tv [untitled] September 14, 2021 5:30am-6:00am AST
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course with mr. and mrs. enthusiasm, his criticism, his excitement, a symbol of france and back job for military grade celebrations and protests. the aga trail for being out work for 16 days, daring, and intriguing. some will admire it. others will find it pointless. but increase those world, creating the unnecessary with the ultimate expression of freedom. natasha butler. i'll just sarah paris. ah, this is edge 0. let's get around. up on top stories now. international donors have fledged, more than a $1000000000.00 for afghanistan. the un secretary general says he's concerned the country's economy could collapse. the u. s. secretary of state says pulling american troops out of afghanistan was the right decision, entity, blink, and total congressional committee. that state would have drawn in more troops upon
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taking office. president biden immediately faced the choice between ending the war or escalating had he not followed through on his b to commit a tax on our forces. and those are allies, what region and the taliban nationwide assault on afghanistan, major cities would have commenced that would have required setting substantially more us forces into afghanistan to defend themselves and prevent a taliban take on. taking catholics and with best prospect restoring stalemate and remaining stuck in afghanistan under fire indefinitely. israeli prime minister and folly bennett says he's had what he called important discussions with the gypsy president of the fact that his c, c, the leaders agreed to strengthen bilateral ties as they met in the egyptian city of sha machine. it is the 1st time and israeli leader has visited egypt in
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a decade. the international monetary fund is providing a financial lifeline of more than $1000000000.00 to lebanon, as grapples with a major economic crisis. the new cabinet has been holding its 1st meeting billionaire businessmen. the g mccarty took charge is prime minister last week of the 13 months of deadlock. apple has released software to fix the security floor that allowed hackers to infect i. phones and other devices without a single click from uses. research is say they capture the malicious code from pegasus spyware, made by the israeli company. n s o group was used to hack phone of a saudi arabian activist. the 2 targets devices through i message. those are the headlines we're back in half an hour right now. it's 11, east china has been very strategic in the way to expanding its reach in indian ocean. what is it?
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and we bring you the stories and developments that are rapidly changing the world we live in without the international aid. what do you think is going to happen? the afghan economy? counting the coast on al jazeera noon, but it's generally children as young a 10 most do the chinese from pull indigenous community like 13 year old, out of what things did you say that you think a kid shouldn't be subjected to 10 year olds going back from a 16 year old i saw we in the 2nd to special report, one or 18th visits, western australia youth jail and remote community to see what's being done to break
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the cycle of indigenous incarceration. the kimberly in the north of western australia is wild, rugged and remote in this region that many of the young indigenous inmates in the state prison whole harm this country up here signed by the aboriginal people. the 1st people who walk this land, they're an extraordinary group of people. but i do struggles. i do struggle just a big long have learned to that thanks. since the 1980s senior sergeant nebel rid has in aspect towns across the, kimberly range as everyone the kimberly's for
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a place of waking up here is exhausting some of them. bates up here for small playstation. you know, i can be the size of france. that's a big plate and you know, we sort of live out of the car. i, his birth police posting within fits way crossing an inland town on the banks of a sprawling river. now more than 35 years on his back to tackle a growing youth crime wave including kids stealing cars might be up to 7 or right juveniles in that stolen car. and that vehicle then rolling over, and children as young as chain in that vehicle with no shape bell or restraint on that scary. the senior sergeant always feared the next crash,
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could be faithful. sharing his concerns is dylan andrews and indigenous elda whose young relatives were involved in recent cassette. coca cola the young colace really after that excellent ad, really concerned with your life is so precious. once you've gone your call, these kids, i think they bulletproof. i think it's fun to get the stolen car. he also doesn't want them to start a cycle of imprisonment. united so many families that it affects yet we have to get things happening in in town, some activity for them. but senior sergeant ripped things, activities can only do so much to juice incarceration right for him. the keys to recruit the next generation of indigenous kids into the police for the men towards
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aboriginal police cadet to live in need by community like daniel carrington, like a smooth divers situation, a lot faster than weekend dealing with their own play to live, placing their own paper that's a win win situation. daniel's learning ab business as play services. and we're learning about culture and how to deal with aboriginal use at the same time. how good is that? then you got a minute placement. so we've got the offences on the assault and the, the trespass. we've got the victims on there. and the suspect ty daniel's only just started training and has a lot to learn. that he says his biggest challenges a closer to home. it was
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a bit hard at this point. people didn't trust me as much when my friends, my family close relatives took them hollywood to 3 months till i won't have any delay real. i said, i'm still the same person just in a 1000000. ah, daniel was inspired to become a cadet after seeing to aboriginal police officers run sports clinics in his community. well, i didn't know that there was everything copy, so it was stolen. wait a moment. that was a bit terrified of the police. when i was a kid growing up. yeah. i've seen i've seen everything i seen. i've seen people died. i've seen people drunk on drugs and all that. lucas not on growing up and thinking that flag normal stuff. that's what we're going to do when you grew up. back at the station senior sergeant rip shows me newly built cells were offenders held. the bars on the windows have been replaced
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with high strength cloth to make detainees feel less trapped. offender the child. what extra provisions are put in place to ensure that they're the judy of care? yeah, look a big list of things. but 1st and foremost that the parents and i was, i will actually bring parents in for them. we will try and get them out on their own bow under their parents. but unfortunately, if i have committed some crime and i haven't got those carriers out there with them, maybe this is the best place for them, for their safety, for the not always senior side. you rip says out here, the last thing police want is to fly children, 3 hours away to western australia is only youth detention center. thank you. hill to what she young. kimberly boy who's never been out of the. kimberly never been on
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an airplane. to same lady's family and the t is from the parents that shot some juveniles that have gone down there. i've learned more about stealing cars from other years. you know, that's a crime shy, and we don't want to have to have any juvenile incarcerated. but if that needs to be done, i'd like to see a center in the kimberley the conditions inside youth detention centers across the nation, his shock destroyer, despite international pressure, these gradient government deferred the decision to raise the age of criminal responsibility from 10 to 14, senior sergeant rip believes the laws should change, should they be incarcerated at 10 years of age?
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i don't think so. i don't think so. in his experience, youth, you have a lot to do with many grow up amid substance abuse, domestic violence, and social desperation, attending domestic violence, jobs of same kid, still playing in the sand pit when dad's attacking mom and then not even affected. it's like as if it's a normal die and you know that that's terrible. there's one particular incident he'll never forget. 4 years ago when i worked at a small community, i had a 10 year old girl that hung herself proof
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place a human were not meant to say that were not meant to be doing cpr live support on a 10 year old girl had is a 10 year old girl hang herself and she had the idea his years to did it when she was 14. sorry. the senior side just rip, believes the authorities because failed indigenous communities. we last generation there somewhere. we weren't doing things that were doing to die. 20 years ago. so we had juvenile offenders back then. the place went working enough with them. and now they've got children. and i think that the
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sufferings there because we missed those people back then on the streets of brood. there's no missing the human cost of those failures. the calorie patrol steps in to help the drunk and disorderly, who could easily end up in jail without the intervention. the right in the the biggest town in the kimberly broom is a draw cod for many indigenous people from small ap back to music where alcohol is restricted. here. it's easy to get the
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denies of father with the baby says he can't find his partner. so the calorie patrol head to his sport table where the mum and his family gathered to drink and gamble the team finds the baby's mother and takes her home along with other relatives. i live on the bob. we're a little bit a baby on board and as they arrived the situation, by the way. no, no, no, no, no, no. you don't really. right. the calorie patrol doff say this is
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a quiet one. we're going one way or in the life way didn't exist for prison would be sky high a lot more incarceration a lot more domestic violence a lot more problems in the homes. cassandra, callum runs the calorie patrol. i don't like to say it just says the pick up service we when gauge reconnect. we know your client and half the time related to them. so it's a personal thing as well. me aside from patrol these government funded workers help those one home and alcoholics today, they've organized a fishing trip to the coast to reconnect elders with the land. it gives them that respect for themselves, that they're not just look turn to that's just
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a matter of encouraging to find the fate again. as the elders cook, they catch cassandra, tell them about how they can access legal services and crisis accommodation. if i get you into that accommodation, they will expect you to do a program one day a week at the maybe that's a cyber show for the georgia morning for 5 to 3 hours a day program in. she says the criminal justice system contract families in broom away from their community because i need to attend sending mr. collins from grove, alcohol related incident. and they kept here for longer. and therefore, the children that's with them, they have to stay behind in
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towns across the kimberly indigenous children roam the streets at night board. an unsupervised recent data shows western straying aboriginal children a more than 30 times, more likely to go to youth detention the non indigenous kid. cassandra says they commit breaking the robberies out of desperation and neglect. other patrols run by aboriginal corporations focus on getting them off the straight. i use my house as a safe place for children, but 7 days we'll have to go to paris. i had a particular family that was in town. his parents were intoxicated down on the oval . i was at home, he did 7th, i came from that time to focus money for food. she says the tough, more in order approach only in trenches, disadvantage and criminal behavior. i have said so many kids can compare where i don't believe that should be the case. they should be somewhere in the
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kimberly's. we're not traumatized. the 2000 kilometer the way in corrective services, commissioner tony hansel shows us where these children in thank c. a hill detention center punch or hill covers the whole state of western trailing, which is 2 and a half the size of western europe. and we have kids from all over the site. i'm not present challenges replied, we have to these kids making sure that response in terms of needs to focus. so this is your main facility 70 percent of youth inmate in bankers hill are indigenous. we can't show that faces interview prison. film sensitive part of the detention center, a 2018 study banks to shield you, found almost 90 percent had to be in your logical impairment. in many cases,
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the result of mothers drinking alcohol during pregnancy. the problems don't in then . i don't have these kids that don't go to school. finding new wife and new guys. i mean, learning is a real challenge. very often we find kids from aboriginal communities, english. she's a 1st language very well. so i got like a logical mental health issue that we have to deal with. but all of these kids will be learning in one way or another. they just don't know their people sleeping on the say, look around them. no, so i'm going to close bang my gamma, doing nothing at all to make education more appealing. thank you. phil has even set up a hip hop academy way gun daytime. a component was wrapping, in this case,
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really motivated to come into this environment because if something really interested in on the music literacy and numeracy outcomes of improved significantly, that critic say it's not enough. and children identified as misbehaving, being isolated in conditions which international human rights groups call a dangerous form of solitary confinement. we don't have what people with solitary confinement. i people locked up for 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. we don't have that in our system. we do half day for the safety of individuals on the side of other people, tight people have then what we would call their mainstream living and put them in an area of the prison, this more regulated and more controlled. why is child the only solution for a child was younger 10? well, i think it's the last resort people that are here, the young people and they are young people, but i hear it primarily for quite dangerous offenses. and the government has to protect it. citizens,
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no child here is left behind or forgotten. we never write anyone off, whatever they've done to get in here. however serious their offenses. no one is written off. but actually the res, awhile forming indigenous inmate se the system failed. shanaiah ma was 15 when she was 1st locked up in banks in your detention center for knowledge in and out of bang show. they did know that i was on drugs and alco and my child was pretty serious. but then everybody got me that help that i needed when i got released and back in the community. and that's why i ended up in prison. i did not even do one counseling session adventure where i should have money. peasants came out there to say me would be detective about luck, other charges and that was it. shanaiah and her 2 younger sisters had a tough upbringing. she says they were removed from their mother by child
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protection officials. when she was just 9. i felt like i was betrothed. i'm a mom by everybody around me. it took a big tow on may because i had to look up the material supposed to grow up pretty fast. myself. never really had a normal childhood when i had to look out for them all the time. and it made me age and mature was born my years, which sometimes on the back at it, i just wish i just enjoyed one di paying as akin shanaiah and her sister's within split up and put in a series of foster homes across western australia. it was not nice to be in and out of 50 different hines, even more, you know, just being tossed around. you do feel, you know, nobody loves you. nobody cares. so, way, caseworkers, we wanted to be reunited again. what i organized was school holidays to go say
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but that wasn't enough to to inside bergen, you use the word empty just in. what will you missing? just a little thing. a little paper type of granted luck, a hug. cute little things that people take for granted. when she and i had turned 14, she began heavily drinking alcohol and using methamphetamines and using the substances because now i really thought it was healing me, but it really wasn't healing. i didn't realize everything. i couldn't handle the i exploded and i went blank, and i don't want to ever go through that ever again. she was repeatedly locked up in juvenile detention for assault while high and drunk one about tegan of mum about at the level my and i just thought luck. anybody was a 3rd. and i just thought to
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a point where a few people, enough in hospital because of me because of this. right. but i kept them side and that's not who i am. afraid. how much anger hadn't thought me luck on didn't know that it could exist in anybody. it took everything in early adulthood. she struggled to shake those demons at that time. just last night of systematic suicide. and during the process of me, you know, going to jo. um my, my daughter was removed from a kid. no. i just looked at that time like i didn't know what grading felt like. i didn't know everything that i was feeling it was and it was normal to feel like that. i didn't know it was
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normal. since getting out of jail, shanaiah has had a 2nd baby girl and dreams of a day when all florence, he will grant a costly eldest daughter when a bank of it's horrible that my name went to my mom when i went through it. and now my daughter is going through, what is your greatest be right now? but now that i don't want to go for all this for nothing. i want to use all of that sadness and use everything and like that, that's my motivational push. maybe more because of so many, not back it. thank you. healed outreach workers, megan crackling and jerry georgia off say the prison isn't providing enough support the inmates the reality is at least half of youth. detainees re offend and enter
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adult prisons. all the programs that are in banks at the moment, like any prison, basically recreation and some skill sets. but what they don't have on the outside is hope, what they don't have on the outside of support. so the recreation, the bouncing basketballs some minor education and the like. that's not going to change their lives. they're all coming in and out. their organization, the national suicide prevention and trauma. recovery project is trying to change that with a new program that provides them with having jobs or other assistance when they leave prison. we didn't do anything special or we deal with the young people and prisoners treat them like the rhine. if you kid sick, he wouldn't like them better, get the medication if they're hungry. if have them, if they need to have a talk conversation because they're not feeling well is fatal. that's where that
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assertive outreach comes into play that 247 with such high incarceration rates in western australia to demand for their services. both inside and outside the prisons doesn't stop. i can't tell you the last i had on the way to the family where incarceration hasn't been put in an issue. there's no hope. there's no help. there's nice support. and this is so problematic because until there is like i social support, more people are going to die. and that's the reality of what happens in western australia. we're very rich, tight. we are very reached, but we need to be rich all me. i astray lawyers, federal and state governments aim to reduce aboriginal incarceration rate by 15 percent over the next decade. witness ready is attorney general,
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an aboriginal affairs minister declined to be interviewed, but said in a statement that improved prevention strategies would help the state regions targets. but those like shanaiah, who've been through the system, believe nothing will really change unless public pressure on the gulf from magically wraps up. i just want other people out there like in different countries . but as when they come into our country, oh, it's a beautiful country, but there's a lot of damage here. do you have like don dies? i have my go, does the damage has been done. i've moved on from it, but that pain are still real and it's still like i just want to be a who are the people i don't think that this time will have a believe me probably will. i
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has to come a dangerous business one or one east and those who refuse to be silent. now says there, unprompted and uninterrupted discussions from our london broadcast center on our 20. it's one of the wealth, nice 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 known to many as the blood alliance. inside this in
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a la carte house part 2 of a 2 part investigation, people and power on al jazeera ah, an economy on the verge of collapse pledges of more than a $1000000000.00 that been made through the u. n. to help us down stuff. i. hello, i'm down, jordan, this is onto their ally from coming up in the 1st visit to egypt, vine, israeli prime minister and a decade. natalie bennett, host talks of gypsies, president of the sutton.
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