tv [untitled] August 25, 2021 11:30pm-12:01am AST
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the more data we were in the midst of a great rates, the data and big companies around the checking empires are rising on a wealth of information. and we other commodity in the 2nd 5 part series. 90 re examines where the corporations colonizing the internet, like me, merit the power of things on a jazzy oh . on the bulk of london with the top stories on al jazeera western countries are racing to evacuate. people from afghanistan with less than a week to go until all foreign troops leave thousands of afghans who fear taliban rule have been trying to enter a couple effort. us president joe biden has ordered all forces out by the end of august, the taliban of urge africans to stay while saying those with permission to leave
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will be allowed to depart on commercial flights resume. for many afghans remain skeptical. charlotte, bella has more from campbell, the countdown is on as us and foreign forces now, and you have until tuesday to get out and what that means. the end of evacuation like from here outside the airport, there is people rush, see if they can get on a flight. we understand your with and the telephone have a deal that the telephone are only about to let people who have torn past pieces and you have paper. thousands of indigenous protest is gathered in brazil's capital, as the supreme court prepared to rule in a case that could put their ancestral lands risk. the course decision could remove protected spaces for some native lands, opening them up to industrial farming and mining. the agri business lobby says land protection should only apply if inhabitants were present in 1988. when indigenous
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activists say they've been forced off the territory. israeli soldiers of fire tear gas and live ammunition to disperse palestinian protests is garza's border. at least 14 people have been injured during demonstrations against israel's blockade of the gaza strip. the violence took place shortly after the funeral of a palestinian man. he died after being wounded by us ready fire during a protest on saturday, a 13 year old palestinian boy is in critical condition in hospital. and so it's in this rate, the soldier us intelligence agencies are reportedly set to release an investigation into the origins of the corona virus. the classified report is said to be inconclusive on the origins of the pandemic. impart due to a lack of information from china. but chinese authorities of accused the us of scapegoating, that country with suggestions of a laboratory leak. both all the headlines stay with us because witness continues.
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surely the key. yes. it's like a new reform. she put on delivery. really. going to april. cool. yeah. well, you could get for the little green by lee was stone of belly fish in it with barley. i shook pylee my last week. we thought the game nearly knew me need you to who are now along with all of us that you completed for you. well, i love to do a call usually go to the college of coca cola. we're doing more. got it. but i'm really but i didn't know my local war,
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but i didn't want to. city college i can get is a what kinds of lima for go would be what it is. and i did it over again. you guys? yeah, we're going to godaddy why linda? no. william, no. willie. willie melissa. come i really won't be mozilla. now when you do that, why you can google me? yeah. what was the one on my on in my name. i was of the little house we lived there and those little things you see that endorsed and things, those are door openings. there is no door, no screen. you can imagine the 1st night sleeping there. you've just traveled
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across a plane with all these wild animals. and now you're living in a house that has no door trimmed at night. come and go to bed and you want to sleep and you can sleep for the whole day. good child coming to life. and i was going to call one single son. they're going to go buy some. mckinney will call you because she can come from us and we were scale was still you because they make such a noise that was so happy to see us didn't know how to take that noise, you know, whether it's joy or madness or whatever. oh my hold on to our why not to believe that the middle while growing he quailed from that shoot again,
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i would i will mom on a funder bringing my progress in this year. so we're going to mirror i the way they walk, the jump into. they were and they matching yes and you can hear the ground practically, you know moving oh my was i barrier had been darkness and cold and worked by death and deprivation. africa was heat color and life talking. mika is where human a meaning failing in the wilderness. and since that's how the refugee children were growing up, they were the most adaptive doing that i was the 1st modern refugee camps in africa were for white europeans,
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40000 polish women, and children spirit and 2 dozen villages across 6 countries. for the post children growing up there when they would later call africa with less of a geography than a shared experience. something like this to say, you know, i don't know. it's hard to believe to for people who didn't seem to advertise . i don't know. i don't know what's up sank in my mind and in my name is ida. i mean, well, even needs anybody from africa, leg 18. you know, because you, your memory takes you back. this is the glass.
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no windows, no doors. it was just the roof. and as you can see here, some wolf, but there it wasn't covered because there was no glass being in africa. it was a quiet place far away from war. we were saved from bombardments. let us say from the disaster of war. so the 6 years we were in a quiet place when he came out of africa, we were ready to face the work for the british authorities. the poll status is white. refugees created problems. they were european. but they lived in traditional huts, not colonial houses. and the polls broke, the british impose rules like not socializing,
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with the indigenous population. the children, especially, were growing up, immersed in other cultures. if they were being raised to be polish, they were also becoming something else will. ooh, we'll bring in there for now. share of tonight. okay. with the when you're in de la, i got your message. when you go to that 3 there and we swam, we jumped from the big, big rock and that one was high. so we could jump from then we could die was a very adventure as. busy but we used to do that work who was getting me well, she should not flag. i thought we knew you were going to the new if your goal is to start, you know, they start to see you that you are open to them like they are to you next day they come and they ask you to come to their house,
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come and see what they live or live in. do you want us? i was one of my number. like i knew i knew i do not know of what would you live the what the home africa. no, never to me. never, never. i because it was nice, there it was. love. so file i had lots of french med because i was sick. so and with malaria to me, i couldn't tell you when we found that we can leave go to england for me. it was, you know, not fast enough. i started with malaria attack was and i will see it and
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i was in the hospital and put away so ad very often practically. once a month i used to friends in school and they used to send me to hospital who had the one the ambulance in the come. where was the hospital on the hill, near the orphanage it go up a hill. and i mean to look from the bottom down there, here it looks beautiful. mm mm. mm mm. i grew up here in the 10th and you and i did the poland. oh, hadn't just been a refugee camp, but
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a full polish town to 5000 people. i tried finding people who would remember my grandmother, but there was little of the polls and nothing of her. the round hats were all torn down and the rigid g can had been turned into a college. little. the only place i could connect to was the camp hospital where she had almost died several times for malaria. was my camera kept pulling me towards his shot. it was like i felt a presence as if part of her might still be here, cut in time. law and refugees who survive like my grandmother expected to go home and rebuild that same country. but while europe was celebrating the end of the conflict, the refugees and camps across africa were finding out that they wouldn't be going
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on me. oh. or the 1st shot, of course, was that when the war ended, they couldn't go home because fallen had been given to the so essentially control by moscow. very few people who had gone through the good leg had any desire to go back to a country that was ruled, essentially by the soviets. by reference. in the 5th days, i got introduced the church of multi volume history of the 2nd world war versus when my heart broke, because it was way back then through churches own writing that i realized how incredibly badly poland was treated like
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a greek tragedy. because you know, in a greek tragedy, you can see the final and coming and you know that it's irreversible. nothing can stop. but so you sort of found the betrayal coming. and of course it did, ah, the 1st polish refugees returned to poland after the war. quickly figured out were going home, would mean suspicion questioning, in some cases, re deportation to siberia. tens of thousands of citizens in refugee camps across africa and the middle east, by the time,
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and tried to figure out what would happen next. not only did the western allies now have to determine where the state was, people belonged. but also how to explain their situation. ah, during the war tradition, american newsreel said the poland was a victim of nazis. but if the poles in africa had been victims of nazis and the nazis had been defeated, why weren't they going home? after 6 years of a war that started was pulling, being invaded, unoccupied. it still wasn't free. it was fully occupied by one of the 2 countries that had invaded it in 1939, the soviet union, while the post refugees, prince, african were eventually we settled in england, australia, canada, and other countries. they were left off, the posts were monuments and slowly, over time,
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the story was quietly swept away. where you're born used to be colon. now it's not. it's russia. russia, it's bearers. so are you pose? yes, we are polish. yeah, your party shall set from loveland, from polar. yeah. i mean we have a cool and everything. i don't think we have directions or something. no, we are pure polish. so she spend your whole life overseas. where does, where is your pollution? how can you be? oh, it will be polish, we'll have our church just have our sessions and they say all my children and they went to the school. busy and they were young in canada, so they, oh, cd auto except to my grandchildren and they don't speak parties, they understand, but they don't, you know,
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i'm not going to pull at them for their yes, but do you feel for me, well, nothing of so many of you english, sail on both of them. i don't feel like this in canada. no. i don't like how it is. i think that not really come in in denver? yes, i am polish canadian but i am canadian 100 percent. oh no. i throw the stories connect in poland and tens and you. 3 i was one of those raised with an understanding where we were from oh, my grandmother was among hundreds of refugees from east africa. you'd ended up in montreal, 900 fifties. ah, i grew up in
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a country from people carrying ghosts from other places. it was only when i started asking questions about her own that i began swimming her recording would only existed in her stories and only shown there a few times before she died unexpectedly me . i, after her death boxes for photos and documents, were handed to me from among her belongings. there were images of things that she never told me about. maybe she'd forgotten about them, or maybe she just wanted to keep some for herself ah . without a voice to guide me through them,
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they were the faces of strangers. i found a photograph of my grandfather. he'd been taken to a nazi concentration camp as a slave labor. with this one photo and the name of the camp, i could tell his story more easily than hers, even though he died before i was born. when the war had started or families had rushed to bury the deeds, the land under one of the buildings, i thought of how many families attend the same thing. and of all the things that i never sought to ask and of everything they would stay buried forever. ah. when her voice is gone, the connection to my own history for gone as well. so i put everything away for 2 years. i
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for almost 200 years for 2 world wars and a half a century of communism. these buildings had survived. and now only 2 years after i had 1st seen them, i was watching the last pieces in my family's connection to this place, being taken apart and carted away. who in the next time i came here, there been nothing the forest. i finally understood when my grandmother had been haunted by everything that was no longer there, but with her eyes. so drew on to landscape who
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the me you know, i went many times to dollars and when i went back this time i went to the spot in the woods with her and i was able to find something from from there. so oh my oh oh, it gave got it in there. okay. yeah, that would be from a place where there was soon. yeah. or the things i think my lack of because and
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then prior places there was a very big yes. they remember all of them. you know, there's not much left there, but you know, pieces there are for me to find that in the would. it reminds me of all the stories . my grandmother told me that you told me something from you. my well, i'm in the to and i've been here 50 years. this didn't have now been is from 9 to 6 to 6. an earth think match or play. and i'll type it out. i will come here to this house. so more than 50 years now. so that's my problem. that's my problem. bellotta, which is my home my home really home.
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ah, he was 8 years after i 1st interviewed my grandmother and they found her history laid out as bear facts. i had been looking as long as she'd been a refugee. ah 18000 of these pages later the life details of polish refugees arriving in east africa after surviving siberia. there was a page filled up by my grandmother and 10th india. in september, 943. as a 13 year old child refugee, ah, i thought of my professor who had questioned history because he hadn't read it. it is paper carry more weight than what she told me. oh,
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the. i know when i got home to material, i got an email from the archive saying that they had uncovered footage from the refugee camp in 10th, near unseen since the war. i opened the video in images that had spent a lifetime dreaming of started playing in front of me. oh, only a few 1000 women and children made it from siberia to this refugee camp in africa. of them, only a few dozen made it into this rejected newsreel footage and the exact same place. i looked for her 5 years earlier. my son, my grandmother's face walking in front of a refugee camp hospital, young malarial,
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3 years after being deported to siberia. far from home and smiling, i thought that they've been nothing left of her. when a student, bella ruth intends near. it's only looking at this for these though, that i understood that she had been teaching me all along to see what had been erased. ah . the longer i look at these images, the more they have to say they're full of hidden messages. that it took me a lifetime to understand. it was 1988. the last year of communism in poland. nobody in the room knew that in just every year the country would be free. ah,
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i was 11 years old. the exact same age is my grandmother when she was deported. it was a marriage between the children of 2 polish refugees and the towns that our parents and grandparents were from were no longer in the country than been born in according to come in his poems. the people in this room didn't exist. but there they were. forgotten wanderers would sing to me and polish farsi and to healy. they spoke of poland is focused iberia. and he spoke of africa. it was a room with monuments and no one truth or official book to turn to. and through stories told from others the children and grandmothers to grandchildren, they were keeping their history alive. and it was a lifetime act of defiance. ah ah
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ah, ah ah, ah hello good to be with you. there's a few steps i want to go over for australia. so 1st let's start toward the northern territory. unusual rainfall amounts, at least this much rain and 19 millimeters. remember, it's a dry season for darwin making it. it's whether it's august stay more than 3 decades now. what do you say we talked about temperature, so let's go to new south wales, sidney on wednesday, 11 and a half degrees, making it it's 2nd cold, a stay in about
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a quarter century. and so very cold stuff that was all caused by this. a vigorous disturbance that we had produced, iconic winds in new south wales, but the bulk of the energy now out toward the tasman, see but still flinging somewhat, whether toward victoria and south australia on thursday. rain filling in across the south adlene to new zealand on thursday of venture we will make it to the north island, but the north island will not be as hard hit as the south side like south east asia . heaviest concentration of rain reserved for southwest portions of borneo on thursday drying out across java. so mix the sun in cloud in jakarta with the high up 29 degrees. it is mostly clear for the korean peninsula on thursday, but our plumb rains get go in on friday. and that weather will steer rate into south korea. on friday. the a tale of 2 presidents: venezuelan military defectors,
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american mass and reese, ah, and the bizarre told daisha attempt at regime change in the bowl of arion republic of venezuela. people in power. the bay of pigs on al jazeera, blue face mosques, a common sight in city centers around britain, but as lockdown. lucid people will still be wearing masks for a month, or even used to come an ongoing nightmare for the environment. this video shows stuff at a wildlife hospital helping a bird that's been caught up in discarded later. it's a face mask made of plastic. now a recent survey found 70 percent of people using disposable mosse didn't realize they were using single use prospects. researches at university college london. so if every person in the u. k. used one does face almost every day for a year. it would create 124000 tons of waste,
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half of which would be an recyclable factory that trying to provide an alternative . but anti viral coaching, like other such mosques can be washed and reuse. the design that we've come up with, ethical, sustainable, and entirely made in the u. k. it looks like face most to because of many people's lives, at least in the short term, whatever. calling the way that being urged to consider where it comes from and where it'll end up. i this is al jazeera. ah, hello, i me. this is the, i'll just hear a news are live from london coming up. the funny clothes carnival airports is thousands, desperately tried to force their way onto evacuation flight before the august 31st
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