all of that suspension of civil liberties obliterating the middle ground, no internet, no communication, no freedom of speech. if that that is not well, i leave it to your imagination. so what life is life for cash? mary's clearly depends on whom you ask. next step. deep seen mining, is it a good idea? so i'm say there are resources at the bottom of the ocean that could be critical for solving renewable energy problems. critics or warning of irreversible disaster
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to ocean life. if this mining actually begins the conversation as heating up is the human body in charge of the sea. that is likely to make a decision about whether one island in the south pacific can begin extracting those minerals. one of our viewers, an associate professor of the region university of science and technology believes that deep sea mining is a necessity. so i will listen to what to say and then stick around to see if our guests agreed when it comes to the question is needed. other more pros and cons when it comes to deep mining? i think there are more pros, because if you look at the, the world's land mining industry today, many of the, the big deposits are getting emptied. there are a lot of issues regarding and, and work environment. and i think that it's
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also the chair to give the whole world a chance to do mineral extraction of such important materials. i mean, i think the issue here is that we need to have multiple options for supply. just like with energy. my fear is that we will go down the path. so what happened with nuclear energy? the activists community, well intentioned, as it was, the conflict of nuclear weapons and nuclear energy. we ended up with making nuclear energy on the canonical and we ended up with a climate crisis which could have been prevented. we had actually continued with nuclear power, which is far safer than any other form of energy per unit output. so the same would happen if you use the precautionary principle inappropriately. you could end up in a worse situation than what you would have wanted to prevent. so this is my concern and the only reason why i'm not gung ho about deep sea mining. all i'm saying is
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give it an opportunity to proceed. they will be ample time to do bio diversity assessment. so there will be no project approved without a very detailed environmental and social impact assessment. and that's where the activists community should constructively engage rather than just scoring points on getting a moratorium. it's much easier to score points on campaigns where you want to stop something rather than trying to actually. okay. all right, maureen maureen gets certainly gets to respond to that. i really object to that particular point of view about civil society just being in this game to make life difficult for everybody. i think we, as i said from the civic, we have real experiences with this new industry within our territorial waters. we can see the role of governance as sponsoring states in the area itself. also,
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there is a question that i think as a society as a whole, this is in the area commonly known as the heritage of mankind. and yet we have a civil society and as the public have had very little c, because governments and contractors are designing this rules about what is necessary in terms of options. sure. but we should give or other options in coding . we can options also the best chance going forward. we know that we should not be transferring the burden off the kinds of mistakes made with the coal, oil and gas industry. with this particular one, we will be looking at generations to clean up what decisions we take today. so i think there are some really contentious issues. it is okay to be contentious. partly because we are obviously the point of view are different levels of the
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spectrum. but we would still challenge whether to what extent should we allow or, or not alone did my need to go ahead. that's still a relevant question for society as a whole in the area, quite commonly known as the common heritage of mankind. and daniel, you are smarter on these things and i am how much traction, how much power do environmentalists and activists have in driving this dialogue, this conversation as it goes forward? yeah, well i mean that remains to be seen, i think in, in recent years there definitely has been an increasingly vocal opposition to, to deep mining or at least an increasingly vocal call or a moratorium to hit pause on this industry. and, you know, those calls are coming from scientists, conservation and some governments as well. and i think it's important
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to, to look at that at the same time. we're on the other track when you look at, you know, investment into the industry. just, you know, right now we have the company, the metals company, which is basically, you know, getting itself listed on the stock market on the nasdaq, in order to raise hundreds of millions of dollars to, to start investing in some of the operations down the line. so i think it's really important to, you know, at the same that keep both these things in mind that on one side, when it comes to kind of the financing that the industry is moving ahead. well, you know, civil society is still having this very important debate. about whether or not we should be doing this at all. i think one just last point is that i have great respect for civil society and they have an important role to play, to hold these companies to account. so i think that's the rule they should continue
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to play in terms of making sure like they're doing with deep green and making sure that there is transparency. all those things are very important. but unfortunately we're in a real conundrum with climate change. and the situation is eminent, recycling is the gold in the deep green. unlike other companies wants to get into the recycling business. they have 31. gerard barron was vilified by the civil society group. he has said that he wants enough metal stocks from dp mining to start recycling and no more. he does not. once we have stock for recycling, go into a circular economy model and that shouldn't be the goal. i agree on that point for all of us. clearly a consensus to we are in a climate crisis. what to do about it that fill up for debate. finally, a very important conversation around violence against women is taking place in pakistan as a nation, react to the heroic murder of nor mcadam. recently on the stream for me. ok spoke
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with 3 women from pakistan. lincoln mccore and the parliamentary secretary for law and justice can walk met, and activists and community leader. and one of ours there is own producers, ali chug tie. our community had a lot to say on the topic, including one woman who says that the pakistani government has yet to clearly communicate that sexism and massage, and he will not be tolerated. so have a listen in the past couple of weeks ago, a very senior minister, a very senior member of the ruling party, addressed a galleon bucks done with housings of people. it ended. and over then he joked about slapping a female politician who was from arrival political party, and no action was taken against him. there were no consequences. so there needs to be a clear message from the government that massage any 6 of them will not be tolerated within the parliament or outside of the parliament. and that message has didn't not come across when it is very big, very careful. they should not mentioning any names. aaliyah you are not in your head. i am wondering about the example being set from the top
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a back pocket from the leadership, from the politicians. i'll let you go fast. yes, the thing is that you know what i think is right. that is 222 percent would be about 20 to 30 percent representation. the punnet, the cabinet is for women out of 53 people in order to make things better for women, there needs to be better female representation. when they go with part of a press conference not too long ago with a couple of other m. a nice talking about how prime minister kind of a women empowerment, but don't we need more women representing the country, which way we are 50 percent of the country? let me think, i want to add something to a boy and we'll go ahead and we think about the guns. and if it's not a good idea, how many women are on back thing? i mean, women get the jones to be fathers on the confident contribution to build such as a domestic line. and let me bring in some thoughts for my youth reporting and so
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was commenting on everything you are saying. guess cilla? doro says the case is, in pakistan, are not miniscule compared to the west. how many do not get reported can, will quick response to that. as i mentioned earlier, and 90 percent of women are facing domestic violence and 0.4 percent of them actually reported me. very correctly said, also because of this shaming associated around the weekend occupying stuff is very patriarchal society in domestic violence is something more internalizing in norm. and i think to the point it becomes something that we're going to justify and are going to need not to interfere when you, when you think about that, if you see a man beating a life in front of you within the streets, nobody is going to come and stop them. and as a community leader, i will miss 1000000 conversations between women every single month, much of which i around domestic so undergraduates are media and then again are
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leadership. and then i really just for the leaders also mainstream, the patriarchal violent view and it had meet the common person as knew me any way to just you with gender discrimination. and most importantly, i do want to hear that one thing of youth apartment, they know they can get away with it because family or, or if you have been to stablish production or even hold accountable for victory through the violence against women. this is a very important person, i want to be part of this conversation. i name is sha faq. she is a friend of nor she was a friend of nor. and when she spoke to us earlier, this is what she told us. how to look. when i heard about what had happened to your friend nor i was extremely shocked at emerson in drama, in phoenix reality because he knew to the news. but this to happen to someone so close to has been so devastating it as not only impacted the friends or family of 2, but it is effective in di nation. and i believe that the perpetrators i should be
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given capital punishment because it is now the time that a president must be set for the future that people cannot get away with these crimes and adjust to do so when to order and for all other victims to go to the item data from the side in bunker, thought to make suggestion about capital punishment. it's something that our audience are also thinking about. bring the death penalty to every man who uses any form of extreme religious beliefs to torture main injure or kill a woman. ali a, do you think that is a popular sentiment in pakistan? the death penalty? that's the way to deal with sexual violence against women. i think everybody's need, your reaction is but death penalty should be implemented as far as new cases. but i would go so far to say that has a capital punishment were rated to be helped bennett, who was murdered in less than a trash her basis was, you know,
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when he got the death penalty has it made a difference. we've had cases of rape in children's rape and i'll go so far to say that we're talking about genocide and but there is a huge conversation that needs to happen about violence on boys as well. and then racist and murder was also somebody who was actually abuse of the child. where does the price will ends really? why? what are we going to talk about restoration justice? are we going to talk about, you know, if there's other ways to deal with things? why are they not math campaign happening about gender based violence and just sexual violence? and what happens inside seminaries, there was a video that was leak not long ago about, you know, you can base senior politician, you know, belongs to a prominent party with an alliance with what, what is happening? why are they no mass campaign? we've invited westerners to come for tourism and why are they not my campaign
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talking to the public about sexual violence being about me? why is there no accountability for that? i want to bring in one more thought here. i think this one is, is a, is a big one and it's really about how to men and women view themselves in pakistan. i cannot comment on this, but i'm going to bring in stuff come, well, she's a supermodel. she's from pakistan and she has very firm views on men and women's role. and maybe this will give us a little insight into how do you even address cultural change when young people have very firm beliefs like this one is have a look at haven't, isn't, i mean, manage on the, go to his husband. i married him, which means i have to pick up his shoes and iron his clothes because i know where all of those things are and walked and when he has to eat, i need to know these things because i am his wife. and i am a woman,
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he doesn't have to know the same about me. this is what i believe, because this is what i've grown up seeing this feminism that has become a part of our lives. it's because of liberals, they shared the model that was a very popular sentiment that went viral that, that whole conversation. and there was a lot of support for that conversation. i am bringing no judgment here, but i am showing that with our audience so that they have a better view of where the cultural conversation is happening in pakistan. if i wanted to ask you in a sentence, guess because we've talked about this for quite a while now, what would be the one thing that you would pio, it's rise in terms of tackling sexual violence. it is one thing i will ask malika, come will aaliyah, one thing, ladies. malika, please go fast. also me as parliament. people doing justice. it would be
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implementation of the law enforcement often law at all levels. sensitizing all duty based police force or prosecution to meet women and go over on ensuring more money to thank you so much for bringing the perspective from the government. appreciate you. come on. one thing. i think it would be fixed education and making resources available at a very graph. so for everybody around spectrum i'm, i'm a thank you for being in our conversation today. aaliyah, we are priority to address sexual violence against women in pakistan. i have to, if he would come to live, inspect cation and awareness, and gender sensitivity. when it comes to implementing the law, we're talking about police force. but for some agencies, they need to understand that filing, you know, a report, women cannot be turned away. there has to be awareness, but these things have to do
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a very important dialogue that should continue. and that is our show for today. thank you for watching. we'll see you next time. ah, i lose with more than 200000000 cases because of 19 worldwide governments about going to fight fresh wave of the virus. a new variance, there has been a 3rd and the number of people bookings activation appointment from human cost to the political and economic pool out. i'll just bring you the latest on depend amick . this will have vaccinated more than 1100 people here. all of them migrant farm
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workers, people on home testing because they think that there is the risk to democracy, special coverage, and i'll just there are when a military coup over through chiles marxist president, one stadiums became prisons and the hunters sole objective was absolute control. one man publicly refused to accept the dictatorship episode for a football rebels. explore the life of carlos casale, the football whose personal story swayed a vote, but altered the history of his country. carlos casserly and the demise of a n day on al jazeera new zealand. canadian birds are at risk of extinction. in bishop planned to read the nation and if the privilege sides of $1.00 0, any event on out there is no tunnel cover. is world news like we do, the scale of this camp is like nothing you've ever seen access to health care or
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something. well, we want to know, how does these things affect people? we revisit places day, even when they're no international headlines. also, they're really invest in that, and that's a privilege. as a journalist, ah, kabul falls as the taliban take over. i've gone this. don't presidential palace just our president asked. rough gone a same. does the shoring citizen the 1st day he now fled to exile? but it gets down ah, on money inside. this is out of their life from doha. also coming up, a ton of on spokesman tells al jazeera,
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those who worked with the government and military will be offered amnesty and in the news rescue teams and have looked at.

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