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tv   [untitled]    September 2, 2021 1:00am-1:30am AST

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mexico examining how the propaganda and profit shaped content all fail the algorithm. jeviana. oh, be the hero world needs right. ah marsha, in, ah, me as ask and struggle with the food prices, the un warns of a humanitarian catastrophe. plus, this is a ruthless group from the past and whether or not they change remains to be seen. chief vow to keep an eye on the taliban and insist the african war was not fought in vain. the hello and barbara, how are you watching?
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i'll just say we're life in london also coming up days after thousands of children were released in nigeria, 73 students are kidnapped in a new school district. those fancy abortion low in the us comes as a force in texas and banning the procedure after 6 weeks of pregnancy. and the red carpet returns hollywood emerges from lockdown at the venice film. ah, we begin the program and gala stand with taliban are now in charge of a country in crisis days after the last you a soldier, the parted ending 20 years of war. it's expected the former government over the coming days. but there's no word yet on the safe relocation of thousands of people who still want to leave. and all of this is the un says it's food stocks could run out in just a month. and there isn't enough cash to buy basics supplies. it's warning of
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a humanitarian catastrophe. with one in 3, afghans facing hunger tradition of human data and perspective continues to be extremely tense. as i speak to you today from couple more than half of the children do not have it tonight or not. and that's the reality of the situation that makes it really concerned about the future of the social sector. as there will be all these limitations in the ability to see saturdays of the teachers and education workers and those social sector workers be paid because most of the budget they choose to pay the salary as extra k from the for an aide. and right now, we don't have budgeted provisions to cover those, those support since the taliban took power 2 weeks ago, afghan astounds economy has sold. the taliban has ordered that bank reopen in
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a bit to help families get food on the table. but the price of basic goods has sky rocketed because the currency is plummeted with vegetables, costing up to 50 percent more and petrol prices up by 75 percent. they sent a country were more than a 3rd of the population live less than $2.00 a day. families relying on help from relatives abroad have had their remittances cut off as money transfer operators like western union, have shocked aid, accounted for more than 40 percent of the country's economic output, and that is also abruptly disappeared. afghanistan has around $9000000000.00 in foreign reserves, but that is held outside the country and out of reach of the taliban, which is yet to appoint an official government. robin bride reports from couple the trying to get a grip on an economy that is faltering,
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get best outside one of cobbles, main banks, the taliban allowing just 10 customers at a time as hundreds more weight that turn not very patiently. but a bit of command. abraham probably didn't expect to be controlling frustrated crowds when the taliban stool to victory will be a home. yes, of course we understand the problems and that's why we've brought these much idea of how many customers government employees who say they haven't been paid for months. and caught by the speed of the former governments collapse. everyone is running out of cash. but like a memo, not because men should have 100 over everything in good order. instead of running over like a did. i have money in a bank like $4000.00. but, but i can't cash my money from buying people's access to bank to cash remains the
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real problem. the banks have largely remain closed when they are open. there are strict limits on how much you can withdraw. i did all pointed to a much bigger fiscal problem of how i can this is going to pay its way taliban government. the country central bank reserves have been frozen by the us while world bank and diana funding has stopped just surviving is the immediate concern for many businesses. it takes like 6 months. the hussein family completed the expensive opening of a 2nd coffee shop branch 2 weeks before the taliban takeover. i very contact with the people who are have restaurants, who have from individual businesses. so they're all down now. further down the street, taylor made raheem. he doesn't know when things will improve. my name is also on call model because the bang fact lost in people's mind is stuck in the banks. there
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is no business. the banks are open, the people come own his rac hanging, increasing number of uncollected jackets and suits they were ordered before the taliban victory by people who no longer have the cash to pay for them. fabric from all who left the clothes and their country behind in search of something better. rob mcbride al jazeera couple the taliban as hell. the military parade in the southern city of kandahar to celebrate the u. s. withdraw fighters paraded through the city center some an armored vehicles left behind by nature forces and military helicopter also flew above the above the celebration. kandahar is the birthplace of the taliban, and the traditional stronghold for the proof shall stratford is in the capital cobble and has worn out on how talks the former new african government are going. these talks between talk taliban leaders. officials are ongoing in kandahar and
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helman province, which is the hot land for charlie bond. we understand that it is actually included in those talks, representatives of the various ethnic minority communities. but yeah, they're all questions. okay, he's hypnos with respect to various factions and it's all about the may differ on ideological lines. for example, there are also big challenges with respect to the basic governance when such an administration, such a government is actually formed. huge questions with respect to money. how is the taliban going to convince the western world international community that is basically standing by its commitments, the promises that it's made in the last few days. also, the west is saying that it's not going to release that money until it sees proof of those commitments being realized. there are also problems of connected to that money with respect to, for example,
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paying taliban fighters. you speak journalists and they say, well there are concerns that if money isn't seen sooner or later sooner rather than later. then then we're looking at possible questions with respect to maybe even defections. do armed groups as these talks go on, trying to form some sort of administration that he's not already seen as legitimate here, but vitally if that money is going to be freed, seen as being legitimate by the rest of the world. the taliban has surrounded ganesh, towns, pancillo, valley, the only province resisting tolerable occupation. the rugged mountain valley north of the capitol cobble is the center of a gallon stones. most important pocket of armed the anti taliban forces. the area resisted taliban moved during the 1990. dozens of people were killed when taliban forces launched a renewed fault on frontier on tuesday. taliban leaders of course the people of and share to lay down their arms and negotiate a settlement with them. i've kinda sounds former deputy speaker of parliament fazio
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qu, fee is in canada. after fleeing taliban rule, who she began her political career after the fall of the taliban government in 2001 . she has survived at least 2 assassination attempts, but that's not stopped. her from passionately advocating for the rights of women in her country. she sat down with dorothy jabari for talk to al jazeera. how do you assess the quick taliban takeover? it took them about 10 days to take control of the country and the us troops were still present, right, because nobody has been in many places, the police and army actually said under themselves to them. and in some other places, the security forces, flea without even tunnel on prisons and some of the places that i present taliban came a day or 2 days later, the security forces lead the country. i think because as i said before, production, lack of mood on the dependency was the reason for corruption and lack of course
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leadership from the college. well, let's now talk about women. as you mentioned that about you, of course, in your life's work into your 2012 memoir, the favorite daughter, you talk about the hardship of being a woman in afghan, a son, and you describe how your parents rejected you because of your gender and how the day you were born, you were left out to die in the sun. you survived and became afghanistan's 1st female deputy speaker of parliament. what kept you going? what was your motivation? the fact that i have suffered so much as a woman, a my mother suffer. so much of the woman and i have fit every woman, the cutting, the burden of what's going on in the country kept me moving forward. what i have seen during the time, the 1st from the taliban in power gave me the reason to come to politics. although my father was a member of parliament, but this was not what i want it to be. but what i have gone to as a woman,
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gave me the reason to change things for others. because i know that it's actually the woman who, who always have to pay the highest price. it's the woman and the goes. if it's what they have to lose the life loved ones, if it is these, the lose the opportunities. and you can watch the full interview with a careless dance, former deputy speaker of parliament. they have who feed on friday. at 1630 gmc russian president, vladimir putin has criticized america's lengthy involvement of gala stand saying it's 20 years of war achieved. nothing. i mean can ski re sca american troops were present in afghanistan for 20 years and over those 20 years they were trying. and this can be said without defending anyone to civilize the local people. but in fact, they were trying to impose their norms and standards of life. the new result was tragedies and losses for the united states. and especially for the people who live
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in afghanistan. this is a 0 results. but to talk to us the fence chief say that the warner gala son was not fought in vain and they'll still be watching what happens under taliban rule. one of them general mar camilla also insisted that recent cooperation with the taliban during evacuations is not necessarily the basis for a future relationship. we don't know what the future of the taliban is, but i can tell you from personal experience at this as a ruthless group from the past and whether or not they change remains to be seen. and as far as our dealings with them at that our field or in the past year or so in war, you do what you must in order to reduce risk emission and force not what you necessarily want to do. particle haine has more or less from the pentagon. this has been seen in the us as a humiliating withdraw. there are lots of questions these 2 gentlemen need to have
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answers for such as how did the intelligence go so wrong? was it in fact wrong when they publicly came out and said, they thought the afghan forces could last 6 months to up to a year and a half? was there a contingency plan? they said there was a contingency plan. that's where we had all of these troops near afghanistan able to deploy very quickly. but there are going to be lots and lots of questions about how this got so wrong, so fast. how they weren't able to get all the americans out. believe there about 200 or so still there, while the majority of african who worked with the united states were left in afghanistan, all of those questions. so they said, look, we're doing an after action report. we always learn lessons from it. we're going to answer that later, but you could see with the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, mark, milly, he seemed as if this was very much painful for him. he talked about the number of troops, the died, nephew in the san and iraq in his, under his command. and the message from the secretary of defense lloyd austin was very much look. we know this is hard,
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but you should be proud of your service. they're trying to highlight this as a success. that's good and you do nothing to stop the question of what people saw play out before they're very eyes on their own television. still to come in this half hour. people who fled louisiana before hearken. either hit or urged not to go back home bangladesh and fashion brands stitched together a deal to protect factory workers, but isn't enough to mend the government industry. ah hello, good to be with you. we've got some driving rain moving across the yellow river valley out toward the yellow sea, just clipping southern sections of south korea on thursday. and all of this is going to pivot in 2 areas of japan. so tokyo,
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you will be in the cross hairs here as seen. some breezy conditions may be about 40 millimeters of rain on friday. the cloud cover continues on saturday. but if a wider view will show us, we've got another round of weather winding up further back toward the yellow rivers . so we'll continue to watch that. but some dry spells really from the gang fee to the pearl river on friday, going a bit further toward his south. indo china shows some heavy falls can be expected for southern areas there in particular, cambodia, right through to vietnam and you know, across to march or we have seen some flooding mostly toward the north seen some dry spells also fairly try across java which we would expect for this time the year jakarta getting into a mix of sun in cloud, but those showers that rain risk pops back on saturday, off to australia. look at this when coming down from the interior, giving us 30 degrees in adelaide. but off to the west, we see this cool pool of air that eventually moves in. it's a cold friends. so adelaide, your temperature drops down to 16 degrees on friday. that's it for me.
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the 985 for young anti apartheid activists were murdered by south africans security forces. if you've gone solve the problem by the moving the guy, then you could get 36 years on a family's quest for justice. reveal systemic resistance to prosecution for the convicted for taking my father away from me. and expose is the influence, the former part. i just stablished my still wielded in the new south africa. my father died for this of people empower investigation on al jazeera. ah ah,
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reminder of the top stories here on al jazeera, the taliban is facing a growing humanitarian crisis. and if galveston days after the last us troops left, the us says its food stops, could run out in just a month. with one in 3, afghans facing hunger and the taliban is ordered that banks reopen to help families get food on the table. but the price of patient goods has now skyrocketed in the country for more than a 3rd of the population lives on less than $2.00 a day. please say gung men have of deducted 73 students in northwestern niger area. the children were taken for a secondary school and the remote village of chi ends on foreign state. more than a 1000 students have been kidnapped in northern nigeria since december, only last week or on the 100 children were freed, sung as young as for fidelis. and by following developments from boucher, the kidnapping happened to wednesday morning when gunmen riding on motorcycles have
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stormed, become a synchronous school kaya, which is in my right to model you said the hometown the state governor and abducted the students. nobody knows where they've been taking to, but people were suspecting that they would have been taken to a very big forest, which on the boundary of the states with all the states in the northwest region of the country. this is just happening 5 barely 5 days after some set of students will release these web students, often higher institution in the same gunfire state. so the police trying to find the location where the student have been taking to and or the military part and paramilitary security. perhaps we have also been mobilized to see if they can present the doctors to be able to rescue these children. but the parents have been advised to hold on and be patient why these positions have been carried out. but
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again, my actually turn out to be another round of negotiations for around some payment before the student will be released. people from louisiana who fled their homes before hurricane ida hit. the u. s. gulf coast are being urged not to return home. 3 days after the category for hurricane swept through the region, more than more than a 1000000 homes and businesses are still without electricity and water. to more people have been confirmed dead bringing the police to 6 officials in the state are now warning about a shortage of medical care and emergency shelters. louisiana governor has called the struction catastrophic arch. lot of crazy stuff out there. boats on road houses on roads. everything is not over the whole night, but i've never seen so like gore there. so you and her date of birth is the windows all over the board is made. it will be on the
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ball is i don't know it on down the job to bring it to draw. that's going to cost me x amount of dollars as well. it's hard. meanwhile, us fire fighters say that they've made some progress in their battle to save communities in a popular resort area in california. but they've warned that strong winds are making it harder to stop the fire burning towards lake tahoe. the flames have scorched the 827 square kilometers of land in just 2 weeks. around 50000 people have been forced to leave a texas law that bans abortion after 6 weeks of pregnancy has come into effect after the supreme court didn't act on an emergency request to block it rights groups say, 90 percent of texas abortions are performed after that point,
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as most women don't realize they're pregnant, 6 weeks is when anti abortion campaigners say that a fetal heartbeat can be detected. the band that makes no exception for rape or incest, and gives private citizens the power to su, abortion providers. people who win such lawsuits would be paid at least $10000.00. the supreme court has blocked a dozen similar laws and other states because of the landmark roe v wade ruling, which legalized abortion nationwide in 1973. but in the last decade, the states in acted 483 new abortion restrictions. the supreme court is due to hear a case over a mississippi band. the prohibits abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy. julia k is a lawyer ad, the american civil liberties union. and she says, abortions in texas are now effectively over no more than forced. it's through
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a bounty hunter ski. it says that any person can sue you if they believe that you have performed an abortion after 6 weeks of pregnancy. help someone get an abortion after 6 weeks, or even just intended to do either of those things. and it's basic seed improving a violation. they get a $10000.00 pay day. so this is designed to open the floodgates to abortion opponents, or really anyone looking for a financial windfall to bring the harassing vigilante lawsuits that will be incredibly burden from in costly for people sued even if they ultimately prevail. the reality is that the threat of these, these bounty hunter lawsuits means that nearly all abortions came to a complete stop in texas today. students in several parts of india can now go back to class to some of them for the 1st time since march 2020 schools
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and colleges in at least 6 more states are reopening, although they'll have to follow safety guidelines. remote learning has been difficult. unicef says only one in 4 indian children have access to the internet. a study in january said more than 80 percent of children had lost crucial language and math skills. well, the internet has been cut off and troops deployed in the capitol of indian administered kashmir after the death of a popular separatist leader. sierra galani family says that he died at home in sweeney gar at the age of 92. he was one of the staunchest critics of india. land was under house arrest for more than a decade. hundreds of supporters have gathered outside his home. delani supported kashmir as merger with pakistan which has declared unofficial a day of warning. kashmir is mostly split between india and pakistan, but both countries claim the region in its entirety. bangladesh is the
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source of much of the world's cheap clothing, but that has come at a price with a terrible safety record in the nations factories. now major global retailers and factory owners that struck a major new deal over standards in the workplace, hoping it will revolutionize the industry from docket. tanveer chandry reports when they're on a plaza building collapsed in 2013, killing more than a 1000 workers. it brought unprecedented pressure on the global government industry and led to an agreement between clothing, brand and local manufacturers in bangladesh. that agreement has improved workplace safety here. and a new deal is now expected to build on that progress and provide that protection. i'm going to money into national export. we feel that the new internal accord that has been agreed on for 2 years is
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a major victory for unions and the workers. now the accord will not be limited to building electric and fire safety. it will also look into occupational safety, health, and other issues that benefit worker safety. the new car makes it mandatory for global brands to set basic standards of workplace safety, as well as establish minimum wage independent factory inspection, public reports on the factories and constant repairs and renovation. on like the previous agreement was specifically focused on fire and building safety. the new york prod broaden the scope to ensure the general health and safety of the worker. it's also legally binding. the new agreement contains many of the rules set out in the original, including the ability to hold global retail brands legally accountable. if there factors fail to make safety standards, we do it by, by the safety protocols, regulations introduced by the court ally and including maintaining health and other
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issues. safety come 1st in the factory. it's important for an organization here, along with the international partners and retail brands, will continue to inspect factories, monitor safety standards, and provide training. they're ready made. garmen sustainability council will be in charge of implementing the agreement. basically, the international agreement between the brands and unions is a, bilateral one, does not impact the fund, the ready made government sustainability council receipt. because i received an independent platform where there are 3 stakeholders for industrial. there unions are there and also brenda that. so the c c and the health and safety issues are being taken care of in odyssey who are try for tight. although most workers are not fully aware of this new agreement, some have basic ideas. yes,
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we have heard of it. the fact managers all regulations and safety procedures, according to a chord alliance guidelines, like the building safety and health issues all are maintained according to the alliance. we feel quite safe and secure. although there is still a long way to go to ensure the safety of bangladesh, garment workers, the new card is a significant victory for campaign. are seeking a better working environment. can be child re. i'll just say that dot com. hollywood has emerged from lockdown, and blockbuster is our back of the 78th venice film festival. over the next 11 days, it will mark a significant shift back to some sort of morality from the movie industry. can vanelle reports from venice? the this stars are back, one of them is most glamorous events. famous faces are booth the venice film festival organizes the as long as you're armed with this, you must have the green pass, which comes with either vaccination or
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a negative cove at 1900 test results. then it's business mostly is usual for those attending the world's oldest film festival in venice. i was surprise, i thought i was surprised to discover that the quality for the fees is higher than usual. and i was concerned at the beginning thinking that it could phase a lack of themes and lack of products. and the lack of quality is the quantity. i don't know why, maybe dip and then serve as a sort of t mutilation to they could activity if you make, i don't know what opening the festival is, pedro i'm a devout mother. as part of that, us parallel mothers starring penelope cruz. the also in contention, the power of the dog, the book adaptation brought to life by the winning direct jane campion to return to film directing her at home. yeah. cementing holly was returned to
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venice. ridley scott's, the last jewel which reunites matt damon and ben affleck, both those writers and coast of the for asked us to bring he, although not in competition in venice. sy fi blockbuster, june is also creating above the warner brothers offering from director dennis been a new scene as a potential oscars favorite. will fans meanwhile, are eagerly anticipating the release of spencer princess diana biopic with a transformed christian stewart in the lead role. the red carpet has brought back the south. how i like to head back, organize this on the 2020 festival fuel filters and attendees organizing, say, 90 percent of people all back and as the industry looked ahead to walk with many here the sentiment that will live organizes say there are
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enough measures in place to keep film bus and the rest of italy protected. and the studio done with waiting. all in all, i think stewed is realizing that basically they have such a big backlog of products that they have to put the stuff out. the good news for the film fans who are ready to take their seats while maintaining a social distance can vanelle al jazeera venice. ah, and now the top stories on al jazeera, the taliban are facing a growing humanitarian crisis in galveston. days after the last us troops left their expect to the former government over the coming days, but there is no ward yet on the safe relocation of thousands of people who still want to leave. and all of this is.

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