tv [untitled] September 2, 2021 3:00am-3:31am AST
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i states have privatized the ultimate public function war shadow on al jazeera. ah, ah! as afghan struggle with a rocketing food prizes, the united nation warns of a humanitarian catastrophe. ah! hello money side, this is out there in lie from doha. also coming up. this is a ruthless group from the past and whether or not they change remains to be seen. us defense chief val to keep an eye on the taliban and insist the afghan wasn't in vain. 73 students have been cannot from yet another attack and niger area all
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surrounding school have been ordered to return to the movie business. after the pandemic locked down, where with the stars at the senate bill, ah, we begin with afghanistan where the taliban is now in charge of a country in crisis. it's expected to form a government over the coming days, but there's no word yet on the safe relocation of thousands of people who still want to leave. on top of that, the un says food stokes could run out in just a month and there isn't enough cash to buy basic supplies. it's warning of humanitarian catastrophe. with one in 3, afghans facing hunger condition has gone from human data and perspective continues to be extremely tense as i speak to you today from couple more than half of the
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children do not have it tonight or not. and that's the reality of the situation that makes me concern about the future of the social sector, as there will be all the limitations in 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 extra k from the for an aide. and right now we don't have budgeted provisions to cover those. those aspects of work. well, since the televisions have power 2 weeks ago after afghanistan economy has stalled, the group has ordered bags to reopen in a bid to help families get food on the table. but the price of base of goods has skyrocketed as the currency plummets vegetables now cost up to 50 percent more petrol prices up by 75 percent. and families rely on help from relatives abroad.
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have had their remittances cut off as money transfer operators have shot aid accounted for more than 40 percent of the country's finances. that's abruptly disappeared. of chemist on has $9000000000.00 in foreign reserve, but that's held outside the country and out of reach of the kind of bad that's bring in alexander and who's in pitt can county colorado. he previously served in us treasury department's financial tashay at the embassy in couple many thanks for joining us on the program. what are the main challenges facing people in afghanistan at the moment, particularly on the economic front 1000000. thank you so much for having me and the situation afghans dan is quite dire right now. many, even before this crisis, many afghans were living well below the poverty line. as of last year, roughly 90 percent of africans, or about $35.00 or $36000000.00 people lived on less than $2.00
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a day. and this is from former president ghani. so the situation has been very challenging. the international community and the united states had previously stepped in to provide tremendous assistance to the afghan people. but the situation were in today is cause directly because the taliban withdrew from peaceful negotiations and a peaceful, political process and engage in the violent takeover of afghanistan. and unfortunately, there are terrible consequences for their misguided action. we've heard how dependent afghanistan has been on overseas funding. much of that has now been suspended. what kind of impact does not have on the ground? what we're seeing, the impact through inflation. the cost of everyday goods are going up as you described. and the asking people, the ability to pay for those good has not changed. there isn't more money coming to the system. so things are costing more money. and so people are not able to buy the same amount of things they had before for basic goods like we like bread like rice,
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like petrol. and so those challenges are spreading across the country. that countries having challenges bringing in money. and so we're also seeing the currency depreciate the afghani against the u. s. dollar and against other foreign currencies. mean that you can buy fewer. you are afghans with, we can buy more, you can with the price of a dollar. but if you wrapped in it can be obtained as well, and we're seeing those huge lines around banks, and that did another another very large challenge. and presumably, it's not just money. it's expertise that afghanistan has lost people who work in hospitals, teachers and so on who have fled the country or trying to flee the country. what kind of economic impact does that have? that has a very large economic impact in my heart goes out to the afghan people, the future of afghanistan, the civil servant, these engineers and doctors who want a better life and know that they will not find it under the taliban because of
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their brutality. and so they're acting very rationally, they want to leave. and it's because the taliban violently took over afghanistan, that these people, these, these critical knowledge workers within the african economy are no longer willing to work or want to leave the country because they fear for their lives. what can overseas organizations do to help people in afghanistan now that the taliban in are in charge? many of these aid organizations are no longer in the country that operating outside the country given, given that what can they do? so from the united states perspective, which is one of the largest donors to afghanistan, they're striking a very fine policy balanced. secretary of state blanket 2 days ago on television said that the united states would continue to provide humanitarian assistance to afghanistan. president biden said that as much yesterday, but that money would not go through the taliban. and so they said it would go
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through international organizations, including the un and non governmental organization, many of which are still on the ground. although some have left a quarter reports. the other side of this though is that the united states really remains committed to the afghan people and supporting the afghan people through humanitarian assistance in finding ways to avoid providing support and violating sanctions to, to, to, to talbot. money, thanks for your time. alex ed and speaking to us, the for pitt can county colorado previously served as the us treasury department's financial a touch say at the embassy couple. thank you. the taliban has surrounded the only province resisting its occupation and talks to negotiate. a settlement have failed. i've gone histones. pantry valley is north of combo. the rugged mountain area is home to the most important pocket of armed anti taliban forces. the region resisted the groups. rule during the 900 ninety's,
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dozens of people were killed when taliban forces launched a renewed assault on pension. on tuesday, technicians from katara been arriving in afghanistan to help get cobbles, airport, functional, again, it was damaged during the recent evacuations. the wrong way is still operational, but the terminal and traffic control tower need repairs. law was keta is a spokeswoman for the guitar. a foreign minister she's been explaining. joe has expect taishan for the taliban when it comes to respecting basic human rights in a conversation with cnn. this needs to be a trust building process. we all agreed with our international partners that russian and to recognition is not necessarily the wisest decision to make. now, yet a constructive dialogue is extremely important, so it will be a trust building process. it's very important isa that all of us collectively build
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and capitalize on the pragmatism that by the bond has shown so far. balaban needs the international community. they realize this, they say this, and that's why we need to capitalize on this moment. where so many questions about what went wrong with the plan. with all of us forces from mechanised on the top defense chief to face the press for the 1st time, they say the war wasn't force in vain. popsicle have without the pentagon, these are the men in charge of running the us military, ultimately responsible for carrying out the president, orders are now defending that withdrawal from afghanistan. it was her. oh it, it was historic duty to focus on the fact that they say 124000 people were evacuated in a hostile environment. but that leaves out the questions. how could the intelligence be so wrong about the strength of the taliban?
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why was in such a chaotic situation, why weren't they able to get out all americans and the 10s of thousands of afghans they pledged to help during disorderly evacuation? that's all 175 people killed, including 13 us service members from suicide attack near the airports. that they said are questions for later. and i'd also say that no operation is ever perfect. i will tell you that we will do what we always do and that is to, to look at ourselves and do after action reviews and, and we want to make sure that we learn every lesson that can be learn from his experience. they may be questioning themselves in private, but l eyes are doing it publicly in most you, we do not need another such job political event to rest, that you must twice for greater decision making to autonomy and greater capacity for action throughout. the disappearance was less about reassuring allies than
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their own troops. the emotion of this moment made clear by the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. this is tough stuff. war is hard. it's vicious, it's brutal. it's unforgiving. and yes, we all have pain and anger, and when we see what is unfolded over the last 20 years and over the last 20 days, that creates pain and anger. the mission now is to try and contain the political fall out and figure out what went wrong. well, trying to reassure the troops that 20 years of war were worth it, even though they left the taliban back in control using their equipment and celebrating what they say was the total defeat of the united states. petty clean l g 0. washington. a group of gunman have abducted 73 students in north west nigeria. the children were taken from a secondary school in the remote village of kaya in some far a state. all schools in the states have been ordered to close for the 1000 students
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have been kidnapped in nigeria since december. the attacks are often carried out by criminal gangs, and the students held for ransom, fidelis and ball as this report. the kidnapping happened do wednesday morning when gunmen riding on motorcycles have found the most frequently school kaya, which is in my room model. you said the hometown the state governor and abducted the students. nobody knows where they've been taking to. but people who are 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 tip of students will release these web students often higher efficiency, the same done for a state. so deeply failure, trying to find the location where the students have been taking to and or the military and paramilitary as security perhaps will also be mobilized to see if they
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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 again, my actually turn out to be another round of negotiations for around some payment before the student will be released. it's another beautiful sunny day at 35000 feet. the weather sponsored by cattle airways booted world's best line of 2021. hello again. nice to see. we're going to start with a snapshot of our summer rains picking up this story in india and look at this, the darker the colors, the heavier the rain falling over good drought. we had red weather alerts in plain or downgraded to amber alerts on tuesday. and we could scoop up about 200 millimeters of rain in this area. some of it may sneak into southern areas of pakistan as well, impacting karachi, what weather on top around that they have been gall all sides. but if we look
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toward the east, me, i'm are spilling into bangladesh. is ball. we'll see some heavier falls there. plentiful rain across into china has led to scenes of flooding just outside of bangkok, water logged roads, sewer system just can't keep up with the sheer amount of rain falling and more of it is in store on thursday. those heavier concentrations. southern areas of thailand, through cambodia and vietnam, really from the south central and toward northern areas of the country are plum rains. we've got a batch of wet weather, just north of shanghai, scooting out toward the east china sea. and this plume of moisture is slamming into japan. so this is going to have a big impact on tokyo show the 3 day forecasts look into scoop up about 40 millimeters of rain on friday with a high of 24 degrees. that sure weather c. a soon. the weather sponsored by cattle airways, boated world's best airline of 2021. eye witness accounts, historical events from arab israeli conflict and sinai. i witness dissident 1st
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hand from beginning to end to espionage and the occupied westbank. jordan government started to destroy the device from a fight for independence in egypt to an infamous hollywood production antennas, al jazeera world, his personal stories from those who are that my own private history on alger there are ah, the health of humanity is at stake. a global pandemic requires a global response, w h l is the guardian of global health, delivering life saving tools, supplies, and training to help the world's most vulnerable people, uniting across the board as to speed up the development of treatment and the vaccine. working with scientists and health workers to learn all we can about the virus keeping you up to date with what's happening on the ground in the ward and in the lab. advocating for everyone to have access to
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a central health services. now more than in the world needs w h, making a healthy world to use for everyone. ah. ready too often of kindness time is portrayed through the prism of war. but there were many thanks to the brave individuals who risk their lives to protect it from destruction. an extraordinary film, archives planning for decades, review the forgotten food of the country's modern history. forbidden real coming soon on object. ah, they wanted 43000000 pounds worth of weapon. that was 6000000
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ah ah, ah, you run your time. the only great a phones outside africa. but the species native to sinatra is now critically endangered because the forest that live gina being long and cleared for industry like palm whirl. i'm maybe that in indonesia where unique collaboration is taking the conservation of the march and around the time to new heights. ah, in the last 12 years, indonesia has lost 6000000 hectic of its primary am. you're running natural habitat business, such as palm lin, from chocolate, cosmetic biodiesel to oven. the demand for palm la means business is booming,
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and many plantations are illegally expanding international. i legal for show and you can go inside. i want to see this is basically what pamela plantations look like. this is all one. and so they encourage the network, but for us, so it's like 20 more than 20 years. this encroaching here. so they had a legal part and they moved beyond the legal part into the primary they are into the national international part. yeah. what you've done is you bought the line back . you've reclaimed. yeah. we have a look. yeah, sure. this is our goal for achieving such a good for a structure like this when we do our explanation activities. 4000 funds,
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thesis leaf in this list and it was system is home to a complex by diversity. news has been running huge clearing and replanting projects since 2008 afternoon again. this team has cut down the palm tree and we claim the national 5 boundary reforestation process clearing long graph that blocks some people in the gym to match and silos. what it is, ok, so actually we can start doing planting seedlings, growing the lexia then planted in rows extending from the perimeter. there are no short cuts yet. just lots of hard, but i feel we can get 160000 siblings. we have to compete with the grass. we have to regularly clean the risk again and then once the 3 actually grow, you know, high,
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then you don't need to to do waiting. despite the competition and poor quality soil, 80 percent of the survive the vital 3 years now grow very well in this line. you actually look really excited to grow relatively like as i said, all the time things you hope you know that we plan it through. that's an 8. this site was dominated by grass. no grass. yeah. no. so it's gone. it's gone. even new siblings that to grow and then feel the temperature here much, much different. and the ultimate food that all of their efforts are paying off.
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evidence of new arrivals in the for us, in an old or on venice over there old news or next to it's like my the maybe the lowest one actually is them baby still trying, learning how to fill a mass, but sales and home will get there. this is a new hope for them. they can make this face as a home for them, you know, and how old are these? i think it's like 2 weeks ago. and then he had a message like 2 days ago. so very recently, i still wandering around in this small nude work hard to restore last habitat. another key part of conservation in the area is done by the so much and around the town conservation program or s c p. every single ring
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it. and here's a refugee from far as that no longer exist. i will go right now is to try and make sure that when indonesia is able to protect, that's fine. we still have a ring and have live in. this is the isolation, catered for this is where all new arrivals aren't any. are any times in the medical treatment. say we've got these big social cages where for many, this is the 1st time this met. another rang attendant had contact since their mother was killed when they were kept. when a company goes in and they completely destroy the forest and everything that was given, every 4 dies. and in a few cases, you know, the maybe in the trees less than a mother or a baby to that tree down club her to death. and so the baby health and powering and kinds of people have legal as a pharmacy keeper. i know just how strong and powerful these animals are to imagine
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capturing one, the level of violence she would need to use as much you know, we are the one her entire body was swollen like she just 50 rounds with my titles. and she had cut, the city cuts open wounds right to the bone and puncture wounds from from shap and sticks. probably satellite spiel, 99.9 percent of your in your 10 live lease for that reason to not point want to fence that somehow managed to survive that process from around your hands arrive at s. as in paul physical condition. the 1st part of their rehabilitation is often surgery or intensive medical care. if you see their face just sort of right here up against joseph, i think all of the equipment here and all the drugs here are exactly the same as
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you use the human patients. that close, absolutely. i mean, to be honest, we hire vets, but i'd rather have medical doctors because i run it as a much closer to humans than the acid cats and dogs. what this teenagers story during capture is obviously sustained damage to his arm and the nerves didn't function anymore. we did lots of tests and we also gave him like 2 years here to see if the arm would come back. so you could, it was uses if we took it off at the arm, he still uses this top pot and that, you know, he still have a chance to live in, in the forest. so we did that almost hills. this is fantastic. absolutely fantastic . once given the all clear mayan like the others will be released back into the wild. ah, who are these guys?
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go on and down. go comes about, you know, when he's about 5 years old. when he's process that's a long way. stone. oh, i think he's about to bomb dive on the camera capture. his mother was club to the clubs. this is after the clear. yeah. and what's gone and now the 1st column. ah, and one thing that nobody has already done law enforcement for in people in prison for breaking the law. and until we do that, i don't really see a lot of change until your average indonesians see that there is a real risk of prosecution going to prison. the number of times coming into captivity is not going to go down. it may come from them going up the loose
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the ecosystem home to the so much in around it is 110th the size of britain. in an area of this lodge monitoring the expansion of pablo plantations has been virtually impossible. until now they have to follow the camera. pretty simple. yeah. so the reason poor in the fictive to this may look like boys playing with toys. but in fact, it's a unique collaboration of conservation and years. so weighing illegal clearing a protective source for the 1st time. it basically fly backwards and forwards in a grid and fits all those together and you get a uniform yield forest high resolution, almost seeing every leaf ah, very cool areas. graham, a colleague of
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n singleton some f o c p. david, a colleague of canoe from around town information center and joined specialist at pest flying and new plane. but the size key and human son who is teaching them how to fly at the tone where ways of in too much fun is that the word for this one wrong move along with the with the route and it's heading off the way point one hand now so it's going to follow this yellow, yellow line, the nation of our borders around here. we want to make sure that they're not encroaching and accidentally accidentally coming across the board, or if they are breaking the rules, when a customer lean,
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get them out. so we're not allowed to inspect ourselves on the ground when we come in, i do a lot of mapping work and use a lot of like this can provide much, much higher resolution images and almost real time basically the world, the dolphin green averages for huge chunk is just palm in the past 6 being out of sight out of my how can i import? i don't know what's going on when you got this sort of area for you to make much more powerful. yeah. maybe. right. maybe we should do something. indonesia already has a very impressive array of environmental conservation. lation we're asking for is
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enforcement off those rules in 2011, the previous governor gave out a new license for one of the last remaining patches. the 4th did not have a license on it. one of those trips was handed out in version oil, palm coalition of local n g o space challenge front license and ended up winning. now while back code case was ongoing, one of the major companies had a major align hearing and burning program. we had over flight and we posted the indonesian government has actually taken action. a court ordered the company to pay for the $13000000.00 company, which is the master. first the vital set legal precedent. i think the visual impact.
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