tv [untitled] September 5, 2021 7:30am-8:01am AST
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the r u. c ends well, conservation. congress is underway in my say, france, act, harrison ford brought him star power. it's hard to read. the headlines, floods fires, families, plagues, and tell your children that everything is all right. it's not all right, and france is president manuel. micron appealed to unity and human ingenuity. i just looked on menu or somebody just people not that ex hauled. you know, i would like for us to fight this battle together. and for my part, on extraordinary confidence, the situation is serious. how will is great. the capacity of the human species to innovate is enormous, which is going to hold. once more, we're reminded that it is humanity that's by diversity is biggest threat, rory, talents out there. ah, this is all just, these are the top stories,
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a 1st batch of humanitarian aid as arrived in afghanistan as campbell airport reopens for some commercial flights. the united nations is warned that if john son is on the verge of a food crisis, doctors and nurses, city, africa, and health care system is close to collapse. many haven't been paid for the last 3 months for the world bank and other western bodies of frozen funding around the president says this country is ready to revive talks on the 2015 nuclear deal, but not under western pressure. dogs have been paused since june, france has called for an immediate return to negotiations and long care down tomor tomorrow. i have said previously that we will definitely have negotiations, you know, order of business, but not with the pressure that the other parties are pursuing. this pressure has failed before the americans in european to experience multiple times that these negotiations along with pressure do not work. what we are pursuing in these talks is the listing of the cool sanction syrian government forces have, shall,
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the southern rebel held enclave of dela, i'll ballade injuring civilians that follows the 3 days cease fire, which is seen russian soldiers patrolling the rebels stronghold. the saudi led coalition fighting who the rebels in yemen says it's intercepted, 3 mess. i'll attacks in the east and south of the country. 3 people have been injured including a child. 14 houses have been severely damaged. the clean up from huntington ida has put the spotlight on problems with housing and infrastructure in the united states . president joe biden will visits new jersey and new york next week to assess the damage. one of the most dangerous wildfires in canada this year has been brought under control. the so called white rock lake fire burned for $52.00 days in british columbia. it stretched across more than $83000.00 hacked chairs with huge areas of forest and several properties destroyed. those are the headlines. the news is going to continue here on august 11, but half an hour after the stream. goodbye. when the new spring on wednesday,
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the 8th largest fire in california history, when people need to be heard, any people who are writing, they don't even know what i am with exclusive interviews for just 0 teams on the ground with intensifying rain. people here appear that these are temporary solutions to bring you reward winning documentaries and lied need the i'm for me. okay. at the end of every stream episode i tried to the guess of the yeah, those relax conversations are very different to the live show. welcome to the bonus edition of the stream, a collection of tended discussions that i've never had on tv until now, coming up the impact of kidnapping for ransom attacks in nigeria and in the u. k.
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the impact of disruptive climate activists intent on forcing that government to take the climate quite seriously. the 1st half galveston as a return of taliban rule, get shared their recent experiences of interacting with a taliban journalist, alley ltv, now feel self conscious, wearing width and clothing redeemer who also linkable have questions about this. take a look at the one good. so a taliban tell you where a t shirt because i'm seeing on the street people dressing normal and people are this was well that's the thing. this was, this was last week and it goes back to charlotte conversation where she said, you know, you're higher upset as long as they were scar 5. okay. and then, you know, some of the people she interviewed wouldn't talk to her. it was the say it was similar to me and i went to a friend's house in the very beginning and some of these hollow bond leaders were
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there and he made a joke and hostile. he's like, oh, look at i li, never dressed this way and it's very high, high ranking college figure was like, oh he can, he wants, he doesn't have to worry. and it was interesting because that dad passed so many, you know, they, they were like the way carla described it. right. they were driving and there and there rangers and, and the humvees and they passed me then thing. and it was a group of 32 of them just walked, often same thing. one of them came up to it was really weird. so that i think that's what we're saying is that it's not all way. i think it's difficult because the higher ups have one image and then i think it's the same thing with police, right? like like, you're always going to have unruly people that don't necessarily follow along. and then the just the figure is that those are unruly people, get too unruly. you know what? i'm hearing all there are rules,
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but everybody's not too sure what the rules ah yeah, exactly. yes. is trauma. what it is, it's trauma. it's trauma, lot of trauma, lot of pass. that's why i'm not bothered right. anything because pass has nothing to do with me. i'm here writing my turban going to wedding going out speaking. well, i'm not going out and speaking to kick on these guys on the street where i want to work with that side where want to negotiate with for the future again. but i personally have not received any threats, any calls any, any kind of issues as a matter of fact, next week to create a beautiful gathering of people, as they always do what you ask. so for me it's just strange that people are bringing. i understand people have trauma, but if you'd like to continue to talk about the trauma over and over again. and again, we're going back to the,
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the close as opposed to really focusing on the real issue, which is saving lives in and finding ways on how we can move forward and, and bring the bridges together. the government was not, and none of them were angel. if i speaking the language, they were full of dirt and these guys messed up. they were full of dirt and now they have the opportunity to come together and north, nor is north america all holy. they created more damage than anyone in the history . so there is damage everywhere, but now we have the opportunity to correct that and our generation, we have their responsibility to present ideas such strong boundaries. and, and you all know that this is it's, and it's like a big chest been laid, you know, check made, you know, to move this. i think we all as our generation,
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we have responsibility to give chip and speak from within and speak for the humanity. i really don't care about a child or americans or any government. i care about humanity, responsibility to the people. let's focus on them. let's find solution for all. like i said earlier, if people know what he's asking the okay to do my their why do you need, how many winters are on the street? how many kids are in the park? how many family? these are just laced everybody's curious about knowing about politics, but i since stood there, not going to be emma medina actually on the on youtube let's, let's bring up the youtube right now. so let's go off. what does a gallon time need before winter comes? what are your long term goals? so the wants to know what, what do you need? not what too much going on, but what do you need? what do you need? what do you think one person needs, you know,
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in the winter when somebody is living in a hot, it's going to get very cold. here. we need clothes, we need shelter. we need to find that we need heat. we need simple basic things that we need to focus on and who is going to bring that support. i'm still stuck on the people that die via the day at the airport. i won't answer for those. is going to be just but under the rug and forgotten, are we still going to talk about how tall events are she like this subject of taliban women is used to distract what's really going on in the country. and i'm sick and tired of it. i don't want to talk about people telling me or any journalists, how do you feel about writing a book? i don't care. i want to save life. i didn't stay behind my project about what, where i'm here to make sure that these women on that not enough to bend in the. ready sally,
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this conversation is so educational in so many ways. there are the nitty gritty of a transition for afghanistan. and then there are the, the rule, hearts and minds of africa. really important. how do you want us to end this conversation? charlotte, where did wanna take us? i mean, you asked earlier about what's going wrong at any misconceptions in the media. and i mean nadeem is biggest. frustration is the fact the conversations about clothing and not people. my biggest frustration, cuz placing i'm in the media is the narrative. i'm constantly ost, i use silence. you must be silent. they must. she's only saying that because she did. and then narrative of western save you complex. we have to say people. and this is scary that goes with it's it's you have to listen to the people.
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know, i'm in the way. i think you need this. and in the last 20 years, all i've seen of the taliban is terrorist. they not people. lessons of people here from africa and some so here the narrative on both sides be open minded to the fact that they're all humans, that all come from different traumas and backgrounds and histories. and been born into this and lived a really, really hard life to dictate and everything. and if any progress going to be made, we have to think of everyone as individuals and try find common ground. agidir's. charlotte bailiff alley lativia freelance journalist struggling with his clothing choices every morning and a ball and social media if once in a deem at the only person that i've ever heard who the taliban middle voice back to being on the street. i know that you will remember the chip or girls,
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the nigerian school children kid not from the boarding school in the middle of the night by the group book a horizon that was in 2014. now cannot pains have become commonplace in northwestern nigeria, where criminal gangs found holding people for ransom is an easy source of money that the state of insecurity in the country. string death explained exactly what that means on the ground. insecurity in practical times, julia means living in constant because you are not sure why you wouldn't be tapped if you went out to shop or to school or to walk or just anywhere. i remember when book adam was on page one page in the not with the most is that what time i would just be sure i will back home and that's what happens every day. i remember this particular id when there was an explosion just outside my office and i was shaking
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when i came out. i'm had to, i mean we go my way through the the pennies of people who died, including the boma before i could get my car. i'm so it is, it is we are human being being affected, being get from their homes. and from there, like once we go from das foods, mike, it and everything. and then into a big guys and even, but i mean babies your mouthy insecurity in the context of nigeria painted the picture. it is. it's a constant state of feeling unprotected, unprotected from people you do not know their intentions. you know, it's a constant lock of trust, a lack of trust in the people around your lack of trust in the ability and the capacity of the authority to respond. when you're faced with the situation where
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you cannot help yourself. and so it's constantly, i mean, i live here in the right of her, i'm a couple even this bundle moving into a moment is real. it's, we live with it every day. i've traveled to many parts of the not, not where, especially the ne, in the, in the, the height of the conflict on, you know, the sense that people wake up, like i said, we call every d, you know, on shar, whether the we're going to the last the day and if it loved one left the home on going to touch into whatever, whatever, going to return and leave it with trauma. the trauma of abuses and the trauma of the fear that the abuses would not only come close to home that you could be the next victim. and it's just not saying that there is no one looking out for you. there is no one that has the capacity to respond to the threat statute face in
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a way that would, you know, assure you that even if the what did happen, there would be a response and there would be consequences for the perpetrators. and jimmy, thank you. i mean, i'm not quite sure how you on that really the fact that no one is looking up for you. and if anything happens, you're in a sense on your own and being in a constant deed of just not knowing my organizational track. nathan, people in nigeria because nigeria does not have a database at the country, so there is no central database where people can track like reports and the things one i'll find out what's happening. so if you use that as a sort of a symptom of maybe not to but as an example of how the problem is. so in the nation way, you can't report them. i love one more thing. that means if anything happens to you
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don't, if you want to step out of the house, even in your house, you know that if anything happens to you, there's really no mechanism that can be set in motion that your life is valued and valuable, that someone will do something about it. i want to show you all the pictures a picture that we've been using to talk about this show it's, it's on my laptop right here. and you see 2 family members being reunited. you feel that pain? i'm. i want to cry just looking at that picture, i cannot imagine what both those family members went through is my jury of kidnapping crisis out of control. i think that picture says a lot, but i just want to get a very brief answer from all of you. is there a solution? can nigeria, nigeria handle this particular crises on top of many of this? i wanted instant on stuff and each if you billamore, go ahead and i think that you can confront this problem successfully. if we accept
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the gravity of the problem, the government is to treating these people as miss petty criminals when, when in reality they should be treated as terrorist. and they, that should be an anti terrorism operation in the north west. and to do that, you need to, i mean, you brought up some science matching strategy. we need to probably because we know that these, but now we're getting transnational be coding in the beginning. what local me on back to local and would be, should be, should mean nice. meet at the point i want to make, i mean, which i couldn't make. that was not what i had gave me in the beginning and i can be wrong. and i hope i am wrong. what's that been that you didn't security courses are complicit in this? and that i, in my opinion is going to be there is no evidence to support that. and that is
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texting to buy the food on the ground making. so you just and police officer, i killed every single day. and if you tell me politician, company i mentally then i went with that even when you the military did that should not take much. i don't have a problem with that, but the not you didn't you for the police officer or 90 soldiers. i given everything they can do to support them when i guess to support them and i acknowledge the difference of opinion between you. but uh huh. and jeremy me is this, and i want i need is 3 brace cuz i'm wrapping this up. is this kidnapping for ransom? issue crisis at nigeria has, can be solved. yes, the can. and i think the say that then i just think it was a conflict. that doesn't mean that they're not people on the ground what their life and government is responsible,
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but other government workers were in their jobs day me on the continuum. definitely . when we speak generally about the nigerian government that has been responsible and in their handling of massive can be solved. one is the major government i think that we have to ship when, when i call with my team there with the daily briefing because it was considered a crisis, was considered important. i'm not quite sure why we haven't seen the can not, you know, the insecurity in the country at that level where we're not getting d and b and i think i mentioned, well, the different security agencies working together. so there's a pop of government, ensuring leadership and again life valued. and they think that there's the but also in the positive sort of the things that we must do in holding. the people elected accountable putting pressure on them that they must do the job in which they've been in that you do in as well as working within our communities to protect us. find a mouthy. yeah, i totally agree with the others because it's definitely something that can still be
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controlled if there is honesty on the part of the government. you know, as i said i, i'm not exactly sure that we have proof that there is complicity. but there's so many levels where government has been dishonest. i mean just that speech from the, the minister of inflammation is just just really jarring because they have intelligence reports. they know the gravity of the situation and trying to deny to pull the wool over people's eyes is not helpful. because guess what? security agencies cannot on their own without the support of the people, the cooperation of the people and when they continue to make statements like this and their response is so ineffective, eliminate the people they reinforce the sense that there is this wide gap between the rulers. i'm the people that need the people on your own desk would come together and realize that needs to be a convergence or by kid. you know,
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community people know a lot more about the community than anyone else. not security forces from boucher or maybe so to any other part of them is going to be able to solve. you need the people to what you to cooperate with. you come from them believing that the government has that the government will protect them. we know also many cases of influence being, you know, given up to, to, to the criminals and then con, or turn on to a point by the nose in retaliation. and so it government needs to know that he needs the people to what would the people close the in devising solution? i'm a be, you know, afraid when a yeah, you knows what kind of comments about them i made about naming these terrorism. what we're going to see from the history of the nigeria insecurity for when you have, you know, you give them, all of the problems are going to go in there, kill civilians in the name of fighting terrorism on this. give very few of the
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public real pop 3 are going to be brought to book and you know, whereby the find them, they will execute them. we're going to see, you know, an increase in human rights abuses. unfortunately, that's the case. you have an agency, curious, people cannot ignore it until we just must be honest with us that they, you know, we can find a solution on the problem is deep. the problem is complex. we don't expect them to find solutions on their own because all of the answers the most understand that the people have contributions to make their right to participate in decision making and in res, reaching policy decisions. it's absolutely key to find in a solution to this problem. mouth shut africa director for human rights watch billamore. booker t from the tony bray institute for global change. and every other malackle and executive director of enough is enough. finally, to london,
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where the climate justice group extension, rebellion has been using disruptive protests to draw attention to climate crises. things like this one on how bridge are extraordinary. as an example of what extent you rebellion activists when able to do, i guess, to share their most impressive stories of math, civil disobedience. well, i'd love to briefly tell the story of the b 5 bridges protest in autumn, 2018, which was the 2nd i would say my non direct action by extinction. rebellion i was there, i was part of it. i was on the bridge that day and many of us were uncertain what was going to happen at the appointed time. we were all kind of standing by the side of the road and how do we do this? and other people are quite scared. and then the moment came, and a few of us just stepped into the road. when the light changed and said come on, everybody and everybody stepped into the road. oh my god, it's easy as that. and just like that,
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we occupied the bridge and shut it down for the next several hours despite please to, to clear it. and it's incredibly empowering thing when you realize that actually when you have a right just cause, sometimes you don't have to pay the law anymore. aren't sure, i think for me, what are the most striking actions like fiction? rebellion have done is t shut down? the printing presses for the sun, the day, the telegraph and they kind of placed them down for a whole day. and what that was about was about what repeat was talking about in the show about the fact that these pieces are actually daily putting out lies and miss leading information about the climate crisis. they for use put trying to nail denial into the, into the probably compensation and they're still doing it right. and what the progresses were trying to do is for attention to that and say, why are we having this product conversation about what the science are telling us
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why that every day for the page about the climate, there's also happening or the lack of government action. and, and they were trying to draw attention to that really effectively. and i think that kind of prove that point because what we were up to it was just so many articles in the same papers attacking the protesters and what they stood for, almost demonizing them really and defending the powerful when he didn't address that. the fossil fuel industries that they, that they were being criticized. and so it kinda really, i think pre, for the purposes we're saying and the label of being called an extremist for the practice. this is something that is kind of being forced on them by the media, and we really have to kind of be on our dodge to that. jenny, most impressive math civil disobedience. i don't know if to sit. if the example i'm going to give you is the most impressive, i think it was probably the most fun and that's important about it. thanks in
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rebellion. we are not grumpy. we are a fun organization with a serious purpose. the october rebellion and 19 in 2019 the grandparents got together opposite the gates of buckingham palace and we sang songs . and we have marvelous art, which we always have the artist of ex or a brilliant crowd. oh, and as we were being law abiding elders suddenly the, the call rang out. there are people locked to the palace gates. so at that point, we separated and, and there had were a number of grandparents who had locked themselves onto the palace gates. this was actually funny because there were many police there as there always are. and somehow rather the grandparents singing in a very peaceful way. i had distracted from this furtive action and i think that it
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was, it was life affirming that that the, the older crowd is still there to be counted. ah, and has a few moves of their own. not everyone agrees with the tactics of extinction. rebellion and some of the criticism of the group has come from the u. k. media after the show and i rupert shed the experience of appearing on the stream are in tweet page. i just joined a fantastic conversation with semi ok on climate action. such an important discussion. i wish the media had more coverage like this. there's no public conversation that is more crucial. and then rupert, how state this program on extinction, rebellion is so different from the usual media fair. it was in debt and there were no lies. mr. presentations or tax refreshing. thank you for the reviews. gents. you want to see the entire program about the tactics of extension rebellion go to stream,
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but odysseyware dot com that i show for today. i will leave you received from the impossible rebellion protest in london. ah, [000:00:00;00] use from talk to al jazeera, we what gives you hope that is going to be peace because the situation on the ground seems to be pointing, otherwise we listen. we were never on whatever road to off migration. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories on sera with more than 200000000 cases because of 19 worldwide government about trying to fight fresh wave
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of the virus and newberry. and there has been a 3rd in the number of people working, vaccination appointment from human cost to the political and economic pool out there. bring you the latest on the pandemic. this will have vaccinated more than 1100 people here, all of them migrant farm workers. people on home testing because they think that there is a risk to democracy, special coverage, and i'll just, sarah. my name is sandra ball. i'm the foster, i'm in the county junior refund shoes. if you book for the lead in the conic workshop, you will see that you set up your god left her baby. i might not do that. is it possible for you specially mismanage enough? mine i do, they are women are strong with my, my dear. and i do there, ah, london is one of the most important issues in the world and decisions made here have
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an impact, right around the globe. and so here at algebra, right, we will show you the true impact of those decisions on people been how it affects their everyday life. we are free to put them on air and to really engage. because we know that all audio was interested, not just in the mainstream news, but also the more hidden stories from parts of the world that often go under reported. ah, the 1st batch of 8 lands in galveston as cobbled airport reopens for commercial flights. ah, i'm robot this and this is all alive from dell ha. also coming up, assessing the damage in the us to clean up off to how to can ida is complicated by
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