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tv   [untitled]    September 12, 2021 8:00pm-8:31pm AST

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we know how to get to places that others cannot. i was just thrown dear guy by the police on purpose. if i said i'm going, i'm going to be fine or the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. ah, cut our foreign minister visits afghanistan for talks with the new town about leadership and the former president common cause. ah, i'm about to say this is 0 live from don't have also coming up. iran eases restrictions that imposed on international nuclear inspectors. following crucial talks into the 1st documents related to the f. b i's investigation into the 911
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attacks and d, classified as the us commemorates the 20th anniversary to prominent women and launched their campaign to become frances. first female president, marine the pan from the right and promised mayor and he dug the life. i cut off foreign ministers been holding talks in ghana stone with a taliban leadership mohammed, ben dockman. donnie is the most senior official from any country to visit since the group takeover. he also made form president common cause i am a former chief executive, abdullah abdullah auto has helped in the reopening of couple airport alarming flight to resume charles try for it. has the latest from couple this is the 1st time we've seen any actual foreign dignitary come and meet, officially and meet the members of the interim taliban government. we understand
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that culture foreign minister met with the interim prime minister molar hassan acount as well as interesting lee, the former president, how many calls i am. abolla move of course was the former chief executive officer of afghan. it's done and somebody who paid such a vital role in those piece negotiations over the last couple of years that have been a couple of tweets with respect to what is being reported as to what was discussed in those meetings, coding to a local news agency here in cobble, they saying that there were a number of important issues that were discussed and interested me at suite, from the taliban spokesperson in doha. so hale shaheen. he said that these talks, it also involved discussions of about attracting more humanitarian assistance course. we know that the countries have been very much linchpin between the new
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taliban government and the international community and trying to come to some sort of resolution with respect to beginning to end this crisis. something that the humanitarian world, the un described as potentially being a humanitarian catastrophe. at the moment it's all about getting as much aid into this country as possible. around stepping up cooperation with the world's nuclear watchdog having imposed restrictions on inspectors since february, the international atomic energy agency will be allowed to install new memory cards at key atomic sites and be able to continue filming. and when comes out of what's been described as constructive talks with the agencies head, raphael grossi, he's been on his 1st visit to the since abraham rice became president last month. the continuity of the operation of the agencies equipment here,
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which is indispensable for us to provide the necessary guarantees and the information to be a and to the world that everything is you know there and that we are going to be able to assist also to assist iran in its future negotiations in the context of the jason be health care about we have agreed to have the technical team come to around to replace the memory counts of the surveillance cameras and type required actions for the cameras. well that all cameras world powers try to salvage the iran nuclear deal around the sign, the agreement in 2015. it was designed to limit turnarounds, nuclear ambitions in exchange for sanctions relief. but in may 2018 then president donald trump withdrew the us and began re imposing sanctions. in november 2020, the i a reported that the ron stock pile of enriched uranium had reached 12 times
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permitted levels. organization, sister, and has limited access to its nuclear sites in february. i mean by us is the iran project director of our international crisis group. he says a political solution is the only way forward. this was this happening because next week there is a board of governors meeting at the a and without the minimum level of cooperation from iran. it was quite possible that the europeans and the us with push for a center resolution to penalize iran. and iranians had threatened that if there is such a resolution, they would not come back to the table to negotiate a way back to the jcp away. which meant that we would have a major nuclear crisis on our hands. and i think this minimum step that iran has taken now defer to the crisis, but it's definitely not going to resolve it. look, the reality is that iranian limited access because of the fact that the us withdrew
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from the date, the p. o, a and reimpose sanctions and the europeans were unable to really help iran weather to storm of us sanctions. and then there were, is really sabotage of iran nuclear fits. and it has been a fascination of the top nuclear scientists. so these are all connected, but the reality is that there are 2 issues here. one is that iran has limited access as part of retaliation for j. c. p. away. but iran also has some outstanding questions that it has to respond to. i have investigation about the task nuclear activities and those are unrelated to the that's the limit. that's the minimum level of inspection that i will have to do. but the problem is that these issues are interconnected and without a political deal to resolve your, on the nuclear band of it's quite unlikely that the technical issues would get resolved to women have kicked off their campaigns to be francis, 1st female president. now him the pan from the far right. national valley party
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address supporters in the city of isis. she's expected to be the main competitor for president emanuel mac home, though he's yet to announce his bid for a 2nd time protest. mayer and he does go is a favorite to win the socialist party nomination for next year's election. so that then i thought i call on all french people who want to commit to france, and i call on all those who believe in our humanistic values. and in our future, i call on you citizens who want to save the planet. you want to build a strong and just republic who won't france to become an example once again among nations. together, let's rise and with courage, determination, with optimism and generosity together. let's offer a future to our children. showing this pure ascii says, a dog oh, his current job could work against her presidential bid. being the mayor of paris. obviously, it gives her a lot of visibility and, and importance. but it's also a handicap because outside periods people are resent the centrality of the capital
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. and they represent the what they see as oregon's from parisian. and so being the mayor of paris is not necessarily the best assets. and it's so very significant that she made or declaration of candidacy, nothing but in a small model city in western frog, in the working class city to show that she's not the candidate of the parisian. she's a national candidate for all the french, so she's putting forward her personal story. and the daughter of the working class and spanish immigrants is made to become the mayor of one world class capital in the country. so that's the kind of achievement that she's promoting. saying i want everybody else to have the same kind of opportunities that i've had. and she's having a program that very classical, in a way for
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a socialist party against the inequalities or more education, more social assistance for the poor and so on. women in eastern democratic republic of congo say they are trapped in a conflict between armed groups or targeting them with sexual violence. catherine, so i met some survivors in boone, near me. this woman has recently been raped by 3 armed men in have village near the border with uganda. she's one of many newly displaced women caught up in a complex cycle of armed conflict. violence and insecurity in providence was concealed identity for our protection. but when they had guns, when they came and broke into my house, my children started crying. all 3 of the men raped me. they also killed my neighbors. children. stories like has in this part of the democratic republic of congo are uncomfortably common. good, and i was too weak,
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but i had children to protect and we needed to flee. so i took my children and we started running through the forest. some well wishes also helped us to get to bonia how worked is give her emergency medication to protect her from getting any sexually transmitted infections. that last then receive a 2nd victim. on this day 7 women reported they'd been rigged. they found us as were escaping from our village. i had my one and a half year old baby on my back. they killed her with a machete and rape me in front of my brother and father. and i killed them. hundreds of women and gulls seek help at this hospital run by our women's rights organization, called the female fully diary for integrated peace and development, or software patty. it helps the displaced restart their lives and those who have
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been raped to get free counseling, medical help, and justice. no ally for says it's a crisis. the majority of about a 1000 patients they see every month are victims of sexual violence. now i don't know that who knows their rates by armed from all sides, including government soldiers and police who are supposed to protect them in town. and as i bonia, there's also a lot of sexual violence within the neighborhoods. and that camps for just place people, this is the largest ibp, comp, it province. and most of the people who are here from an area called dougald, where the conflicts started in the focal here. well women and girls who've been draped get to meet health workers and joined support networks to try and deal with that trauma. so here they get to talk about the experiences and life challenges and the need to protect each other. they tell us that even at the camp,
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they're not entirely safe. catching soil al jazeera, the to re province, the democratic republic of congo. so i had, and i'll just have a call for aid in sudan after flight, destroyed dozens of villages during the rainy season. and a tennis retail, the british teenager is a huge surprise that the u. s. a . hello good to see you from doha while we're getting into that season again. this was the highest temperature i could find registered on earth register, that's the key word 46 degrees. and this is actually below seasonal for this area. in iran we should be close to actually 4950 degrees. and that is this story across the middle east, in some cases, temperatures below where they should be though,
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however, that's above average with a bit of a slight shamal here. like sapir go into pakistan. it's dry in karachi at $36.00 degrees low hor, starting to dry out after the flooding rains. we saw there and i think we'll see sunshine really for the next several days. we'll throw in our next rain risk as we head towards thursday, about a 40 percent chance of showers after turkey and a bit of cloud cover. we'll hang over it's sample on monday, but still going to see the sunshine with a high of $26.00 degrees, which is pretty much where you should be for this and the year, tropics of africa, there is a zone i have concern about in it says, we had toward gabon equitorial guinea, a camera room rate into nigeria. we're just going to see bursts of heavy rain in time for the south is scattering of showers from the western cape pulse to the eastern cape johannesburg. 24 degrees. but your temperatures are going to drop. we go from the south, went to northwind on friday. c. as in the
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i can unlock my phone with my face and you can access your bank account with your voice unique algorithmic measurements of us that are revolutionizing the process of identification. biometrics, a fall from person, for convenience and seeming infallibility. comes at a most crucially, our privacy in the 4th of a 5 part series, re addresses the appropriation of our most personal characteristics, all hail the algorithm on jazz. o a reminder of our top stories this iran is using some restrictions in the world. nuclear watchdog following talks inter from the international atomic energy agency
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will be allowed to replace memory cards on monitoring equipment at key sites. the socialist mayor of paris has heard intention to run for president and next year's french election. and he had divided provisions with her policy to reduce con numbers and make the city greener cut out his foreign minister has been holding told for the taliban leadership a couple had been under lock one out on. he also met former president common cause i am a former chief executive abdullah abdullah autonomy is the most senior official from any country to visit since the taliban takeover model uncovered. and is head of policy analysis of the out of center for research and policy studies. he explains cato role in the rebuilding of i've got a son under taliban rule. i think this is somehow a continuation of active or the forgotten issue. you know, it started actually a few years ago and it,
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it ended with agreement on the was with all of us done now, is continuing this all by trying actually to reach out and try to bridge this guy actually between party run national community trying to make money by like more flexible and more responsive to the demands of the international community concerning the formation of the government concerning women and politics. our society concerning the role of minorities and all these things actually would make it easier for us to compare the international community dock probably by has change and that is time that i have to deal with it as the legitimate government kind of stuff. i believe this is what company is trying to do right now. is very sensitive to any sort of interference and i forgot what it is. especially now probably by and see is like it one does. it will it for 41 just over the past 20 years? well, i think we can also, on the other hand,
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said that that has some sort of a liberal authority bank because as you said, it's trying to make this pro cool approach with the finally. but if you show some flexibility in terms of the demands of that community, we will be able actually to get to some aid because at the end of the day party. but we won't actually do the cartridge. the word is over. now you have to come to the right now, and if you want the country without having much problems, you will need to have some sort of international cooperation and helping you out at the country. ah, the 1st secret document of the investigation into the september 11th attacks has been released after a long campaign by the victims, families, the nearly declassified papers come on the 20th anniversary of the attacks and
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described contact with hijackers had with saudi associates in the us. but the 16 page report offers no evidence that the saudi government was involved in the plot has been joe biden assigned an executive order to release the documents a week before the collaborations wasn't. jordan has more from washington d. c. one of the main groups, 911 families united, released a statement overnight saying that while the saudi government has constantly denied that it had anything to do with the planning or the execution of the terrorist attacks in new york city in pennsylvania. and here in washington, d. c at the pentagon, that taught in their reading of this 1st document, that it couldn't have been a coincidence that people who worked for the saudi consulate in los angeles, among other places, had repeated contacts and provided assistance, food, housing, transportation, to 2 of the hijackers. now if all mahdi and colored armies are,
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this is a statement that says that the saudi government should basically take responsibility for the fact that it's officials of facilitated the murder of nearly 3000 people. on september 11th, 2001. the families are course pressing for more documents. it's not clear how quickly these documents are going to be released. the us president joe biden recently signed an executive order ordering that some of these materials about the government's investigation into the planning of the attacks be made public. if nothing else to try to relieve the anxiety that these families have been suffering for the last 20 years. of course, just the release of this one document does not mean that these families are going to withdraw their lawsuit against the saudi government. trinity, as president says, he wants to push through changes to the constitution, said,
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took control of the government and dismissed the prime minister in july, trinity as powerful labor union and the biggest party in parliament oppose any attempt by the president to suspend the constitution says, says he took power to tackle economic and political crises, fido ali rosa is editor in chief of miss college, which is a news and analysis website. it says president says next steps are unclear. we had seen an advisor of his speak to the process a couple days are going to just that the president was willing to suspend the constitution and to to, to have a new one written and to submit that referendum of last by the present. to clarify that he would respect the existing constitution, but he wants to be amended in terms of amending the constitution, it seems a bit difficult at this moment. the constitution currently says that amending the constitution would require a parliament to, to vote on any amendment by 2 thirds majority. the president, of course, has frozen the parliament initially that it was freezing the parliament for one
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month period. he's extended that indefinitely since then. so it's unclear if he's going to be making amendment on his own, whether they'll be a committee that cut up. he has said that very soon there will be a new government. 3 that he's going to be putting in place that is going to be pointing out. however, he's been saying that for quite a while, we still have not seen a lot of clarity on that. there is certainly a lot of popular support for the president. we saw jubilation when he was preaching the parliament and dismissing the previous government, the parliament being as effective by many critics in many ways, even as seen as quite a corrupt institution. when the president lifted the immunity off the parliamentarians, legislators, many people saw that as a positive step that the parliamentarians should not be above the law that they should be judged by the same laws as average citizens. so that certainly quite a little popular support for some of the moves that the president taking so far, but that a lot of people are sort of waiting and, and trying to see where it's going from here. there isn't a lot of clarity hasn't been given conferences. he hasn't been talking to tunisia,
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journalists need to press, i give him just a few interviews to international outlet. happy going and 5 slugs in sudan have destroyed dozens of villages. more than 70 people have died. agencies are asking the government to urgently help people to safety people walk and reports from zada in flight. now state one of the worst effected regions. this is what's new ella village in sudan state of white mile now looks like from above. it once had more than 80 homes, housing, dozens of families, but heavy rains in the east of the country resulted in flash floods that left the houses in ruins. le, right, gone in like these houses belong to me and my children. then the waters came at night about a week ago and started in the village. they just moved in, but now everything has gone. i've managed to save this cupboard, but it's destroyed. i don't know what will happen next. the only way to reach new ala now is by boat, and many of the villagers are using them to pick up whatever they can salvage heavy rains into, down and neighboring. if you mean more water is flowing into the nile river. a few
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100 kilometers away. people here say it's the worst flash floods they've seen in years. more water came from the valleys and stream than previously. the rain thought it in late july and dozens of people have died. and more than 800000 have been affected across the 15 of them. 800 states. a more how much was as how the floods destroyed his village of alba now about 15 kilometers from nowhere. now he had to carry his sick mother on his back to safety zone with us. it was better if we've lost everything. we've lost our homes. i found lance that most of us suddenly came out with what were wearing did. we don't have anything in the government has yet to provide us with any aid. and those villages are not. the only wants to suffer more than 50 villages have been destroyed by heavy rains and flash floods in white now, states alone in the past week, thousands of people have been displaced as a result. and many now live in be open. many like basic necessities such as food and clean water and with more heavy rains expected in the coming days. their
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concerns about the spread of what's a bond disease. those displaced in the state have called on the local authorities to provide assistance, but they say they have limited capabilities and need help from agencies. while i have, let me know norman, one who have distributed tents by the are not enough for the people affected. so we need 8 organizations to assist us in the response because beneath a huge need for most ed may defense and additional attends. we are trying to help as much as we can, but the people affected too many with any high it in there are still weeks to go before the end of the rainy season. and the thousands of people displaced by the floods don't know how long they'll have to wait before they can return to their villages and rebuild their lives. he but morgan august 0 joe white mile in the number of new cases of covered 90 to me and more has fallen. but many patients are having
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difficulty getting treatment in hospital distrust of state run facilities has led some people to see vaccines on the black market. from st. louis reports cove at 19 patient of being treated inside his private facility. that used to be a boxing stadium. it was converted into a treatment center by a group of business men in yang gone. and his run as a not for profit enterprise. the idea came about as myanmar was experiencing its 3rd and most deadly wave of corona virus, which piqued in july general d got we saw that people are in trouble. they could not get a place in government hospitals and that have to pay a lot of money to go to private hospital. some died as they did not get enough oxygen supply off to the military coup in february. and the subsequent crank down on health care work is being one of the 1st groups to protest against the new rule . health services deteriorated or the way my during the 1st and 2nd waves, both government and private cove at 1900 facilities could help the people. but
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during the 3rd wave due to the politic situation, people cannot receive proper medical facilities even before the cobra. 1903rd, waive people didn't go to the hospitals for other diseases as there were insufficient human resources. many people also came to distrust state run facilities. this treatment center plugs a gap in the health care system, but it's not a fully functioning hospital. and patients who take a turn for the worse, we'll still have to go to a hospital. however, families who have relatives in the center tell us, they still rather send their loved ones here, whose name, i mean, we didn't want to bridge public hospitals. we have 3 patients home, we're not able to for private hospitals because they're too expensive. that's why we're here. for some, the distrust in authorities has extend it to distrust in the government's vaccination program. some are opting to purchase. india made vaccines on the black
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market. this post on social media is advertising a vaal of vaccine for approximately $400.00 us dollars. 8 times its usual price, the latest available figures. last month's show that only 3.3 percent of myanmar population was fully vaccinated. military ruler, say they aim to have at least half the population inoculated by the end of the year, florence li algae 0. you can government's rule. i would plan to introduce more locked on to fight the cobra. 1900 crisis in england. housman, especially jeffrey says vaccine possible to get into nightclubs and large events, the scraps, the government says it'll instead rely on vaccinations and testing to keep people safe. putting the scholar from the scheme is going ahead starting on october the 1st festival. they said there's a lot of defenses we've just gone through some of them that way. we need to keep in place here because this bars haven't gone anywhere. the still a pandemic, of course me to remain cautious. but we just shouldn't be doing things for the sake
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of it, or because others are doing it. we should look at every possible intervention properly . but his teenager m right. economy has stung to the tennis world by winning the us open. she beat lina fernandez and the final to become the 1st qualifier to win a grand slam. david still supports ladies and gentlemen why, why do you want us women? it's about 2 weeks ago and already kind of begun her campaign to quantify her. first us open. she'd already but flights back to the u. k. but 10 matches later without dropping a single set, the 18 year old lifted the trophy in new york. i have no idea when i'm going home. i've got no idea what i'm doing tomorrow or any schedule. i've got actually no clue . and right now, no carrying the world, i'm just loving life. the final get it back to the teenagers, read it kind of against 19 year old canadian lane, the fernandez, the 1st grand slam final men's or women's to be contested by 2 and seated players.
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it was a tory contest in the early stages, but ready kind of came out on soap in the pressure moments sharing the skills dispatch more experienced players throughout the tournament. she took the opening, set 6 games before the into the 2nd, the no matter what fernandez through, it's a read, it can have the answers. she got the crucial break and went on to serve for the match. it was 3 point needing treatment to a cut on her leg. she held her nerve to wrap up the championship with an ace. but it kind of is the 1st to qualify ever to win a grand slam. and the 1st british women to when a major virginia weighed at wimbledon back in 1977, u. k. prime minister voice johnson tweeted his praise as to the queen and friends and friends, celebrated back in her home town. a 2nd. i'm in south london,
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including a former coach who told her between the ages of 6 and 10 team and they got it done in the late or clone and she was really unbelievable. read. it kinda will jump from a 150 to number 23 in the world rankings on monday. and she walked away with a witness check at $2500000.00, nearly 10 times her entire previous career earnings. david stokes, out his era. ah, this is all just here. these are the top stories called our foreign ministers being holding talks with a taliban leadership in cub. old mohammed been a dock. my not funny is the most senior official from any country to visit since the taliban take over. gotta helped restore operations at couple airports which was damaged following the us troop withdrawal.

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