tv [untitled] September 11, 2021 9:00pm-9:31pm AST
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i never see no american dream in america. you just feel like your caged animal things on my child shouldn't go through the program that open your eyes to tennis. if you, well today on al jazeera, you want to help save the world, needs into your elbow. in the news, this is al jazeera ah, hello, i'm a mattress, and this is the news i live from doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. commemorating 20 years since the deadliest subsides on us soil, opposed to remember the victims of september 11th ceremonies are held across the
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country to mock a day that change not only the united states, but the world for power steering through scapes and israeli prisoners set appear in court on a man hunt contains for 2 others. and almost 30 years after he was captured, the man accused of being behind the killings of thousands of people, dies and peru. habits forth a dream or to manchester united for christiano and i was called twice in his 1st match for the class since leaving the house, his side beat new counsel in the premier league. ah, in, ah, it's been 20 years since the deadliest attacks on us soil. nearly 3000 people were killed and september 11th, 2000. and one combinations have been taking place to remember those who lost their lives and reflect and how the attacks reshape the country. and the world christian
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cylinder has more from new york. i alongside the memorial pools, which traced to put prince of the twin towers, family members of the victims gathered with leaders and 1st responders for what is now the 20th time. remembering the nearly 3000 people who died on september 11th, 2001 to decades is more than long enough for some attendees, who have no memory of that day to have become adults. but for many others, it seems like yesterday these 20 years have felt like both a long time and a short time. and as we recite the names of those, we lost. my memory goes back. so that terrible day, when it felt like an evil specter had descended on our world. but it was also a time when many people acted above and beyond the ordinary
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moments in silence. mark the time the plains hit. and when the north and south towers collapsed and michael into vain, silence broken by the customary reading of the names of the victims, a list so long it takes hours to complete us. president joe biden at ground 0, stood alongside to other former presidents. the horrors of $911.00 didn't end on september. $12000.00 more have died from exposure to toxins at the site. many of them, 1st responders, been 1st responders from all over the country have gathered to pay their respects, wendy norman as a florida firefighter who volunteered in new york in the weeks after our last deployment at 220 help me back. you don't want to call it a celebration. 3rd call the remember that's what we do. as a firefighter recently retired, florida. it hit homely and here in the pile. beside the brothers and sisters from
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all over the world that came, firefighter dennis shone came from new mexico to participate in a fundraiser. this is a day to honor ram. remember the guys, i mean they left 5 families, they left behind their brothers in arms, veterans were on hand to an honor of the thousands more who died in the conflicts triggered by 911 with the withdrawal of our troops service members from afghanistan. here recently it's really just kind of full circle and it's hard in shanks. so pennsylvania, the president and 1st lady laid reese were flight united. 93 was brought down on route to washington before it could hit another potential target. george w bush, us president at the time of the attacks recalled that day and sacrifices made sense . there were shot at the dash r dash d of able and gratitude for their wisdom and decency that are posted
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in the staff or 5 of the 1st responders in the mutual aid of strangers. in the saw, dirty of grief and grace. the actions of anatomy revealed the spirit of a people at the pentagon, still grappling with the u. s. withdrawal from afghanistan, the focus was on the victims and the day that started at all the united states. longest war now over perhaps, but not the vow to never forget the day that started at all. christian salumi al jazeera, new york. kevin, as owners, live in new york were working some images of some signs of, of the atmosphere that's have been going permeating throughout the day. just talk us through what's been happening, where you are in new york. first of all, the official ceremony. a few will remembrances now concluded, it lasted
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a little over 3 hours. it's been held every single year for the last 20 years. this year, as was mentioned, former president bill clinton, brock obama and current president joe biden attended as well as hundreds of other dignitaries, but also family members as well for many of those who lost their lives here. and it's not only 1st responders here in new york city, but also in new jersey across the hudson river. took part in some of these remembrance as well because it was a day and an event if you will, a tragic one that affect it. so many people right here at ground 0, but throughout the neighboring states as well, people that came in to help in those desperate hours and days and months afterwards . and the recovery efforts, someone that was not here of note, the former president donald trump, he chose not to partake in the official ceremony,
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but he did arrive here afterwards just within the last hour or so where he toured a part of ground 0 took some photographs with some firefighters and spoke outside of a police precinct here. but for reasons he is not revealed, he chose not to partake in the official ceremony. he did put out a statement saying, attacking president joe biden, for what he called was a chaotic withdrawal from afghanistan in the last couple of weeks. the bottom line though, is what you see at ground 0 on this day is, is something that's here all the time. there's been more than 50000000 people. they have visited the world trade center memorial and the museum that you're at ground 0 sense. it opened in 2014 people from over a 190 different countries that visited. and the thing that strikes you about whenever you visit ground 0 here in new york city, is how quiet it is. it really takes people in and it forces people to reflect
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people. not only that, we're here on that day or new yorkers or people from around the united states, but international visitors will visit again, more than 50000000 people that have visited this site since 2014, when it reopened as a memorial and a museum. and it's really shows how this tragic day in american history was really a tragic day in many ways. and you and world history by how many people want to come visit it and pay their respects. give it, we've got a sense from christians reports. there are some of the feelings of the people who have been attending the ceremonies given the fact that we are 20 years on from the original attacks. how is this permeating through us society now? well, it's a point of reflection. but i think you can point to a couple of weeks ago when those 13 american service members were killed by that
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suicide blast outside the airport. and couple out of the 13 service members that were killed that day. 4 of them were born in the year 2021 the very year, 2001 excuse me. they were born in 2001 the very year that the 2 towers that were once behind me fell down. so it shows you how this war, if you will, if the u. s. has been engaged in for 20 years. how up until the very last moment of us pulling out troops from afghanistan. there were 4 out of the 13. it were under one year old. at the time of september 11th, this is permeated through generations in the united states. and it's led to, of course, all sorts of ramifications. it's led to master valence in the united states. where does we know to wars and afghan scan,
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and iraq as well as counter terrorism operations in 85 different countries. it's militarized, a lot of things in the united states, but abroad as well. and well today is the day to remember of course. it's also a day to reflect on the ramifications of the september 11th, 2001 not only here in ground 0 but in pennsylvania, washington dc, but in the united states, and quite frankly, around the world. gabriel, thank you very much indeed. that's kevin alexander, who's talking to us from new york. well, as you saw earlier, president joe biden later, reese, 2 of those killed in chunks, fell pennsylvania of fishes joining us from their island. former president george w bush's folk in shang so suited vice president comma, la harris, george w bush. of course, the man in charge when the attacks took place. one of the themes that was common to both of them was the unity of the united states.
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exactly. i press the button is actually just less than the last couple of minutes picking a helicopter, he'll be heading to the pentagon, the thought of the, the sites that were impacted by the events on 91120 years ago. he spent some time here at the memorial. he spoke to family members of the 40 passengers and crew who were on board the united flight 93. as it came down on the field here in charlottesville and then he went and spoke to members of the volunteer fire department who were cold into action on that day. 20 years ago. it was a day that george bush obviously remembers. we all remember the pictures of him being told that america is under attack as he read 2 primary school children in florida and then realizing just how it was. he talked about how this is a special place. how is a place of coverage where there was 40 members of the crew and the passengers voted to take action to try and reclaim the flight. because they were aware of what had
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happened at the pentagon and in new york. and ultimately they were unsuccessful. george bush, you say, talked about how and medical needs to find a sense of unity. he talked about how politics become very divisive in recent years . and he said he didn't offer any solution. and he also also talked about the violent extreme as it both home and abroad. he said the old, all those little cultural overlap. you said they are children of the same fellow spirit and said it was us duty to continue to confront them. but he did call for unity, it was a call that was echoed by vice president. come, how does she said it wouldn't be easy, but then she said in history, things that have happened for america haven't always been easy on the days that followed. september 11th, 2001. we were all reminded that unity is possible in america. we were reminded also that unity is
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imperative. in america, it is essential to our shared prosperity, to our national security and to our standing in the world. and by unity, i don't mean uniformity. we had differences of opinion in 2001, as we do in 2021. and i believe that in america, our diversity is our strength. me. the plane that crashed and shank spill was headed for the capital. the hijackers already use the auto pilot to program program in the directions to washington, d. c. and george w. bush said that though is in the capital or unconscious that to the bravery of the 40 members of the crew and the passengers who decided to try and take back that
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flight. he said the cottage is more common than you would think, he said, but it does reveal itself and often reveals itself in splendor. he talked about how the families had more for so long. but he said this with an order place, it's a place where the american fight back against his war on terror started. he felt that it was important to be here to mark the occasion on the 20th anniversary of the 911 attacks. that is, gabriel said, sharp, not just the united states, but the entire world as alan fisher speaking to us from shank. so in pennsylvania, alan, thank you very much indeed. well, at a set of money at the pentagon, us defense secretary lloyd austin, paid tribute to the american soldiers who died since $911.00. we know that you carry pain every day. we know that you bear your losses. not just at times of ceremony,
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but also in ordinary moments of absence in quiet minutes that can seem to stretch on for hours. all of us are here because we remember and i hope knowing that is at least measure of comfort or for more on the legacy of the 911 attacks i speak to bloomberg columnist, bobby gosh, good to have you with us on earlier in the day we heard from a president george w bush saying that to be the subsequent events following the attacks on the twin towers and the pentagon and in pennsylvania had been debated. he said, where do you stand on the effectiveness of the so called war on terror? well i think there are 2 parts to it and there is a short, shorter part was between 911 and the and the events leading up to the end of
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2002. and then you had the war in iraq and everything that came up with the war in iraq to me is the dividing line in the discussion. the debate between all of the events that the base between 911 and 20 years later, i think until the war in iraq we had to pick up on a, on a theme. from the previous segment was not only unity within the united states. there was a unity in the international community. the world rally behind the united states ought to be events of $911.00 that was horror and repugnant, spelt towards the terrace attacks all over the world. and countries that didn't normally regard themselves as allies of the united states. the project was important to show that solid, dirty, and show support. and that support was been converted into an alliance that went to war and found the people to try to beat. and
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before for 2 years that i think it's safe to say that that sold identity remained. then president bush decided to change his reason. but she would warn iraq and that unity, global unity that was behind the united states, began to fray pretty quickly that after. and so i think it's fair to say that the president printed away ram moment of international unity behind the united states. it is fair to say, of course, that there hasn't been a significant so called terror attack in the united states since 2001 to some degree. is it fair to say that they're the ongoing war against terror? that umbrella, that covers a multitude of different types of a symmetric warfare and different types of operations. but it is actually successful except for the very high profile distractions, if you like,
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of, as you said, the iraq war. but also of course, more recently, they hurried, removal of us and, and other western troops from us canister on. and i had a very long conversation last week with ali. so find the former f b i agent who was so important so, so much a part of investigations into 911. and he makes a larger point in which i support which is that just the have not been attacks on the, on the american home. but there have been many, many, many more attacks against us interests and the interests of american allies then, also against people who the united states are not necessarily regarding. the big point is that terrorism, this particular brand of terrorism, is now with us almost as a fact of life that was not true before 9. and had been an escalation, been that had been the attacks on the american embassies in africa. their happiness
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on the u. s is colon yemen, and then the 911 seem to be the high watermark for these terrorists. we are no longer at that high watermark, but there is a no intensity if that's the right expression. but there is a steady drumbeat off terrorism threats and actual terrorist attacks that picks pick around the work all over europe. i live in london, not london experienced it. europe, paris expedients, everywhere around the world out there are terrorists attack. so the war interior is nowhere near concluded. american interests are not yet fully protected, and certainly the interests of american allies are not fully safe from this kind of terrorism. so we're, we're nowhere near concluding that warranty or the president bush launched shortly after 9. well the gosh is a columnist for bloomberg and we really appreciate you being with us and just so thank you very much. indeed for your time of the $911.00 attacks lead to
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a 20 year war in afghanistan as us forces another allies sought to target. i'll call you to fighters along with the taliban, which was accused of harbouring them. tens of thousands of afghans were killed and many lives were turned upside down. shall strife of reports from couple and people's hopes for the future. insult, whose homes was destroyed during fighting between us led forces in the tolerable 40 years ago. his brother, one of his songs, was killed. he and his family have lived in this camp for internally displaced people in cobbled and ever since he blames the united states and its allies for the pain. david jord. yes sir. locals coming at us in the past 20 years. we've suffered so much that at times with hardly been able to eat for days. all africans have been through terrible hardships, not bombardments, fighting our house is destroyed the war last, not so long because we are africans. and we will fight for our country in central
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cobble today, totally bon fighters, god form of government buildings and abandoned foreign embassies. the challenges the movement faces after what it describes as victory in a fight for national sovereignty are immense. it's been 20 years since the $911.00 attacks and the soon after us that invasion to hunt down osama bin loud and remove the taliban for power. then followed the taliban describe 2 decades of foreign occupation. the foreign forces have gone metallic bound back in power. and the un says that afghan stan is facing a humanitarian, an economic catastrophe. this is the old american embassy once a hub of cia and military planning, one of the most important centers of us foreign policy in the world. now, it's just an empty shell. come, it ghoul was 24 when us led coalition forces invaded. he is scared about the future
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holds. so look, i look at mobile in the last 20 years, my hopes changed, but now they've been left behind all afghans. so we'll get close the rest of the world when the americans were here. but now we have to wait and see again what the future will bring. despite his doubts, he says he wants the world to give the tale by chance. mistletoe taliban oh no, no. oh my life experience only war i just want to sleep with ease. i just want to wake up with no fear. i'm tired of saying good bye to my family as i leave for work . afraid i'll never see them again. this is one of many graveyards on hillside surrounding campbell. here are buried. some of the estimated 50000 afghan civilians killed in the last 20 years. well that, that is our goal says he also wants the international community to accept the taliban. he wants education for his children who are born into war. he wants the
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chance for them all to start their lives. again, just off al jazeera, cobble. the situation of canister has been on the agenda. talks has been cut off foreign minister and his russian counterpart in moscow. the, to discuss how to coordinate their response other and russia is agreeing on the necessity of moving to help them to support the african people. and also we see it from our perspective that humanitarian assistance need to be independent from their particular situation over there. for the palestinians who escaped from an israeli maximum security prison are set to appear in court after days on the run that have more protests in ramallah and solidarity the escapees and all palestinian prisoners protest to say inmates or facing collective punishment. after the 6 tunnel. the way out of gilbert prison on
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monday among hunt continues for the other 2. hurry false at reports from west jerusalem. around 5 am local time on saturday. israeli counterterrorism units arrested to more of the 6 escaped palestinian prisoners in laurie park, east of the town of nazareth. a tip off from a local resident, reportedly led to the capture of mohammed al are de a member of palestinian islamic jihad. and zachary, as who bady the highest profile, escapee of formerly of photography armed wing the alex, a martyrs brigade. bady is reported to a resisted arrest, but was unarmed and overwhelmed. an image released by his where the police showed him with a bruised face. all 6 of the prisoners come from in or near janine, in the north of the occupied west bank mohammed al art. his mother reacted to his arrest lives. i want the whole world all organisations to stand by him because he's a hero. he's my son. i want him out, i wish for the best the him to be released. late on friday,
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2 other escapees were captured, yucca country and muffled al are they said to be the masterminded. the escape. all 4 detained without a shot being fired, palestinian on the factions, had warned retaliatory attacks if any of the men were harmed. the arrest alone triggered sizable protests across the occupied west bank. from garza, a rocket was fired, intercepted by israel's anti missile system. extraordinary escape through a shower room floor into void space under one of israel's most secure prisons. was an enormous embarrassment for israel security machine and celebrated as a victory by palestinian israel's effort to reverse. it has also been huge for the men were serving life sentences for killing israelis to babies on trial for similar charges. the israeli government warn that they may have been planning fresh attacks with help from the outside. as it played out, the men appeared very much on their own and were captured without the kind of bloodshed that many feared might spark abroad around
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a violence that said the hunt for the remaining 2 men continues. and palestinians have been angered by abroad, a crackdown against prisoners since the escape on monday. this remains attent situation. harry force it, i'll just hear west drew some. so i had, and i'll just show, of course we're going to tell you about the conference for a multi $1000000000.00 industry being hosted in iraq protesters ons, giving up the fight after thailand is prime minister survives a 3rd confidence vote and a formula one all the drama from the sprint race at the italian zone, pre more than that later in sport. ah, ah, hello, thank you for joining in. we've still got a slight shamal impacting areas of the middle east. so through q 8, the ne, of saudi into cats are, were seen that sand and dust kicked up,
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but i want to take you to pockets on a lot going on. these clouds here have unleash just heavy amounts of rain for the horse. i want to take you right down to the ground and we saw flooded out roads. here was enough to also disrupt transport services and still more to come on sunday, pretty much stretching from floor to lama bod rate through to the border with are gone. it's done, but further toward the south, it's settled karate at $35.00 degrees. then we're going to crank up your temperature up to $41.00 on wednesday with an abundance of sunshine. pretty average temperatures. however, for turkey is stumble at $26.00. okay, maybe a degree or 2 above where you should be through the tropics of africa, some pretty good rain falling through the democratic republic of congo toward the western portion of the country. and as we venture a bit further toward the south were seen just a week disturbance pull into the western cape. so cape town, we'll see some showers, temperatures looking good in johannesburg. 25 degrees. but unfortunately for cape town, because of this south wind,
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your temperature is really stuck around 15 degrees, which is below average. that's it for me. we'll see you soon. the join africa line to trade and investment in south africa. inter african trades gives you access to more than 1100 exhibitors and 10000 visitors and buyers and more than 5000 conference delegates, more than 35 countries, participate in trade and investment deals with 40 $1000000000.00 as business and governments come together to explore business and networking opportunities at the international exhibition brought to you by the african export import back at the premium partners. the atl 2020 was transforming africa around one percent of electricity globally is consumed by data centers, many of which provides remote storage facilities or what is also known as the cloud . i'm in no way to see how one center is. honda think the energy of the fuel wants
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to store our digital information without a heavy comp and footprints, and i'm going to build off the north coast of the u. k, where the global green energy revolution taking on a new elements rise on alger 0. 0, a you're watching, how does it reminder of our top stories? this collaboration is taking place across the u. s. as it remembers nearly 3000 people killed during the 911 attacks 20 years ago. one of the memorials is in new york, with the twin towers of the world trade center were hit by 2, hijacked, famous joe biden. and several former us presidents of attended ceremonies to
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remember those who lost their lives and september 11th, 2001 biden isn't expected to make a speech. but alice called for national unity in the face of adversity. george w bush was president at the time of the attack and says he shares the subtle people who lost their loved ones. he spoke with a memorial in shanks for pennsylvania, praising veterans who fought in the so called war on terror. i want to bring in stephen's sort of, it's in new york, new york, new jersey. he was a supervisory special agent in the new york f b i office on 911 and he responded to the attack. it's really good to have you with us. and i'll just say to so thank you very much indeed. i was doing a quick calculation. if i understand correctly, your office is maybe just 7 blocks away from the twin towers when the attack happened. just talk us through what your memories are of that day. so on that day it was a clear day, it was a tuesday morning, i went to the office that day and.
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