tv [untitled] September 8, 2021 12:00pm-12:31pm AST
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oh, when freedom of the press is under threat, outside the mainstream shift, the focus that pandemic has turned out to be a handy little pretext for the prime minister to clamp down on the press. the listening post on jazz eda ah, it's all about announces a new interim afghan government made off of old god members. ah, hello money inside this is out there a lie from joe. so coming up holds open the moroccans get set to take part in elections or districts. corona vars guidelines. the 5 rips through an indonesian
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prison, killing several dozen inmates out of victory for pro abortion right campaign is in mexico as pre me court rules that criminalizing the procedures unconstitutional. ah, we begin with afghanistan. as the international community begins, reacting to the taliban and new interim government, they drew from the old god of the group to fill top post in the can take administration. the u. s. says it's concerned about some of the members named in the cabinet. washington says the concern is over the affiliations and track records . some senior figures on us in global terrorism watch list. china, which had cooled for an open and inclusive government in afghanistan, says it will still maintain communication and recognize the new leadership. well,
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as the group promised, an inclusive government representing all afghans, there were no sheer previous administration officials chosen to take part the acting prime minister. pamela mohammed has some acount, is a taliban founding member. he served as foreign minister deputy prime minister during the groups law stint in power from 996 to 2001. the tele button co founder, popularly known as mila, but has been named as the deputy prime minister. he headed the groups political office in doha and has been the taliban the most visible face in recent years. the acting defense minister is malachi mohammed. yeah. who he is. the eldest son of the taliban found the miller omar. he's a military commander and has ready been seen in the public eye malory sir, and you did. her connie will become interior minister. he is head of the had connie network, which has been blame for some of the stones most violent attacks in recent years.
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funny, the role of foreign minister will be filled by lobby, a con talkie who took part in negotiations with the united states. charles strafford has more from couple it's important to recognize the thought of on does have support here and certainly members of the old god as we're describing them, do have support, especially in the south, around their heartland and help province in canada. certainly the people that we're hearing from the capital here carnival, very concerned. many of them will say that they didn't actually believe the rhetoric that there was going to be what we told him was describing as a fully inclusive government. but that doesn't make them any less anxious. of course, they mentioned things like the lack of women in this into room cabinet. now, the child of mine spokes person, which i had yesterday when question by journalists on that issue said that there was a number of ministries that needed to be announced. and the women's rights would be
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addressed in those administrators. but you speak to analysts and they say, well, people should not be surprised at all because according to ireland, they say that the particular interpretation of sharia law by the taught about would never realistically have given women or woman's a serious position. or how will dorothy in this cabinet there obviously concerns as well about the fact that all these figures are tyler by members. and they all fall from representative of the kind of ethnic complexities as the colors of this country. for example, the topics that workman's very few in positions or be given portfolios, moroccans are voting for new members of parliament and regional councils. the election comes amid an economic crisis deepened by the pandemic, and a sense of frustration over the lack of political reform promised a decade ago. but 18000000 people are expected to vote its election since the new
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constitution was introduced in 2011, 395 feet in the house of representatives of being contested as well as more than 31000 municipal and regional positions. a new law has changed how the parties share of seats will be calculated. and we based on the number of people on the lecture roles rather than the number of people who actually vote the justice development party which heads the current coalition. government says the reform unfairly benefits smaller parties as geisha. ben smith have lived in the capital of morocco. what is the need of people today on election day? while balls opened about 2 hours ago, and there's been a steady really trickle of people going in to vote. this is the polling station. why? where prime minister started enough money will vote as possibly morocco's cleaning
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polling station has been nothing but cleaning teams and spraying and even disinfecting this area before the prime minister arrives later this morning. and the question is whether this will be the prime minister last election in that role, he had the justice and development party, which has been at the head of the government, the largest party in parliament since the elections following the arab spring. but there's a lot of frustration that that party has not been able to advance any of its own particular policies, because much of the power arrests in the, in the hands of king mohammed the 6 contenders. the speculation is that the party that might come out on top this time round is a national riley of independence, led by aziz kanisha 1000000000 agriculture minister, very charismatic character, seen as being very close to the king. and if he wins because of his clothes to the king, that might be the sort of personality that could advance parliaments role in policy
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decision making a bit further. but whatever happens that governments going to be made up will be a coalition. the systems designed to stop any one party getting an overall majority . the justice and development policy says this is aimed at then. you're going to have a coalition and the fairies because lots of smaller parties might come in is going to be very weak. because everybody has to agree to other people's priorities in the coalition. and with a weak coalition, it means parliament is weak and that allows the king to show that he's stronger, retained his power is power of the implementing policy and pointing cabinet ministers. many thanks that bernard smith, monitoring the election from morocco's capital robot. now at least 41 people have been killed in a fire as a prison in indonesia. the fire at ton garage jail near the capitol jakarta has been puts out more than 70 people were injured. authorities investigating whether overcrowding at the prison effected evacuations. the prison house,
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hundreds more inmates than it was designed for. jessica washington has the latest. i'm here in congress outside the prison and we've just heard from authorities some new details about the tragic incident. we just heard from the indonesian minister for law and human rights revealed some new information that firefighters did arrive on the scene. about 13 minutes after the fire started and they were able to put out the fire within about an hour and a half of its being reported. but unfortunately, the fire spread so fast and according to authorities, they didn't have sufficient time to open up all of the cell while the fire was spreading. and unfortunately, that meant that some of the inmates died in their cells without even getting the chance to be evacuated. or escaped from the flames. we also have learned that 2 of the victims were foreign nationals and individual from south africa and another from portugal. the minister also alluded to the problem of overcrowded in this
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prison. this prison built in the seventy's was intended to house around 600 an inmate. instead, there were more than 2000 prisoners here and authorities all looking into whether overcrowded hampered evacuation attempts and whether that may have complicated things overnight. when this fight began, the minister also apologized to the families of the victims and as we have been standing here, we've seen some women arriving the wives and mothers of of those who perished in the fire in absolute shock and crying over this tragic new sell ahead on al jazeera, the homes left and rooms we look at the growing crisis in the democratic republic of congo, people displaced by violence. communities in america, northeast take stock of the damage left in the wake of hurricane ida. ah
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hallo, there. we've got to trouble disturbances either side of the philippines at the moment, and that's bringing some very heavy rain across northern parts of the philippines. 96 millimeters, the frank coming through his grad, going to make his way up towards high, then towards vietnam. ahead of that, we've already already seen some very heavy rain 144 millimeters of rain there in northern vietnam. so by the time this system does make his way across the south trying to see if it is likely to become a ty food early next week, it is expected to make land full. but ahead of that, plenty of showers there cause much of indo china and that wet weather set to continue as we go on through the coming days. and so will cause some flooding. as we make our way through the weekend. what a rash show was there across much shelf malaysia. start to see some showers now
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cropping up because a good part of indonesia as well. meanwhile, frustrated. yeah. this lonzey drive. we have got some writing the full cost. having said that, this line of cloud here just running into southern parts of western australia, we'll bring some rain into perth as we go one through thursday at about 5 and try warm and getting warmer. weather will make his way into new zealand by friday. but cooler and fresh air for saturday. the my name is sandra white. i'm the foster, i'm in the con, the refund. ah ah, if you bought for the living mechanic love shop, you will see that you said you're gone after baby. i might not do that. is it possible for you specially amendments on it? and not the mind i do, they are women are strong with my. my dear analogy there,
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ah, ah, ah, ah, you're watching out as a reminder of our top stories, this our, the us says it's concerned about some people appointed to afghanistan, new interim governance announced by the taliban. the cabinet has some members who've been on global terrorism, watched oral consult choosing new members of parliament and regional councils by 18000000 people. i expected to vote. this is the 3rd election since the new constitution industries in 2011 and he's 41. people have been killed in a fire out of prison in indonesia. fine, a tangle,
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run jail may the capital call has been put out on the 17 people what injured doors he's investigating, whether over crowding at the prison effected evacuations. as more now in afghan stone and the challenges facing the new interim government, one area of major concern is health care. a majority of the donor funded medical facilities all shutting down due to lack of money. a world bank funding free since the taliban took over, has blocked tens of millions of dollars. chance drafted reports from mir busha caught district in couple province. persona is in pain. she's come to this rule clinic, north of cobbles. the treatment for the doctors can't help her. i want to have done another stuff, roger, but i hope to come here when we get treated and go home. but there is no medicine available. and i can't afford to go to a private hospital. this hospital is struggling to keep going because there are
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constant power outages, not enough petrol to keep generators going, and no money to buy any more. these empty wards are typical of rural clinics across . i've got to stop because there's no more medicine available to treat the sick or treat even the most basic medical complaints. madam, how much and they call it, cut out, does bone patients come in? they get angry and fight with us because we have no medicine. this is the only hospital and stephen district still open. last night we had to help women give birth using l mobile. phone lives in the world. health organization says 90 percent of more than $2300.00 health facilities. face imminent closure because world bank money issued under the previous government has run out. and it froze funding when the taliban retook power. so this is the clinic's medicine store, just look at these empty shelves. there aren't even basic medicines here. bear in mind, they started out as
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a maternity clinic and we have pregnant women in the wards. there are no rubber gloves. there are no anesthetics, there are no antibiotics. there aren't even paracetamol tablets available here. and it's been like this now for 3 months. for the past off saying they are struggling to support their families. how come to the most other we don't have enough money to pay for taxes to come to work. so we haven't been paid in 5 months with that is another the un says that more than 30000000 people benefited from the world bank funding clinics in afghanistan like this one last year. so if a 100 that remind kurdish about who could mosher? unfortunately, the hospitals work is coming to a standstill. we have no fee drugs for patients on the people can't afford to buy their own from other places. so the, the world bank says it's frozen afghanistan's project funding, because it wants the tale bomb to prove itself on human rights before it releases any cash flows on and a husband, head home with
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a young son. they and millions of guns liked them suffering as a consequence of events and actions far beyond their control. charts. rapid al jazeera mirror, but you could go next on police and hong kong have arrested for activists who organized the territories, annual vigils marking the 1989 piano square crackdown dorsey the keys and failing to cooperate with an investigation. many pro democracy activists have been detained ever since paging, introduce a sweeping new national security law in hong kong. last year a you and him and his heron agency is warning. it needs more money to deal with a growing crisis in the democratic republic of congo. this year alone, ethnic violence has forced another 3000 people from their homes. catherine soy reports from the camp for displace people in the capital beneath. the keys in kiko,
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joseph and his family have been in this comfort, displaced people in borneo in a tory province since may their village is that a boot with benny territory in neighbouring north keyson. it's where one of the most feared armed groups called our lie democratic forces. all adf has been attacking villages, begun, and as if i've been fighting with the government forces, the troops is treated. dental ruble started attacking us. so we also fluids. the government declared a state of emergency me effectively placing it to re and north q and a military rule to counter the rebels. but it has been a struggle since we've been here, a convoy of civilian vehicles, escorted by the army, was ambushed by adf. several people were killed and others are missing. thousands of vehicles were burned and the military escort have now been suspended. a village
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was also talked about 30 people killed this. com for set up 2 years ago, but it is increasingly receiving more and more people from areas that one are previously caught up in the conflict. it is one of many idp comes cars across this province. hosting thousands of idp will continue to flee from this conflict. the new presence of a b s in some parts of the tory by the complicates an ethnic fuel conflict that's going on for decades, mainly between land farmers and hammer. hard as more than 1000 people, mostly hammers have been killed since 2017 and close to 2000000 people displaced the total needs for the d. c were estimated at $1980000000.00, which is nearly $2000000000.00 to aid a $16000000.00 people as the most vulnerable the most valuable areas of the country . it's ri, north cable, south cable and the north of north entangling acre. these areas where there's so
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much displacement require special attention. and unfortunately, at the moment this year we are only 30 percent funded of our humanitarian response plan. covenant forces are pushing rebels out of some areas and people are beginning to return in this village of now. cool day, those who come back are receiving essential supplies to restart their life. mel jones and the and his wife shantell said they fled doing fine thing between troops and militia group guardian and our road. yeah. we did not find anything in our homes when we returned your starting our lives over. everything was lucid, military victories like this one in your county. i boosting the morale of soldiers as well as the confidence of those they're here to protect, but some here say the success is a to few and quite far apart. catherine sawyer, all 0 italy profit. canadian prime minister justin trio has denounced anti
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vaccine protesters. it's very gravel at him during an election campaign rally. he says the incident shows how the doctors, nurses, and other health care work is being targeted. harassed, encouraging coven 19 vaccinations, and the wearing mouth cameras kept 2 pieces of rock and every hissing to jo. ann, one of his body guards, french doctors and scientists, the calling on authorities to protect them against intimidation, including death threats. during the pandemic, some doctors have even hard body guard. ever see threats in the mail through phone calls out on line post weekly process. again, it's kind of in 1900 restrictions and vaccinations in france. circle caution to do a feeling we are rebuked for respecting science, talking about science, popularizing science and spreading these ideas to the people that i understand what
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i must respect the social distance. and we are a mask and get vaccinated city. most people who are working in victor, nations seem to vaccinate and the medical practice, nurses, doctors, kid, give us, we fear for them. we fear they will be the victims of violence. one of the biggest trials in french, modern legal history will begin in a few hours. among the keys is fella of those salam who has to be the only surviving attacker hunting 1st. the people were killed in november of 2015 attacks and hundreds more winches. natasha but no reports from powers at the bicycle concert hall in paris, some people managed to escape the reply door inside. gunman was shooting at the crowd. the earlier, the attackers had run paged across the city, getting people in several locations. by the end of the evening, a 130 people who then attack claimed by the french president, declared
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a state of emergency from there was shock and grief. nearly 6 years on thomas met, remembers how an evening of enjoying life music at the battle rapidly turned into a nightmare. the crew of a sudden people fell to the floor. i turned around and saw 2 people on the crash because shooting everything that move according the floor. everyone was tried to call. it was a mess. the lights went out, we had more shouting, someone shouted, they're loading yet 3 seconds and i just ran. most of the attackers blew themselves off, was shot dead by police on the night. 3 days later police killed a man suspected to be the mastermind of the attack in a parish suburb. but it was 4 months before the man alleged to be the only surviving attacker was arrested sala, up to slam, had been in hiding in belgium, salam, the slum is one of 20 accused in the paris attacks trial. 6 will be tried in of santia proceedings will take place here in paris says hi court. in
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a specially built courtroom, hundreds of witnesses are expected to testify among them. survivors. this lawyer says that for the victims, it's been a long wait for justice. to be honest and under my own experience for victims, they can not put all these behind. it is very difficult, but it can helps them to go ahead and to know that ok, even after 6 long ears, there is a try. and this is important. thomas says he's anxious about the trial, but hope that his testimony will help others shows up off if that anything i can do perhaps to help others say like i do, i can be okay. and that motivates me to testify. the, the trial is scheduled to last 9 months. it may shed more light on what happened that night. how the attacks were plans and whether they could have been prevented. years on harris's cafes and bars are busy,
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but reminders and memories of that night on never very far away. it's ash butler, al jazeera paris president joe biden says it's time the u. s. got serious about the code red danger of climate change. he's declared, it's everybody's crisis while visiting northeastern states hit by hurricane ida. 45 people were killed in new york and new jersey last week. the storm dumped record amounts brain. and so folks, we got to listen to the scientists and the economist, and the national security experts. they all tell us this is code, read. the nation and the world are in peril. match not hyperbolic. that is a fact. they've been worn and us the extreme weather would get more extreme over the decade and we're living in real time now. gabriel, alexander reports from manville in new jersey. the bill were co,
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la stands out in front of his home on main street, sorting through this small mountain of what's left of his possessions. if everybody are so blind, it flooded off that was under what this is all based. this is generally everybody's based in his basement filled up with water. and it's now a muddy mess with what little he could salvage and it totally filled up with water and floating above the floor above us. when i 1st moved here, where color has lived in the town of manville new jersey, his entire life 68 years and seen 5 different clubs. this was the worst. you see the garages, but the belts, fine. yep. you see the black line? yeah. so this is this flood, the water level was here, like fire as bad as it looks from the ground. that true scale of the destruction can only be seen from the air. a few days ago. first, the town flooded, then gas line breaks, set some homes on fire in. manville population. 10000. its estimated 500 people are
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now displaced. after the remnants of hurricane ida came through and flooded the town over the weekend. in new jersey, 27 people were killed, making one of the worst natural disasters in the states history that came with a vengeance. the king so fast and so high. i've never seen it as high as it came. ever. i did your all my life and i've never seen the waters as high as they were. there was no warning. they didn't sound sirens, and so after the town started flooding many residents told me the weather is changing, and for the worse they keep telling us that a 100 years or 500 years storms, whatever they tell us. but is that really the case? you know, you look at, look around, i mean, this is 100 year storm and yes, it works on averages, but i think we're, we're exceeding the average quite a bit. scores are getting more and more intense in the area in
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a town that bore the brunt of a deadly storm with a long recovery and rebuilding process ahead. gabriel is on dough. how would you see that men to new jersey? mexico supreme court has de criminalize abortion. it rolled unanimously that penalizing terminations is unconstitutional. that now means courts in mexico can no longer prosecute abortion cases. it's a major victory for pro abortion rights advocates just as part of the united states . and i tough laws against procedure, money or apollo reports from mexico city. i stopped on an anti abortion activists demonstrating outside mexico's supreme court on tuesday. there protesting a landmark decision by mexico's high court, declaring that the criminalization of abortion in the state of while wheeler is unconstitutional. the unanimous ruling sets a precedent for the de criminalization of abortion nationwide. i notice the senior
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mistress, ladies and gentlemen, ministers today is a historic day for the rights of all mexican women and pregnant people from this moment on it will not be possible to prosecute any woman who has an abortion in the cases that this constitutional court has considered valid women's groups and advocates of abortion rights are celebrating. would they call a watershed moment? you will knock on the, you know, the, the court has spoken abortion should not be punitive. it should not be criminalized . this resolution will give legal recourse to women to they are in prison to regain their freedom. experts born that while the wheels are in motion for the d, criminalization of abortion across mexico, it will continue to inflame divisions in a country with deep conservative catholic traditions. with this decision, by the supreme court, mexico becomes the most populous country, inline america,
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to move toward the criminalization of abortion. mexico is also one of the most catholic countries in the world and conservative rights groups have vowed to continue to push back against the court's decision. on abortion. so the move in favor of abortion in mexico comes at a time when across the border us states or restricting women's access to termination, particularly texas many in mexico. believe tuesday's court ruling will eventually allow us women to turn to mexico for safe and legal abortions that women will no longer be prosecuted. that will need to all women women. but does not mean that services have to be provided. then we won't be expecting necessarily that we would find more active, so that make that they were in their own business. what would be a mexico's president, not an outspoken proponent of abortion rights,
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stressed that the decision was the courts to make and promised not to interfere. when we'll set up a little al jazeera, one, mexico city and strong earthquake has hit south west mexico. the magnitude 7 tremor struck near the beach, resort 50 of archipelago. one person was reported to have died in the state of colorado. it was felt in parts of the capital, mexico city, in north power, in some neighborhoods, and send people out onto the streets. britney spears father, his file documents to end illegal arrangement that let him control the american popstars life and money for the last 13 years. the thing has been fighting against the conservatorship imposed after worried about her mental health. she's denounced it as cruel and exploitative. ah.
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