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tv   [untitled]    August 27, 2021 11:30am-12:00pm AST

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sector, but as the world becomes more globalized and the exchange of ideas more free, the chinese government hopes these changes to its education system. will encourage young people to turn in woods for guidance and not to the west or elsewhere. katrina, you al jazeera aging. ah, this is out there. these are the top stories and the death toll from an attacker. kabbalah on says he has risen to 110 ice. ok. his claim responsibility for the twin bombing. if all it, warnings from native countries on the taliban at an attack was imminent. charles crawford isn't cable and explains the situation around the airport security situation down there. so that's all i'm saying is, is, is much improved. we know that they put more resources into it today, a lot of finger pointing we saw yesterday between the american to the child about about who is responsible for letting the suicide attack as suicide bombers into the
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crowds. it's all about saying now that they are going to man watchtower is not only around the board here in cobble, but other airports around the country. the blasts at the portals are killed. 30 members of the u. s. military president joe biden has failed to strike back against who's responsible and he's promised the evacuation operation will continue despite the violence. dozens of nigerian school children have been freed after being abducted from an islamic school 3 months ago. 136 students were taken by gunman from the town of tina and the no, it's not known how many have been released. it's reported 6 students died while being a crucial vote on peruse, new cabinets has been pushed back by day president. petra castillo is facing his toughest test yet, and getting the opposition controlled congress to approve it because they took off it's less than a month ago after a very slim when. 2 he's ill and is extending his nation wide lockdown until
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tuesday after reporting 70 new cases of cobra. 1900 boasts are the largest city of oakland that will stay locked down for another 2 weeks. there are now 347 cases in his unit. the supreme court has ended a moratorium on evictions and posed during the pandemic. it had been extended until october, but a collision of landlords in real estate groups requested the court lift the ban. president joe biden. it's cordial cities, states landlords and cabinet agencies to prevent evictions. of hundreds of thousands of people at lunch more news coming up here or not 0 right after we visit the stream is the country about to collapse before the kind of reform you're talking about can take place. we bring you the stories and developments that are rapidly changing the world we live in. why are we not in the best situation? why has that money been responded? how did that happen? counting the cost on al jazeera
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ah hi, anthony ok. as western forces leave afghanistan, we are looking beyond the headlines of today and into the future. what was gonna look like on the taliban rule again, to help you navigate this conversation were joined by a sun. by charlotte's and camille. good to have all 3 of you with us. let me introduce you to the international audience. so good to have you here today. please . every tell everybody who you are, what you did. thank you very much. my name is my mother that i'm from a gun, a son, and i'm a researcher. and today's my 18 days that i'm in canada. thank you so much for spending time with us. charlotte. we've been watching your reporting for the last few days on our dcea reminder audience who you are. i am a correspondence,
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sir, and i am based in campbell. nice to have you. come here. welcome to the stream, introduce yourself to our international juris. i'm clear, i'm a senior visiting fellow and immigration at the gym and center for national policy and i run an immigrant rights organization. we've been part of the coalition advocating for the evacuation of our african allies since that was calling out spent earlier this year. we anything from history right now. i know you have an opinion on this for us. so if you're on youtube right now, the comment section is here. you can be in the youtube comment section right now, and i will do my best to get your thoughts, your questions or experiences into the show today. charlotte, let's go back to the afternoon local time incapable in afghanistan to explosions. what difference does that make now? to people, enough gallery than thinking about the future if they are trying to get out of the
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country. what difference does that make? well, we had the 1st explosion. it was at 540 local time and then we went down to the airport and all i had was heavy gun fire was snark in the street. there were hundreds of people running towards us trying to get away the telephone will panic. they were shooting in the air, trying to push people back. there were ambulances rushing, pasta, i it was, it was really devastating to say, especially because we had fortunate having to abby gauge had been down there earlier this week. and i, i am seeing the people down near us forces overlooking the wall there. and they've been holding up the papers saying i will put the americans, i'm into percent. these are my papers. let me through the americans, seeing me helpless, saying go to another gate. and you could just see the desperation. they mean to think that this explosion happened today and i am, yeah, i've seen the same,
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those same type of people with the same place. this a few days ago and had the sprint they were and it's very hard to tell what will happen next with you. i sitting here now i can hear flights in the i can hear planes, but how many who are and how many more people will be up there back to 8 with this tuesday, be line at s. and there is a picture that's behind me, a big protocol behind me. and this, this is a picture of people on a plane being taken out of afghanistan and taking to canada. i'm will see this in just a moment, so people can see how uncomfortable that journey has been. and you made that journey with your family. can you speak us to, for briefly that process of leaving your country? how fast you had to do it? and what you had to do thank you. the my case in my evacuation from granite on it was before the fell down off coupled to the town
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and it was very fast. i started on 299, 9 of july and ended by the end of august my date of august and under the weather it off. okay. everything was very smart, very manageable. everything was on time and the email, the forms, every case can very soon and very bad after the fin ingles for when the colon fell down to the carnival on i had some colleagues and friends that applied to the same to the same program that i came here on based on that d, explain it to me very difficult. this is, it takes days that they receive one a me. sometimes it doesn't receive a reply from me from their name. what was it was the they took us to compound it
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took us to secure, come another compound or a tower and all the, the route with the places or the cars that they use for our carrying from other one place to another place. they use our cars and one day when they took us to the to the airport, they also use the arm car when there was a big airplane and a chart darted for us. the airplane had the capacity for our 3 to 4 passengers 100 passenger. but we were 150 passenger. you wouldn't you? what was your wife annual 3 children? what did that feel like? because it gives us a sense of we, we keep seeing so many people 100 how people trying to leave. what did that feel like as you were leaving on that time?
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it was okay, but when i arrived here and look at the pictures in the used in the, at the airport a comedy report. i sometimes got that we are not there. how like, how i come to my children to the airport? not because when we, when i was in call, i told my wife one we will walk into. we had to walk on the street to know what children were with us. and i told her she had the civil or how, who should i pick 1st? which under and i see law or no one. yeah. it was difficult for me. then i thought that we lived, i blessed others you've been left behind. at the moment. i want to go to camille. i would love to have a listen to my li, her huck. she's very critical of 5th x, a process from afghanistan. have a listen to her comment that she sent was a little bit earlier, and then come immediately of the back of it with your own divided administration
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has a moral and ethical responsibility to make sure that any us citizens, their families and their allies and utilities are able to leave the city safely and quickly. we've been working around the clock with our clients and their families to make sure that they're able to get inside the airport safely. and once inside that they're able to find a flight to leave the city. the august 31st, the line that the administration has said that they will stick to is causing a lot of desperation and station and the deadline needs to be extended. if not everybody who needs to get out is able to get out before then. i think that's exactly right. my 1st reaction that i want to say is the august 31st deadline that the by didn't administration has agreed to is not our deadline. we didn't agree to that. we, you know, we've been fighting since the since april, since the withdrawal announcement to make sure that we, that the us evacuate our allies with the tree. that the,
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the u. s. evacuate or allies, as they were withdrawn the troops that we withdraw with dignity and bring those who helped us to safety along with our troops. and when that didn't happen, we started working on the civilian side to try to get as many people as possible when people fell and the government got to stan chow to control we, we just up those efforts has been incredible to watch civilians coming together to get charter flights to get manifest to get as many military working with civilian issues they ex, military, working with civilian to get them onto flights to the, to the air for gates and onto planes. and we're not going to stop. we're going to, we're not going to stop pushing the u. s. government to continue to ensure that all of our allies and all of the honorable afghans who are now still the country are brought to safety. we're not going to stop pushing for the deadline to be push back for the number of individuals to continue to grow that are evacuated. and we're
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just going to keep looking for new ways to get as many people out of the country as possible. because that's a commit that we made and that's a commitment that we intend to honor. and we also intend to remind the u. s. government that. that's what we expect them as well. charlotte, there's some conversation online. i'm going to share it with you dara. off on the chief, thank you for being part of this discussion. so these are off on youtube what, what will be the future of afghanistan onto the taliban? that is a huge question. right? but then i'm wondering about since august the 15th, when the taliban moved into a pool, what life has change and what that change has been like earlier? we sport to nidia and he gave us a sense of how life had changed. listen to the dear and then give us your take to again, this is beyond airport. 35000000 people living in this country. and after this sudden and unpredictable change of power,
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we are about to face as humanitarian crises. people do not have jobs. they are running out of money, the banks are closed and the price of food is rising every day. my message, the world is paid on abandoned afghans at this hour of need to ask that people really need you. and your support and african lies do matter. yeah, i totally agree with that. i'd say to the weston media and the rest of the world, the story, the me that what the majority about the afghans being the economy and what does this mean? where do we get money from? that will bank the i'm, if the you way has frozen, there was a bank fund. irene, economically be using money as leverage against the telephone to say,
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play bull human rights or you don't get anything. and the problem is that, well, they might be doing that and it might be safe to try to manipulate the telephone and to doing what they want. the people that are getting people on the ground. and i mean, i can say from living here and having, being here on and off for the last few years that life had very how dos reopening. seeing women on the streets, ministry 3 stuffing. but the economy is a big problem. points, i mean, trying to get money out, you can argue that $400.00 and no one really knows how the going to pay government salaries. that type of thing. this a lot of questions and very much there's a lot of questions about when will be in special community who were supporting the previous administration, paying all the teachers and the nurses and hospitals. when they come back to the
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policy, will they be satisfied with the taliban? enough to stop giving them money and aid and pay for these people as an i've got some questions here on youtube for you. i hope you won't mind answering them. does the on the says, in reality, what percentage of people, enough galveston are actually glad that the taliban is a rule again. so honestly, i traveled in $33.00 province, several found a son from washington in $21.00. pro more 2000 and no, i mean from february 2011 to march 2021. i visit all the progress of you know, are people that they want. the color was given the country, but the people that he was leaving under the control of when he got no man, they didn't want it. most of them to didn't want to nice survey. it needs of
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research to ask people, what percentage of people want the thought about govern the country. but from what i understand few days ago, i had number of interviews, a different problem to, to look at the situation. and i was, i wrote an article about that they are optimistic about the future, but at the same time, there are 3 dating that the things that they are saying and their words will not be in an action. they said with respect to my board with respect one member, we respect the freedom of speech and media. but i heard number of video grew up. our journalists were beaten by thought, one income and past few days, and also the restriction for what was the working and government offices. they said you should be at home. so the time that we set up a good day, can we work on our leader on or on, on our president,
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introduce our president to the new government to introduce the new government. these are things that makes me to think about it, but they need time. then international community needs to help them the thought of i need to change them. so i remember the time that i was primarily student at 996. i over there, go platinum and then and what the, the rule was on dot com have that rule is implemented with a new government. i'm sure international government will not support them. i'm sure people will be threatening and i'm sure we won't lose all that cheese and that we haven't been was 20 years so. so it's really interesting as they should say that i said, because charlotte has been having conversations with the taliban over the last couple of days i. she asked a question that we do. we asked the questions and then we'll immediately get to play the answer because it was a particular question about women's rights,
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but i will audience the he that question. go ahead i well i, i ask them at preschool, friends if they're going to respect women and goes right. what kind of assurances they could give that they would do that. and here's the response. i had the stomach, i'm already committed to the right of women within the framework of sharia are we may have the same rights that going to be working shoulder to shoulder with us. we want to assured international community that will be know this combination against women. but of course we think our religious framework shall it what i've been saying is genuine fear from some people in africa style about what the taliban. this new taliban may well bring from you interaction. what have you seen? what do you predict? well, i mean, i can say from my perspective and i've been treated very well,
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i to thinking, i know i bridge ask and women and i has methods of recourse if anything happens to me or i me take my picture, which is quite an error. what i have see to the him, in conversations since that great conference, because this is a lot of really positive things safety, we want to respect ones, right? go right to want to go to school. we want to proceed. minority. it was a lot of great things that they said and i speak to them afterwards. like i'm really version for you. i hope you can pull this off. i hope you follow your word and, and execute a lot of these things and they see the okay, great, yes, thank you. i mean with the press, they will be international media into a room yesterday and said to us, is there anything we could do basis? we want you to critique us. we want to improve, have you had any issues and can we fix them and improve? so there's a lot of things that they are doing that are promising. but,
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and i'm sure the panel is going to take to this. it's a watch and wait for crews. will they follow through well, hold over time and who ends up running, running the government. i mean, are they on the more progressive end of the scale, or are they on the more conservative end of the scale? and we're still waiting to see that i didn't realize that there's a big part of this conversation, which is we are not going to know until that time by the 1st, right. or even beyond that. can you go ahead? i'm sorry, i think also that we've been, you know, we've been fielding a lot of calls, a lot of our coalition members. i mean myself and we are getting messages on every social media channel emails from calls, people connected by partners and there's real panic amongst afghan people to, to leave. and i think we've seen that right in the, in the scenes outside the airport and in the visuals. but the message is that we're getting our devastating and they're just people who just don't believe that not
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just that they can't live in and they're gonna stand that well, you know, continue to sort of care for them in a country where government care for them. but that their life are truly in danger. and we've received photos of the town then searching door to door for certain individuals and not just those who worked as interpreters for the us treated anybody wait restaurant owners who catered to, to western customers and our others, women and girls who spoke out academics who spoke about, you know, western democracy and the panic is, is real and it is heartbreaking. and it is terrifying to see i want to bring in has rena, because has rename talking about some of the practicalities of being a refugee from afghanistan. but i'm going to go via my laptop because it is really interesting to see the countries that accepted african refugees in 2020 right out here on the list pakistan iran somewhere behind
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a germany look where the us it's right down here almost at the bottom just over just over 1500 refugees, they accepted from afghanistan, canada. whoa. where as son is sitting right now, they said to just over 2000 refugees. so let's go to task rena, talking about the reality, the practicalities of the people who would like to leave that country and the problems that they are going to face. the car is gone, his non crisis is unfolding at the time in the world is also facing increasing amount of that guy, refugee, anti immigrant. and you know, full big sentiment. the vast majority of our guys who can lee probably will end up in docusign, which already has one point. 4000000 refugees to iran and turkey. attention needs to be paid to how these 3 countries are going to respond to the refugee crisis. and attention also needs to be to the large numbers of intern done,
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the displaced outcomes will remain within. i've got a son and have their own very specific challenges to deal with in this deal environment. i set up. oh can camille, you go setting ethan, go 2nd, go ahead. are you going to say? i was going to say it's a well known fact that the vast majority of refugees and internally are in displaced person around the world are taken in by developing nations. and that the countries with the most resources often take the smallest numbers and obviously in the united states, the previous administration in the white house you know, took in virtually no refugees and really dismantled not just the immigration systems, but the refugee system. i do want to say an american citizen and somebody who work votes, you know, for these, for the that i could leave or is that this is our responsibility. and we are a country that can absolutely have the resources to take in all of these individuals. we, our economy needs and our, you know, our culture, our society,
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the very fabric of what this country is based on, almost requires it. and at the end of the day, we made this, we created the situation and it is on us to make sure that nobody suffers. and that certainly that nobody uses their life over it because we didn't live up for obligations. our obligations remain to make sure that the afghan people who believed and that they wouldn't believe in the promise that we made our progress. and people are going to stand that we honor the protections that we promised them and honor the, you know, the, the promises we made to them. and if we are not i, as an american, as the american people. and i think you've seen that over the last 2 weeks and the reactions to what has been happening, we aren't going to forget that and we aren't going to let our government elected officials forget it either. and i mean, if you look at our military community or veterans community, they are absolutely devastated by what they are seeing happen. and the idea that they laughed and that they left allies behind is absolutely getting to them. so i'm
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sorry, i just, i had to react that way because it's been a really tough 6 months and 2 weeks for us and they cannot imagine a saw on what this must feel like for you and your family here and back home. like i said, have nori fled from afghanistan. he's now in france. this is what he told us a few hours ago about why he left his own country. why did they call? because i and my family are not feeling safe when they're taught on over the country. you know, the freedom of speech and the life of journalists are in danger. that's why you call, and i think my country is a very challenging and difficult time and people don't really know the future. there is no government anymore on have some restrictions on place already, and i'm sure it's going to enhance in the future when they take over and they go in
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and when they have their system set up at an a so many so many thoughts on, on youtube toe is that the us chicken doubt from the taliban? what an embarrassment people ask about monetary and aid. and then one big question is coming from our audience. and i wonder if you can help us just close our conversation. what are your hopes for afghanistan? you have resettled in canada, you have left. what are your hopes for your home? so let's be hold on it. the situation that's going gone. it's not good now. i have a few minutes ago i heard from my friend i had a phone conversation to get my so for this interview, he said now the time i want to start asking people, especially the people that do work for spanish and for for india and for police and they're asking them and they are knocking their doors and demick problem for them.
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another thing we have to big exclusion is today at the airport of onset that spoke months of thought about said that the area that is moving on our can i and now are. thank you. i hope we will come back to us and thank you so much. and camille and charlotte, and everybody and youtube really appreciate you. being part of today's program, i found your story is not over yet. we will come back and revisit it. take everybody thanks for watching. ah, that light emitted from history kept alive only in the family tales of those to buy and had to believe for people who didn't seem to these damaging story. as the polish women and children who endured the siberian refuge in africa,
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never to return again an epic or if the memory is our homeland are now to sierra on march 15th, 2019 zealand security which was $51.00 people was shot dead into christ church, another 40 wounded when a gunman began shooting at a christ church, moth with tech worship and attending the friday service. for those who lost loved ones. finding ways to deal with the trauma. crucial. she gave me and she asked me, what was mom? i told her mom was with me 4 months later i feel much quiet and i feel much more calm and really focused with my life. let us love one love doesn't close to lunch and it makes your heart happier. my heart,
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if he doesn't bring any loss for a new symbol, let us practice one of the last remaining ancient forests and se asia is a lifeline to hundreds of lumberjacks and drive. ah, we follow the treacherous journey as they walk through extreme condition together and transport the dangerous but precious cargo. risking at all, borneo on al jazeera, there is no channel that covers world views like we do. the scale of this camp is like nothing you've ever seen access to healthcare or 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
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a journalist. ah, the death tell from michel f. what a tank past is 100 us president says those responsible, real pain. we will not forgive. we will not forget. we will hunt you down. the americans live from afghanistan goes on, but you k evacuations will end in a matter of hours. i . i don't neglect this, is out there a life coming up. dozens of nigerian students are.

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