tv [untitled] September 11, 2021 9:30am-10:01am AST
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and many properties are being reported and all becomes taken refuge conditions here . last time, idea. ah, no, i'm emily. i'm going into. these are the headlines own al jazeera israeli police of quarter fir, the 2 of the 6 palestinians who escaped from a maximum security prison on monday to more remain at lodge. the men had escaped by tunneling their way out of the bow. a prison in northern israel, but y'all break from to the large scale man hunt by the israeli army and law enforcement agencies. harry force, it has more from west jerusalem. one of them was, zachary is a baby who is the highest profile of the 6 and the only one, not from palestinian islamic jihad. he was a senior commander in the alex martyrs brigade had
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a pretty check it and colorful life, both in israeli and palestinian detention up until this point to the last 2 years or so has been in this very high security prison in july and joined the other 5 in the so before this jailbreak it was he and mohammed our day who discovered at around 5 o'clock this morning the world food program is wanting nearly all afghan families are going hungry with many going to extreme measures to survive. the un says 90 percent of the population could be living in poverty, but in a year it's calling for urgent efforts to boost the economy. international aid has been cut since the taliban took over the new york times investigation is costing down on the target of the us drone strike on cobble in august. the report claims 10 civilians were killed. the military says it was targeting i phone its been 20 years
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since hijack has flew planes into the world trade center and the pentagon. in the u . s. i remember in ceremony has been held at the pentagon to honor the victims of the 911 attacks. nearly 3000 people were killed, telecom 1000000000, and nat geo, mccarty has become lebanon's, new prime minister. the previous government resigned after the port explosion, more than a year ago. morocco has a new prime minister abilene, a fuel tycoon, as is her notion. he was appointed by the king on friday, 2 days after his party, one harlem entry elections. a french court has charged the former house minister over her handling of the pandemic on years bosom is accused of putting lives in danger. those are the headlines continued watching witness right after this the september 11th
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day to reflect day to be thankful. so years of service, man estimation are getting ready preserved lives on the line to protect his country here and abroad. and from those are in the military man, i want to tell you, man, thank you for your service. thank you for your say. my name is damien smith. i will be 26 the monday day that la damian, who is always like, i don't know, stand out by what you said. i know the damien, i speak to him every blue moon, a little gentleman, the day me. are you doing real good? he's mary. i think he's in a military now. crazy crazy picture. why i can, i still can't believe like to this day that i was
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a part of that much as you try and downplayed. you know, that's still major barn american history. they want the me, it definitely makes me feel on edge that there could be more taxes. that nature bit happen pretty much on a know where everybody was caught off guard, they scared the hell out of a man. they realized that were both honorable and they were free. it made him read how safe we really are. we not that safe terrorism against our nation will not stand. let me being in the class with the president on 911. i do believe that that was an influence for him joining the army. i don't
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think i am a private 1st class in the united states army. i joined the military because they help motivate you to become a better person. will not go down without a fight. i will be playing up or which is the enemy is very important to learn how to do this. mainly because once you get overseas, you will have the opportunity to make a mistake. meaning you can lose your life. hey smith. so they have already stepped off where to go and set up for that. okay. my name is don, 1st class drill, guys, manage logistics. support for all separate trainees, for the engineer, regiment of the united states. army there's ever
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a terrorist attack again, we're here, we're training, we're ready. when 911, when that happened, i felt vulnerable like i couldn't have done anything at that point. i wanted to be a part of something bigger and make a difference for a country. the me, my rac deployment, it was scheduled for 12 months. the, i was blown up 4 times and that deployment i was in countless amount of fireplace. the last i squad leader, my team leader. and my best friend, i think that was, that was probably the the worst part is losing friends. y'all set up, go goes on, i may, let's kick it off. the losing
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my life overseas is something i keep them back of my mind. i knew that coming into the army, that eventually at some point in my career, i happened to feel like i'm in no rush to get deployed. but if the opportunity presented itself, i'd be willing to help our country do whatever it is that they need of me at the time when i deployed i would rate this experience, leach and i the thing. and i'm still me now live in reopening of races. that's
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a pretty bo statement to make birth scared americans the pictures that were shown of the individuals that caused this brown people. and then over time, all people to come will look as we went from cherish to muslim to metric to 100. some of americans on that that from within the, this is just not white americans anymore. they can't stop the changing of america. they can't stop them. browning of america, their white house is going to be the and house pretty soon the my name is lazara brock and i'm 24 years old.
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and lazarus being a good father. he was a very serious little boy. lazarus, very, very sweet. he was such a nice. he was very nice, a nice boy perfectionist. lather out. oh my god, he's the thirty's parties. every year. to me, the world was my house and a little bit of that schools while growing up i didn't have the standard american childhood of playing with the streets with the other kids because in large part in speak the language and i was essentially a foreigner in this country despite being born into a big cage, $150.00, the president visitors because of our rights improvements in our literacy rate. all good things will come to you if you work for them. if you believe in yourself, the job lot you know. hi way know
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why? oh, well, my parents put a lot of risk to ensure that i was presented with the most amount of opportunity in my life. the stop paying their mortgage on their house here and sir, sorta to pay off my college tuition. what laugh at i accompany is a career some guinea in korean for years, a chemical engineering which typically takes $5.00 to $6.00. he start working almost immediately. there's a little bit of traffic, okay. how i was a little wor, work with british complaining. he's making all the decisions, i think so much the latter now is helping his brothers and he's helping off which is why yes, the door, the lie on getting away. well, you know the door,
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i handle the finances of this house. this house is actually my house and i, i bought it and they can live in here with me. check not being the main breadwinner, the family actually being the engineer. i make more money than both my parents who i know exactly what they're spending at all points in time. and i make sure that all the bills are paid. how's the dancing? i think. yeah. ok. and 12323 together. that my family was very lucky when they decided to immigrate. my parents immigrated from cuba early on to mexico working with my mother, surely upwards and going to united states. so it's a, it's a series of very fortunate events that led me to being born here. eventually let me do where i am today the how medical and route and everything for us represent the beginning of the new life. the future of our children. the american did seem to become
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a little more paranoid as resulting. we do believe that that they did have a negative impact on america's view on immigration. ah, you find it very unsettling. that in just a few years, my parents would not have been able to immigrate to this country. i would not have probably been born to the same circumstances and i would not have been presented with the same opportunities. i could been a completely different individual she blanca ronnie, want to take a moment to talk about the gun violence in our community. says when a parent loses a child, can imagine that. but you also can't imagine what it is when
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a person has to envelop himself through a tragedy. but then i've seen it 1st hand to triumphant spirit where they didn't let that circumstance dictate. but the last going to be my name is megan dance and i'm $25.00. meghan, big. my friends. oh yes, i'll make indeed. yeah, go we, we had a few differences school and we always kind of get is truly like one of the 3rd type corals. looking at his football. make me want to be kidding. you. beautiful. everything is going to be okay. i wanted to be a singer and actress. i really filling out the diva school
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was just now for me. like i am got kicked out a book of middle expel. i was in relation my baby father for 4 years. he beat me. for 4 years. honestly beat me pregnant and i use the choke. me pull my hair, punch me. he then beat me up. i had my baby in both my digital bit and i had a seizure think he cared about. and of course my he did not give me. it was me, my baby father in my ex boyfriend. they just started fighting and i try to break them up. and i end up getting shot if so the legs and all one. and i even saw the amc say
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please don't let me that. i got a baby. i don't even care about nathan. nope. i just care that i just want to make it for my baby. somehow would never walk again. so much. when i got home, i want to be in a be all the time in dot to say if you don't get yourself out a bit every day you go care yourself. ah, i just woke up and i said, today you going to get off of me and you're going to do something productive today
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. everything about being disabled is part. just imagine you walk in all your life. and then the only thing is i use ah, my knees are you? i watch her from monday to friday. 7 to 5. is i i'm glad it gave me an opportunity to watch because i'm disabled. you know, you know, happy with things. maybe people think i can do stuff it able body, people can do and i can what
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i want to be in life is a paralegal. or i want to be advocate to help other women and been through domestic violence. life is real and hard times will con, times will come make you want to say, i quit. ah, you hold down, you hold on because you can make it. and if you feel like you need to talk to somebody to call me in the jess everybody's fighting for that merican dream, a piece of the past. no regular life has a tendency to beat you down. it does give you barely make it, you know, i'm saying you're struggling just to pay your bills. i know that can be overwhelming, but i'm telling you, do not give up on that trade for the american dream.
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to me mean and even plain feel basically doing what you why being paid very well for i just want to live as you want to be alive to make it to see my grandkids. you know, i just want to have a want to be happy. what is the american dream? what is the american dream? what? because i mean, i never see no american dream in america, and i don't bid in america my life and i never see no american dream. so what is the american dream? who have made it possible? what is that? we try to make it to just regular regular, everyday struggle that be unable to make sure we have a place to be able to eat and that
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life is re live through these tragedies surround petune, you know, to create strength, character message and to overcome obstacles. to ah, september 11th. in the historical day. i missed that occasion. but it's important. every reflect on that day we all came together and worn. it was no black when the light was yes. we was all unified for that one moment. the humanity in as you still there, the been thread of human decency isn't everybody turn a national tragedy? that's the good part about american best, real fast america. everybody wants to see all the time.
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ah, well, i'm in new york city here to visit the memorial museum for the 911 tragedy. if i'm going to be honest with you a little summer about it, it's really tragic event and i know that i'm free. it's really tied to the events. it will be really interesting to see what kind of like see what they have. i saw memorial and all the different faces. i saw police officers and saw the fireman lives husband. here's a victim who could not have been more than 5 years, or the tragic event is an incident that expand upon all kinds of cultures. all kinds of why see all kinds of families. so i was pretty emotionally moved by it and i can my thoughts get going back to that photo brush or anything to
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myself. i was around that age. however, there still been was a part of the south tower, the side of the south tower, the same, the same tower that was struck when i was reading to president bush touching is profound. you feel it immediately how strong things and you can see it visually. how was that? like, nothing. the enormity of it is hard to describe to me . when i saw that photo was, was a bizarre mix of various different reactions. took me back immediately. but it's, it's rough. a pretty big job. story the
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the me i was doing this memorial didn't change my life thinking it all. in fact, if anything and reinforced my, my mindset and my pride that i happens. but at the same time it doesn't go with me . a sense of optimism for this country for this country now in the face of adversity. and also that we're going to become greater than we were before, despite trudge beds, that might happen. life happens and we are in 1000000000 people. we learn and we get up and we move on. when things get tough in a wheel,
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. 7 me last row. ah, look at you. i did say it again. i gave it to me. i mean, i mean, i'm not gonna make it okay to everybody. i love you more. more. it's so good to see everybody. we have an attachment and that's something our chairs for the rest of my life. the relationship that we have. it will never go away.
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you know, we've all had our different paths in life. some days we're good. some days we're not good. nobody told you. the road would be easy. you are just beginning to live. but as life goes, are you going to find out every day brings the change in? it also brings an opportunity. fees your opportunities? yes. a man fair to me. how he is now. when you were this time, my secret went along, cried i take a look around, ama theda and get him back. oh, oh
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oh, okay, i want to thank you for tuning into the show. before i go or let you know that you, julie will come in the morning. i believe. whenever you go into trouble, you somebody call your mom will tell you, let me just tell her my phone to enter ryan w i b 17.5. last name will be right there. we're ready to walk. y'all. we don't get to say, oh oh oh and don't ashamed. documenting to decade in one of the most embattled corners of the globe. a child that can stand 20 years of war,
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follow me from boyhood to manhood, a life that has no, no peace shaped by hardship, resilience and adventure. the unique film that captures the conflict in a way it has never been seen before. witness on did, there. did you know you can watch the re place streaming line and i do 2 channels plus thousands of our programs award winning documentary and you get to choose subscribe to. you choose dot com. forward slash al jazeera english. when freedom of the press is under threat, you know, you just con, thought genuinely about your thought toward the government step outside the mainstream. there has been a implement here just some of access points that shift the focus,
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the pandemic that's turned out to be a handy little pretext. the prime minister clamped down on the press covering the waves. the news is covered the listening post on just hello good to see you. here's the weather story across the middle east. we're still dealing with that slight shamal down the golf, so that is swirling around the sand in dust worth in northeast of saudi rate through to the gulf. so we look at the forecast in doha. seen those wind gusts about 40 kilometers per hour on saturday. they die down a bit to 35 kilometers on sunday in our temperatures pretty close to where they should be for this time of the year through pockets sun thunderstorms. for the north hor, through to his long abide and just a scattering of showers in the south at times effecting karachi over to turkey. we've lost the thunderstorm so we get into the sunshine on saturday with a hive. 24 degrees still a brisk when for the eastern med. so nicko see a has
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a high of 35 through the tropics of africa pretty much from this corner rate here. so we're talking gap on equitorial guinea rate through to cameroon. we're going to see some big storms set up here. further toward the south. we've got some con weather in temperature as well. we're starting to dial them up so we look toward, as in bob boy, bill away. 023 degrees, but give it a few days and we'll really crank up temperature looking to get yet 30 degrees. by the time we get toward tuesday with an abundance of sunshine, that's it for me and joy. see you soon. ah, it's one of the world's most powerful and dangerous criminal enterprises, central to the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of people. and behind the death of many more. exceptional access to some of its key players reveals the inner workings of an organization telling the name to many as the blood alliance. inside
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this, in a la carte house taught one of a key part investigation, people and power on al jazeera. ah, israeli forces the rest 4 of the 6 palestinian prisoners who escaped from a maximum security facility. ah, play you watching al jazeera alive from jo with me for the back, but also coming up a new york times investigation reveals the us may have taken the targeted and a worker in a jones striking, a guy that killed 10 people to divide in administration vaccine mandate.
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