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tv   [untitled]    September 12, 2021 7:30am-8:00am AST

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it's not, there is nothing like cinema. cinema is like when you go to the cinema, you see it in a room with people, different pages, different come back down the different culture. you know, other social event like a cinema was film festival organizes agree and say this year's event with it's covered restrictions and social distance thing was the real proof will come when all these films are released to the massive kimbell al jazeera venice. and before we go british teenager am i read a can who has won the us life and women's singles title becoming the 1st british woman to lift a grand slam trophy in 44 years. read. kenner defeated canadian layla, fernandez 6463. the a 10 year old didn't lose a said the entire tournament. ah,
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this is algebra here in a quick look at the top stories commemorations have been held across the us. am i 20 years since september live in the tags? us president, past and present, joined family that ground 0 in new york to remember the victims. a memorial was also held in shank, so pennsylvania to match the moment when united airlines flight 93 crashed into an empty field. their president joe biden laid rates at the ceremony to honor those killed the f. b. i has released the 1st day classified documents about the tax documents described contacts. the hijackers had with saudi associates in the us, that the 16 page report offers no evidence. the saudi government was complicit in the 911 plot. my candidate has the lightest from washington. president biden
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instructed the justice department to look through the documents of the f. b. i investigation into the attacks over the next 6 months and released to the public. what they think could be made public. now this is a 1st tranche of documents to be dropped released on the f, b i's website to a short while ago. and it's 16 pages. it doesn't provide any real revolutionary material. and also it is very heavily redacted. so very difficult to understand exactly what it is saying. health authorities in columbia say they're worried about a potential covered 19 surge next month. columbia has run out of vaccines and many people with the 1st or the currently unable to get a 2nd shot. it comes as a delta variant is on the rise. those are the headlines state change for the stream, and i'll be back at the top of the hour with more news by female how many nukes is too many new america has in many ways driven the arms race parties are much more
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like the british parties down to the there are fewer regulations to own a tiger than their our own a dog. how can this be happening? your weekly take on us politics and, and that's the bottom line. ah . hi, i'm from the okay, welcome to the bonus edition of the stream i night to think of it as a theater on call. when the cough comes back and performs another 3 numbers in this show, we bring you the special conversations that happened after the live show has ended . coming up, the growing humanitarian crises in somalia and the life changing work of women for women international in afghanistan and around the world. first, garza, the everyday struggle of living on the blockade rarely makes headlines in a post show discussion gets almost shaka. mama shall be a wasa abdur rahman said,
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personally about what it means to lack freedom of movement, have no security and live amongst the destruction of for was his own mom. my colleague, the human rights watch research just sit in the gaza strip, who is educated as one could be works for an international organization. never left garza until the age of 31 until a couple of years ago when we managed through various channels to get her permit to leave gaza. you know, for the 1st time and i distinctly remember talking to her, you know, her 1st time out and she described feeling like, you know, somebody who had been left let out of a prison like a bird that was sort of exploring an entire world. and it just struck me this reality that you know, just because of where she was born, no matter she pushed every possible wall as a woman, as someone born in gaza as a palestinian to reach the limits of education and yet still for 3 decades of her life,
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she was unable to leave the 415-4511 kilometer piece of land. and that's something we've been able to help with a little bit. but tomorrow when she moves toward next step, she goes back to being locked in that prison. and that's somebody who has access. imagine, you know, the 2000000 other people that don't have that sort of access wafa. the issue of the floor is i had lots of stories including my own i'm, i garzon my family there. so when you talk about the for. ready the war is on god, i actually i had my family there and i needed to to connect with them. i live in ramallah, living and my love, that doesn't mean that i had the ability and the freedom of land. many people might think, expand 11 years, unable to actually do that. i'm old. not even to go to to other cities,
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let alone go to god. so after 7 years, i got my address change. i managed to get to not put it under jack to find it. so i went through egypt to god's law and i. so my family and my brothers and sisters off the 8 i've been years married. they have children that i have never met face to face. and i think the last time i was in god's i was in 2015. i still have my mother said that it's so much fat, like are all of us of experience around the world being separated for family, for 18 months, maybe still separated from family because you can't travel because of the pandemic . but he's like, oh, i don't see my family for 11 years that he's not normal. wafa. you just shrugging about it. i had my share of
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trying to deal with that and every time i would bring it up, i wouldn't cry because i wouldn't say i'm all that it because there was something very important to me during this this period. i'm very, i was very close to my father. they couldn't see him and 11 yet. so when the 1st time we mapped for me, i saw him for the 1st time that he could do read the old. and i didn't want to see that i didn't want to be so this is like, i think, many palestinians, they have this experience whether they are the way thing. you are in drama yard, in the so called palestinian territory. but, but you cannot really go and see them and we're talking about less than one on one and a half and drive in a corner. and you cannot. and this is not because i don't have the money to do it
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or i don't want to do it for, you know, if it's not like like the situation right now. so that was like, this is part of, of the story. and then i got married to this guy was palestinian was born in jordan. now he's living my same experience by the way. he doesn't have an id, it wasn't granted. and i the why the rate is because the radio they control the whole lives here in the west bank who, who gets that mess will get it cetera. so now we're waiting for the family re unification this year. he will complete 10 years of imprisonment in a lot. it's. it's almost 3 is repeating itself. like i have a daughter. my parents never. so my family in golf but they never so she's here
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with us. so the issue of movement, the issue of family, you see cation, it is very personal, but, but that why i'm dealing with it may be in a different way. i'm almost on daily basis. i'm connected to god, because of my offices there. we've covered stories of women and children. we worked a lot during the radio war on gods are it? may we have lots of stories, human stories that we try to focus on. so when you look at what, what my family and my friends and, and the people of goals up, i'm going to do, i know pain can not be there, but then you look at yourself and you look at them and then you see if you've shine like i can not really talk about my stuff putting in front of
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a family that last point it family member or the members or the children or the parents. or maybe that has that data file that order that is funding 25 years imprisonment. where lot that lags or their eyes, we have what company, lots of stories like that. so i think you shall use shadow a chunk of your personal life and i on. i appreciate it. when i said, tell a personal story. you literally told a personal story, mahmud, what you want to wrap before we wrap up to things that she would allow me one personal experience linking what was said. so as a 15 and i wasn't born in gaza, so i didn't have an id. i was an unpublished union for a long period of time because eloquent, you know, who gets an id and who doesn't. so when i finally got my id and i got a scholarship to study for my masters and after the 2014 was i want to show you the
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meaning of continuous trauma. and when i went to the u. k, i had 24. what is the city hot water? whenever i needed freedom of movement, you know, going to going to scotland on the other places. and back in guys. i had my 4 months old son. who now is the, you know, the kid nice with the sounds of bombs. my wife, my mom and dad and they didn't have that luxury that i was giving. when i sent back to god, i had more today than when i list because i continuously keep thinking of the things that i had was going to them. and the last conversation is one international guy. you know, this ask you this young senior and what are your dreams? so they say simple, you know, i want to get a good education to have a job, to marry that love to buy a home,
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to have children and live. and then the national guys in the senior and i was asking you about your dreams. like you are, this is very entity that we are living in, and that's part of the deeply empathetic mom. we shall be a senior program manager for medical aid for palestinians recently on the stream. my colleague josh rushing house did a discussion about the increasing number somali people facing hunger and homelessness due to complete an extreme weather after the ball cast josh off the gas. how the involvement of other nations has impacted somalia. so my now over the past 30 years has really been at the receiving end of this year. actual invasions, i would say, if you really, as, as one of the countries in the region that has come sometimes to somebody but assume,
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regarded by the so many people as an invasion force really come into the country once or twice, twice constant trying to. ready fix the politics as you would say, because they, they say we are part of a problem to the security of the region. but this really negatively affects the security situation, the political situation. and so my mom and has helped the community of the region anyway. can i also just add to something that i think oftentimes gets missed when we do these kinds of discussions and that is sort of the, the human talk about all the use humanitarian crisis. i remember looking at that footage of that elderly lady who you know, clearly is in distress. and as a somali, it really broke my heart to see those images all over again. because i remember interviewing these the, you know, the, the fema somebody, novelist, 195. i think it would be exactly 10 years ago, 2011 and basically,
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i remember his saying something that really stuck with me, which is that it's really hard to be dignified and i'm quoting him now. it's hard to be dignified when you're being rationed. and i think it just seems like somalia, as for molly's, are constantly in the state of being rationed by the international community. and as somebody's, i just find it really heartbreaking because it's really hard to be dignified. like you said, when you're constantly at the, you know, the behalf of others. yeah. what you said during the show stuck with me about 10 years on what was 10 years ago. what has changed. okay. and what can we expect to be different between now and 20? 31 he you know that the fact that has been happening even before state collapse. i think the aid industry and this cyclical draws and you know, the weak government has been some think it's been something that has been ongoing for, for 2030 years now. so really, like i said,
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it's up to the so many people to really work together politically does work together so that we can eventually such take responsibility for the humanitarian crisis as well on governance. but also now with the international community more interested in, you know, the conflict, say this a hell or even a few other things to be including. i think it's really time for somebody people to take on responsibility. just simply a lack of opportunity. where do you have a common saying that when the animals go, you sign up to be a refugee like that, that seems really problematic in some way to create an area of climate change. you know, you become so kind of a normal top which is shouldn't be, it shouldn't be a normal pattern and maybe just read those on the, on the industry. i mentioned i've been around here for, for many years now. but on, on that side of things are changing and we are trying more more to work with local partners and to put more emphasis on the local initiatives. those are put more
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responsibility on the autonomy in, in local talk to. so, guys like me, probably will, slowly these appear to be different. some of that is who there's a kind of numbness to the somali story to the you hinted that if you looked at all of these factors, if you put them in any other country, that international community would be going crazy. like to respond. but because it's coming out of small yes, like somalia again. and that surely is got to make i hamper efforts to help there. i would assume that people are near to the suffering of somalis up. augusta went for me. this is, this is going to, it's the constant, the constant name, but they always say, you know, somebody is a resume and i think this is part of the problem, this labeling of all resilience. and then forgetting that, you know,
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things actually real problems that the people are grappling with. and i don't think it is really responsive to them at times. i don't think i wanted to mention it, but the funding for the humanitarian response to see is around 41 percent and i don't think about will be. ready that will be covered by by many so and you know, i didn't want to the corporate 19 the security challenges just gotten in the cloud of i've got over everybody. i think it's a really. ready read crime for, you know, a different way of looking at somebody. how does the cloud about the industry in effect, somalia was one of those connected i think is really a panic within and i think i international community circles on what exactly are we doing in somebody and how are we delivering this aid? and jeff just mentioned there is a need for us to have to flexible disbursement to local community based
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organizations. of course, with the proper accountability measure is a lot of money spent on somebody in just a monetary system, but also in the security. talk about 2000000000 a year and if you go, if you look at it on the ground, that the impact of that, of those resources or if and those resources strictly down to the so many people or making any difference. it's very hard to stay. so they need to be a different look at how things are definitely and i forgot, i think, to what happened there. i think that i see now looking back at their plans and you know, try not to, to make it seem to take with samaya. but also what united be some that bob and it's leadership by looking at it kind of stan and the way the taliban have been able to over run the country and take it back in like couple of days and they're basically sitting there thinking if we just put our time, still, the international community will just eventually go away and we can have it all to
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ourselves. so i went in there so additive, then narrative time and again that you know, a foreigners will always need and the way they have, they have placed this adamant is that this is actually an invasion of course. and it started in 2007. i mean, it was trigger the 2007 by the invasion. and then you have the amazon forces. we have approximately 900000. i'm some african union forces and so my lawyer. so i think it is a lot of comparisons. when you look at it that way, but i think there's also lessons to learn from the supposed to somebody government into so many people that you know, the difference between an extremist terroristic group and the been as, you know, an organization that was looking internally. and so they, there's a very interesting lesson there for us as well. if you miss the somalia episode or any stream episode go to stream out, is there a dot com to stream the stream whenever you want t? usually in your average interview set up, it's the journalist who asked for guest questions. but when norry adams,
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the ceo of women for women international appeared on age a streams instagram life series. she flipped the script on josh, rushing. just you yourself has been a lot of time and i'm going to stand. i know what, what do you think going on? it was heartbreaking to me. i've been getting messages from every i cannot ever known or it was saying, you know, help me out, brother. they're going door to door looking for us and i've done specials on interpreters who had been approved for their visa to come. and then we're stuck in a bureaucratic limbo for years sometimes while the taliban chased them. and that was, you know, i was 5 years ago and it is the sad part to me is how predictable all this was. i mean, i think i put in a report in 2009, someone saying that the u. s. may have all the watches, but the taliban has all the time is just waiting just waiting for the us to leave.
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and so everyone knew the us was going to leave. i don't see why they didn't have like an evacuation plan on the shelf 10 years ago on how we're going to secure a call. we'll get everyone there. and then we're going to have time to get everyone out before you know the us back out. a called like all that should have been plan years and years and years ago. for us to be surprised that the taliban went to the country so quickly. it's been evident. it's been obvious that every time that there wasn't some surge western forces that tallman took over and, and had control. and so this was going to happen. and it's, it's just shocking to me and it's not like combo that hard of a city to hold in the sense that there's only so many roads into it. there's mountains that go all the way or around it. they couldn't help the city for a little while, while they got had time to get people out. it's like there was no intelligence whatsoever. it was, i didn't, i think the this goes beyond my place isn't as
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a journalist probably, but i think what you had at least the u. s. military is generals are steep and. ready telling their bosses that they can achieve what they're being told to achieve . and they're validated on that for years and years and years. and so you don't spend 30 years getting the validation per saying, yes sir, will make that happen to them. be able to turn round and tell your boss, i don't think that you're looking for can actually be achieved, where they could have told their boss that generals us generals good to told their boss. no wait. and it was 7 and 9 in 2010, you know, but instead what you have was every 12 to 618 months, a new one, come in this at all. we got a new plan this time and i interviewed them. so what's different now than 5 years ago? it's the same thing. oh no, we got, we got it figured out this time, but that will be gone. 12 months at a new journal will come in and have it all figured out, you know, and it's,
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it's just so predictable. it's like watching a ball. does your move toward you an inch of time for 10 years and not getting out of the way? which is kind of like climate change in the same way? you just see this massive been coming so predictably and so slowly and no one getting out of the way of it. and it's so frustrating as a journalist to. ready just keep doing the same stories over and over and over until it actually happens. and then do you do the story like well, yeah, that's what we've been saying for how many years. you know, i mean, it will have frustrating as a journalist or took to watch this happen and to actually give a damn about the people on the ground. and i think it didn't have to be this way. you know, heartbreaking. and i mean, that's going to stand papers, i haven't read it myself. it's. but i've been watching the news clips about it and you know, it documents how the u. s. investment was so that we knew all along that it wasn't
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too. so not only is there the failure to prepare, but the gazillion that was spent was spent badly. so anything was left behind. and so all of, and it's documented, and i think, but that's the important thing. journalists, you play an incredibly important role to show us those facts and we as citizens, have to put on the pressure. so that's what we need to do. we need to, to, to shine a light on those facts. use those facts to say, this is unacceptable. this is absolutely unacceptable, and we need better from our government and, and also we're just going to have to act philanthropic lee and insulted air di or selves. because while we try to get our government to do something better, and i mean, this is different about the papers in the pentagon papers in the 60s. like the pentagon, new 165, and i wasn't wonderful. and most of those deaths occurred and 686970 like i don't
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understand, they say journalist, right, the 1st pass in history, right? we then it gets added it, but it's just really frustrating when everything seems to be repeating and such a predictable and miserable way that we can't do better. i mean, look, that's why, you know, i am in the, the civil society sector is that i, you know, governments do act in the interests of their perceived interest of their country perceived. cuz i don't believe this is actually a new but they really and so i, that's why i'm in the, in the nonprofit sector, that's why i'm not just in the, in the movement sector building movements because i governments act in their perceived interests. and we need to support citizens, we need to support families, we need to support women and we have an opportunity to do that. so i spent a lot of my years as an advocate and i think advocacy is still really important. but the reason i left pure advocacy pure, you know, trying to get policy changed was i thought, you know what,
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and it was congo they did it for me. and if i had been in afghanistan, it would've been africans in, in the 20 years, it's going to take us to get a democratic congress government with the right policy. women's insights are falling out right now because what is being done to them. so let's provide some practical support even while we try to bring about the structural change, which is absolutely necessary. structural change. but right now it feels really, really difficult. and i think a lesson is, you know, it, it isn't, it isn't, however much you, if you're an american, however much you love your u. s. government, the u. s. government going in to determine and other countries futures is not the way. the way is to invest in the citizens of that country to build their future because it's nonsense that you know, all people, all people want as we're just talking about, they want to invest in their families. they want, they want,
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they want peace. and so, you know, we can trust people that they will build a better future for all of us. if we invest in them. not have it be our government said, determine the future of another country that just shows except from a riveting conversation. you can watch it on the a stream i g tv page on instagram, and that's i show for today, laurie adams and the work of women for women international in spot are closing, slide shows, africa, women at home and abroad. thanks for watching. ah, [000:00:00;00]
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cruise challenges, attractive circumstances pushes forward. let us step into uncertainty and experience the happiness of the moment. let us persevere. the 4th al jazeera comes international documentary film festival, sorry a vo and don line from the 10th to the 14th of september, 2021. a j b dog. don't be a take the worst possible material uranium. grind it into dust comparable flour and make a whole lot of it and put it into the face that people live picking up in the line . for many people, this is a silent dealer. what does it make you feel like you feel like a murder?
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we have created an enormous environmental disaster and investigation. south africa, toxic city. on al jazeera, preventable disease account. 15 to 10 children in the election throughout the childhood education teacher. ah,
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i oh, [000:00:00;00] i marking 20 years since the deadliest attack on us soil, so ceremonies the health, to remember the victims system not to live in a chance. i

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