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tv   [untitled]    August 18, 2021 2:30am-3:01am AST

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during the 19 eighties and 1919, during protests on sunday, opposition supported, also called for the president to resign. they say his cabinet is full of inexperienced ministers. castillo is back at. the cabinet represents the marginal lines to pull the japanese man behind the popular numbers game, sudoku has died. he was 69. marquis kaji had retired as ceo of puzzle magazines. nicole lee in july. he had been battling cancer, although the origins of the game said, oak, who are unclear, koji has been credited as the person to popularize it. it became a global phenomenon after it was published in the london times in 2004. ah, hello, this is al jazeera and these are the top stories in its 1st press conference since
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taking over afghanistan, the taliban says it will respect women's rights and forgive those who fought against them. the claims of being met with skepticism from many who fear or return the harsh role of 20 years ago. the us says the taliban has a grade to allow safe passage for civilians struggling to get flooring out. cobble evacuations have resumed to day after chaotic seems on the runway. ladies have also agreed to hold a virtual g 7 meeting to discuss a common strategy for f chemist and rob mcbride has the latest from cobble. it was very significant. i mean, this really was almost like a key note, i think setting out the tone and the china for the, for the forthcoming taliban government. and i think what we were getting with what the taliban wanted to to get was the softer, more acceptable face of taliban rule. and actually started with in quite
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a triumphal. it's way quite uncompromising, talking about in grand terms about the emancipation of the country after 20 years expelling the forward as, as it was put survivors of saturdays, earthquake in haiti, and now having to cope with a tropical storm. heavy rain lashed may shift shelters in the southern city of la k, one of the worst areas. so finally, 2000 people have died. the number of americans admitted into intensive care has raged to levels last same during the winter way. more than half a year ago. the surgeon new corona virus cases has been fueled by the more infectious delta strain. 20 percent of hospitals have nearly all of the i, c. u beds occupied. for new cases of corner virus have been confirmed in new zealand as the country begins a snap betray down lockdown. it brings a total cases there to 5, those at the headlines. i'm emily anglin. stay tuned for $11.00 east. i
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went i knew dealing watches paradigm, ah, hiking countryside versions of the calculus variety of feathered creatures. oh look centrally. you don't have to be up to love that can be quite as spiritual to come in here and just to sit and be quiet in to listen. but this south pacific nation has one of the worst extinction records we have last about a 3rd of every species and the decline is still ongoing. if we let it roll for
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another 50 years, they won't be much left to restore. raxon other interviews present to destination the nation, the population. ah, now g zealand is leading the world with an extraordinary goal to bypass the countries worth pissed by 2050. this is maurice. this is eggs. i'm to get a, get a start this size. i want i want a travel to new zealand to see the battle, to save the country's unique bird life. ah, [000:00:00;00] ah,
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now tara not lies over the majestic forms of new zealand. the beneath the volcanic pain, a team of conservation. indeed inter rosa cove scenic reserves. the hunting for a nation bird, that is a symbol of museum. the key we are more than 2016 in the reserves. hopefully, get a handle on the bird will then be released into an area where can we population have been destroy? local ranger, chris dodd, is a master at searching for the small flight was bird in its scrubby healey. habitat . how long does it take you to find some of a bed for 20 minutes to figure out, fill out. nocturnal bird has a tracker on us, but it's still a tricky endeavour to find her. every day,
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this foreigner of the forest floor moves to a variety of different tree, hollows and holes. that's going to be the radio transmitter picked up the shy key we is about 400 meters away. so sir, how would, how would i know if i heard one? there were good long whistles. i had actually got one my phone which makes it awful lot easier. i didn't testify about and i called about 15 times. the female is more of a worse in response. quite a pleasant sound. we go off track to find the key. we really want it, but there's
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a huge brain. an hour goes by the sunny setting and the efforts to move the bird from the tree after you saw we had a really, really good climate on the inside of trade him. we'll come back tomorrow morning and, and hopefully found a new new spots and all morning. ah ah. he'll to come early next morning. we tried the key. we did the higher rock the terrain. okay, closing i literally stumbled along
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ah, that hi. no one said checking a key be would be easy ah, to jeff and kind of invitation it to be full. and finally, after 2 days of surgery success, we made our 1st key when i mean, ah, today, 2 key we have been for both to a code read special release. the moon,
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these 232 partakes endangered birds with an eye kilometer permit offense. the capes pests, ah, geographically isolated 85000000 years. new zealand birds evolved as ground dwelling creatures, predator free. wo i human settlement time pitch like rats, the prey upon the birds, eggs, and chicks. it's interesting, really important taffy's sightseeing new zealand because mammals are native a lot. they might have bird species that have no no real defense is against the newly introduced spaces i. she percent museum and bird spaces are endangered or wrist including the k. we vulnerable to pests who kill an estimated $26000000.00 birds every year. key we living in the wild, easy targets because they don't fly and have
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a strong odor easily detected by predators. very easy mail for a start. so k, we in the wild have just a 5 percent chance of i will form from hatching. code to become not ok with the goal, rosa korea to raise key ways to an adult size. so they have a fighting chance when released into unprotected wilderness. so can we, why is about one half kilograms is seen as being, as i can look after yourself against some of the main predators to since people arrived in new zealand more than 700 years ago, half of the nation, birds bases have become extinct. to stop the 3rd, the decline t we and other faces a carefully managed intense reserve and conservation projects across the country. it's almost like farming and away you're moving from from where we've got that are
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in really well into other areas math hope in the future. they'll be able to continue doing well and breeding me the forests around mount taranaki. i sacred land for the countries indigenous communities. not only did she call it before leaving roto cody, and now the elder blesses the 2 key ways as they move from one tribes land to another. to rise in a new home egmont national park where they welcome bye custodians of the last few. we have arrived safely and so we're going to do a bit of a show and tell me good birds. we'll join 14 of the key we released he in the last month. it's a vital step in saving wald, k. we,
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which we're almost walked out across this region 2 decades ago. moldy leader, jamie tusa, says the bird hold great significance to indigenous people. we are the mountain, the mountain is us and so we have a response validity to ensure that the health and wellbeing of l environment as if the center of everything we do being able to return. the key we back to this place is important. i want the forest to be a life. so i want to have a song again, i want my grandchildren, my great grandchildren, to experience boots on ah, across new school. children, learn how to build louis to trap piss the q wildlife. and you know, how many customers you caught them all 30 and we hate. yup. but we're saying on the camera was camera. my name? i from the coast to the
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a bomb to the far ah, trip. and now we're defining feature of new dining landscape. ah, more than 5000 registered community, good conduct, pest control across the country. ah, including into the car club. we check trapped in the ranges around new zealand. capital, wellington, today we're doing a standard run through the traps with $132.00 volunteer with a conservation group, cold capital k way. i'm on the road with one of the 4 wheel drive him through the battery in script. and he's going to strike ah,
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friday. i know something i lot of the bite as even being tapped off it because that a good or bad thing i with the diminishing population it history good. ah, it's encouraging to see after 2 years most trapped. the empty gum, the dropping, but i mean tree by barry told barry, barbecue tongues, i normally 12 sausages with how big a recruiter going to be picking up. have you ever tried falling at her? and all rhetoric have jobs of attract the same, but it's not a good choice. for me based 100 masons a be with eggs or rabbit cuts the loo trap in wilderness between dead
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and left behind. no news or any like that just just came back. he showed me how these killing machines work. that animal comes in with the flu or on the fat. and you really for this. oh my goodness. there was i gave your fingers well a lot. yeah. i don't think i would survive the journey as soon as we strike goals trip number 5. holy hey, what exactly? we'll start. all right. school in nevada. so it's good to get this one did start that size would be yankee rejects. how satisfying it to get a start in a trap off the top is really is that's another step in the right direction.
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ah, 5 years ago it's easy to introduce a gram breaking policy to why that whole raf hoffman can start by 2050 trapping and volunteer group play a role in saving a variety of critically endangered birds. being more than $200000000.00 has be invested into these government programs that brings together businesses, school universities, conservation, and farmer. i think it is the 1st country that's doing it on such a wide basis to have a have a go up saving, you know, considering something that so special. it's a real big hero. dashes go. kaycie moon is elidah at print of free. 2050 limited a chargeable company established by the government to carry out the mission. a former president of
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a farm as association. she says pest also bomb because they can infect capital with tuberculosis. controlling the disease cost the taxpayer $42000000.00 a year. so predator eradication is good for the economy, not just the grades k, he says they can achieve the goal by 2050 with reiser investment in scientific research. next, going to be the case to help and draw up the loss of the printed as there is nowhere else from a planet like this. and we now have the technology, the well and the not here to take those faces and would be for not to have a guy me in i bedroom, this is the animal resource research facility i don't will. behavior is patrick gog studies practices so that the best pick can be developed to walk them out in the
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wild. this research facility helps him and other scientists observe arrange pissed at all hours of the day and night. like the stars roused from his slumber. the quite noisy thing, a little defence, if not because it doesn't like to get close to what makes the killing machine and you do. and so they're voracious predators. it's only 350 grams per kilogram of $10.00 to $20.00 times. it's half the eastern part of their body weight. every day i heard somebody jokingly tongue in cheek state before that it starts were 30 kilograms. there be no humans on the planet. i suppose. what make the great killer is static and climb. it can swim. it can go under water, it can be active day or nice, ah, scientists at the university of canterbury and christ church helping patrick hughes smell to strengthen louis. they've built
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a cent library from done to apple and identified odors that draw predators to attract one, they can't resist affair. it stench we discovered hair. that 1st order really increases attraction. we've sent out 1st older to 4 different trapping operation, and they increased their capture rates doubled or tripled in many cases. patrick, also psychologically evaluate stokes by testing them in nice op to studying how they feed, fight, and breed. patrick has discovered each dose has a distinct personality and behavior pattern. what we're doing at the moment of seeing how these past respond to traps. when we tried to cook, the population were quite successful. we always kept more than half the animal. we'd be able to remove from population, but there always is some individuals left at the end. and now that's what we're focused on to which individuals wanting to react with traps,
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warranty debates. and how do we understanding these individuals? how does that make us better targeting them? apart from our we seeing smart pit new zealand, the big challenge is wiping out pretty remote wilderness area. the l. bradley's finding ways to eradicate tests in tough to rain, only accessible by helicopter, is the ceo of 0 in vice president or the which i'm to watch that test area 100000 heck is inside. among the glass, he is ramparts and ribbon of the southern, out soon after landing at their research station, our shows me the lie of the land rover boundary that we use the, the place. and this is the project here on this side. we call this the clean side,
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and this is the duty type. so the pos and the rock starts there on that side. acting as a natural fin, rivers like this, play a big role in innovation project across the valley. yes. so this is a joint experiment, really, if we can prove it here, then we can kind of do it anywhere at $10000.00 and take this team case by 10 case . we think we can do it at the scale. we'll be able to do it pretty much anywhere on the clean side zip often drop boys and tell it to kill any living arrow biting gets the one the very tough terrain that we just can't move around them. i don't think any of us like using an option, but at the moment their only way of getting to 0 in this really rugged country. out here it's costly and difficult for humans to monitor. pest control efforts says it's built these artificial cameras that take piss, using a thermal and lewis system. 200 of them,
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a being set up in wilderness areas where predators have been eradicated, to stop re invasion. and how does that helping tester about a cation? well, most of the time this camera sees birds sees things we are interested in that occasionally . if we get an incursion, these cameras will be the 1st and the warning system, basically because things like red breed so quickly. we need to know as soon after they arrive, so that we only have to deal with a few rats rather than hundreds of rents. using such technology ranges can monitor off shore islands and remote wilderness areas from a distance. it keeps an eye while the people on here. and it just means that we can do it a lot cheaper than having people do. lips, chicken cameras that generally just got native wildlife on it. this is a camera that hardly needs any servicing. and the batteries in here will probably last us to be part of nearly a year. so far around 10 percent of museum and mainland has been subject to
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intensive president control. so such innovations could help ramp up the war on pass . by moving to this technique will be out of work. big, big chunks of new zealand for grand plan is the government and just place that we should better. they've printed a freedom by 2015. but that means in about 5 years time, we have to be doing a 1000000 hate days a year. there's 3 mind challenges initially. we've got to work out how to get to 0 . so we call that the removal place. but once we're there, then we're going to be out of the tapes in creation recently quickly before the animal stopped breathing. and then we've got to do that removal phase again. we, we respond to incursion, little bit like with a, a specialty that's just tasked with removing those few occasions, visible projects to succeed. every section of the river needs to act as a strong barrier to help identify weaknesses along the waterway. lip is tracking mice on the dirty side of the river, where they've set up. automation law dispenses. so this device dispenses
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a little bit of my eyes that's going to die in it. that when the animals eat the die, they end up with the whisky tissue marked so that we catch them later, we can identify them in the lab. we had to invent a way of marking the animals that gave us a long period so that when the eventually cross and eventually we catch them as though but the mocker in the system. so if a rate consumes a little bit of my an ice tonight with diet, 80 days later it will still be on the end of its whiska. ah, these threats make it into the clean areas. there are special traps which quickly get them to death. so the corpse intact, when they sent to the lab for analysis, ah, ah, zip scientist, tom and jenny didn't investigate the history of every rap that he's trust that we trip in a box is almost like
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a crime scene for us. so we get the most amount of information out as possible to try and help us plan our next move can he's going to give it an autopsy. today we will be able to tell maybe that's come across the river. maybe it's evolved or original talks, operations of the so much information we can gain from just one. we're going to have, after checking its approximate age, the team dissected liver to see the rat consumed any toxic pellets? yeah, definitely female, right? she 200 grand female. they're a big issue for us. they do get into the claim side of our box because they have been breeding team chill that can cause a huge population explosion pretty quickly. so we can look at the breeding history of female tells us grow interesting information to find out if the rack crossed the river, they remove its whiskers and use ultraviolet microscope to identify if it has chemicals from the mayonnaise. in another room, waldron kept in captivity. i used to test new traps and talks while the privilege of
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a loss about apprentices movement. and while the areas being questions lingered in the quest to kill all pests. i think one of the most important things that we don't know is how we might be able to suppress printed a breeding. so stop, read will stop, starts being able to as a whole lot, a whole minds and chemicals that control those processes. and so we may be able to tap into animals biology on that level to, to improve what we're currently doing in the southern out zip is proven to move predators from large remote cost landscape through such work. our bramley is company that you do can lead the world in conservation and pest control is credited to free 20 to be achievable. yeah, absolutely. the strong through might in the last couple of years. we absolutely think now we can do it. and now it's a matter of putting the right focus on to finish the job. and then with a small, the funding comes in order to scarlet. so pretty as
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a free 2050 is the opportunity to restore the majority of our lot of a city. this opportunity to reset it and enable our wild life to flush a few hours drive from research thought the aka research lagoon is a, was a bird wonderland. paula sheridan has worked on the lakes as a tour operator. the 15 years. she said al bradley's initiatives a desperately needed to bring more bird life back to new zealand. i think it's the make or break. this is a program. it was crucial to go with something begun goals like this. you can't just keep doing a little bit here in a little bit there because the species are just going to start to drop away and will never see them again. these wetlands are a vital feeding ground. the thousands of whiting birds on the south island. it's one of those laugh special places every day. i'm amazed every single trip i come
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out here underneath and i think it's just because it's perhaps a untouched area. ready many birds theses here abominable because they can find to small pocket to new zealand pass take over their habitat. it will be catastrophic. we're really fortunate to have a really intact ecosystem where these birds are still relatively abundant, but it's fragile. there is definitely a silent tag if you will, going on in the bush around us. the dramatic landscapes here are redraw cards, the alpine adventures and nature love it. seeing unique creatures is a huge part of that experience. for those whose dowdy new deal and beauty, the vision to remove old predators by 2050 can't fail. i think new zealand would be a very different place without its iconic species and species that you can't see
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anywhere else in the world. and if we start to lose, we start to lose our identities. mm. as the resurgent taliban retakes of female activist journalists and even school goes on to threats. 11 east investigate the fight for it kind of stones women on algebra. me gotcha. one of the fastest growing nations in the world, i want a condo needed to open and develop the whole entire national shipping company to
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become a team, middle east, and tough trade and money, skillfully enough re key is up to about filling up from it of connecting the world connecting the future got cut to gateway to whoa trade. ah. the taliban promises women's rights media freedom and amnesty for government officials in its 1st news conference after taking charge of cobble and evacuation fly to resume the coyote things. on monday the us says the taliban agreed to allow safe passage through the air force. ah, hello,
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i'm emily angry. this is al 0 alive from joe. how also coming up anger and frustration in haiti is heavy. rain from

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