tv [untitled] September 20, 2021 5:00pm-5:31pm AST
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to read, asked lam is helping the pakistani community to find a voice. the stories we don't often hear told by the people who live them undocumented and under attack. this is europe on al jazeera ah, facing a life sentence. the man who inspired the film hotel rolanda is hearing his fate on terrorism charges. ah, i know about this, and this is all just a life and also coming up a gamble that may backfire unjust in toes old canadian. his vote in an early election cold by the prime minister rushes routing parties on course for a 2 thirds majority in parliament, despite losing some grant the communists. homes burned and thousands forced to flee
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a volcano on the spanish island. la, much a rubs for the 1st time in 50 years. ah, according to godly is delivering its verdicts in the case of the man whose life inspired the hollywood film hotel. rwanda. paul recess of again is credited with sheltering and saving hundreds of people during the countries genocide in 1994. but he fell out with the president and he's now charged with terrorism offenses. the 67 year old faces 25 years in prison, american lads joining us live now from work to golly, took us through what's happening inside the court at the moment. well, the judge is delivering that verdict right now in a court room inside this court house. they've been speaking a leg summarizing the prosecution's argument. then the defense to the judges,
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spoken so far. they both said that they think that recess to begin, and some of the other co accused should be found guilty, but we're waiting for a conclusive statement. so not meanwhile, the says to begin is not actually in there. he hasn't attended the court hearing for the last 6 months. he says, because the child isn't fair. it's not something that's been echoed by international legal observers. we've watched this trial and said that there are key irregularities. they've said that there is some evidence against recessive. again, that could have been considered, but this court hasn't effectively considered it, not one of the reasons it's come under a lot of criticism internationally. malcolm, how is this trial being viewed inside the wanda itself? certainly something that is quite difficult to engage good gauge because the
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country in which people don't really speak freely about about politics or their opinions on these kinds of issues. but full recessive, again, is say, really comes from, from hollywood to not move the hotel. rwanda in 2006 not store lot of international attention, a lot of criticism for this case ever since whole rest of the recessive again turned up here just over a year ago in handcuff, he said, and they supposed to say being kidnapped from dubai and brought here on a plane, the raw, the government suggested that he'd been deceived into boarding the plane. and this justice minister did tell out that the government had paid for that plane so murky circumstances and how he got here. they have many supporters to say a breach of his rights, and certainly that compounded waive his fame from that film from the mid to thousands of on a lot of international attention and criticism to this case. indeed,
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that's markham. what i'm talking to is from kindergarten and welcome. thank you. paul recess a begin his daughter carina can in by told al jazeera, the child is a sham. this burdick means nothing for us. our father was kidnapped, he was dragged across international border in violation of international law, tortured for 4 days, and then denied he's more, he's extreme rights. he was denied access to legal to his chosen representation and denied access to his case file, and then was held in solitary confinement for $215.00 days. that is a violation of the nelson mandela rule because holding someone at more than 15 days in salis amounts to psychological. so for us, this verdict is based on, based on nothing, it's based on the man who was kidnapped and tortured. additionally, throughout the duration of the trial, the co accuse actually said that they were forced and co hurst and tortured into saying false allegations against my father. so for us,
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this verdict means nothing. my father should not be rwanda released and allowed to come home voting on the way in canada. stop parliamentary election more than 27000000 people are eligible to cause it to cause its takes time zones. 5 minutes suggesting photo is hoping to consolidate his leadership with a majority for his liberal party. but he's being criticized for calling an early election during the pandemic. he's also facing stiff opposition and wants become a close race. well, that's cause life to jordan vance, who's in lawrenceville, forrest, jody. the key will be, of course, that the question of the panoramic, which is at the center of this election. i'm campaigning, but also a question of how many people are right. you're going to turn out to vote. well if any indication by this recently open poll here in montreal voter turnout is robust. certainly this is the crescendo of the 36 day campaign that has
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unfolded since the snap election was called on august the 15th by now the federal liberal leader just in judo. as mentioned, a too close to call dead heat between the liberal leader and his biggest rival. conservative leader aaron tool, literally tied in the poles early polling in canada has also been robust, turned out for advance poles and male in ballots. sitting around 7w2x7w eligible canadians headed to the ballot box. hopefully today, over the course of the 12 hours, the polling stations are open. i should note that there are a reduced number of polling stations across canada, due to the coven, 19 pandemic. and certainly there has been a lot of negative blow back pushback for justin trudeau and the liberal party for calling this election mid 4th way. but there have been some twists and turns for
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aaron o tool as well as the province in this country. that is the largest base of conservative voters sees itself in a state of emergency and alberta certainly a difficult time for the conservative premier there. jason kenney, who had a vote of confidence from era no to the conservative leader. so many moving parts here work over 19 is concerned, but when it comes to heading to the polls, canadians look confident and certainly elections, canada, that things up to be safe. we saw in the us presidential elections. of course, the 1000000 ballots became a key issue during that campaigning. how much influence do you think that the male in ballots are going to have in the canadian campaigning? well, the expectation was that male and ballads would be in high demand. posters have told us that and election candidates in fact, told us that mailing ballots were not requested at the high numbers that they had
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anticipated or perhaps were concerned about. however, those ballots cannot be accounted until they are collected. and the voter can be checked from the balance that are kept in these polling stations versus those coming by mail. so there is no duplication of course, so that might draw things out in canada, it is not a popular vote, it is a 1st pass the post vote. and traditionally in elections in canada, it is fairly early on that we realize who is the best candidate or who is declared . the prime minister oftentimes before voting is even closed beyond the manitoba border. as we had west to scott joined alberta and british columbia. so we could go late into the night and maybe even into tomorrow as we wait to find out who will be in the prime minister's office. well, jody, i'm sure we're going to be checking in with you as those votes come in over the next few hours. but for now, judy vents, montreal, thank you very much. indeed. rushes broke from running parties own course to retain
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its 2 thirds majority in parliament to most of the votes counted, but it has lost some support compared to the previous election. the opposition says fraud was widespread. most kremlin critics were barred from running my year after a year of crackdowns founded smith has more from moscow. it was widely predicted, the united russia would hold its super majority. the election commission, the head of the electric commission has been speaking and she says that these elections, i've been more open and more fire than any other elections i've had in the last years in russia. this will come as a surprise to the opposition, many opposition groups and an independent polling observing group who saw lots of evidence of balance being stuffed ballot boxes being left on attended overnight. the elections were held over 3 days. unusually, this is because of try make them covey safe. so there was no long queues of people, but in fact, the world long queues on friday on the 1st day. and again, observe
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a said this was clear evidence of people being forced out to vote on that particular day. and then these other days where ballots were left on, the attended overnight with the possibility of them being tampered with. we also in the moscow area have still not had the results of the electronic voting. electronic voting voting on line was widened across russia this year. but in the moscow area, we still not have the results and you would expect them being electronic they. those results would be instant, but the house been a problem with the way this system in moscow is working and they haven't seem to be able to resolve how to fix it yet. in fact, the system says 104 percent of people eligible to vote voted well you can have more people voting than there are registered voters. so that a lot of suggestions that this is not as free and fair as it was. and of course, as it should have been, people have been killed in a shooting. and this,
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i 1000000000 city of palm alone. gunman was detained after the attack of the university campus. as motive remains unclear, students were seen jumping from classroom windows to escape. thousands of people have been told to leave their homes after a volcanic eruption on the spanish canary islands. it follows a week of increasing seismic activity on the island of la la palmer, 500 kilometers off the coast or west africa. i do, simmons reports day to and it's relentless. the 1st full kind of corruption in the canary islands to 50 years. people living on the small island of la palmer had already been on high alert after more than 22000 tremors were reported in the space of a week. but just days ago, scientist has said they didn't believe and erupt was imminent. now look at the skyline really got to little for i don't know how to explain it. it was powerful,
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powerful to see a sudden explosion like that. if we were on orange alert, there were loads of tremors, but being an orange alert. i couldn't imagine it would all be so sudden this rupture took everyone by surprise and by nightfall on sunday, its ferocity became evident, molten liquid, shooting hundreds of meters into the sky, and then snaking towards lower land. the spanish prime minister petro sanchez, flew to the canaries. having put off a trip to new york, where he had been due to attend the un general assembly, are more simply miserable compliments. look in the chill right now. we are keeping a close eye on the fires that may happen as a result of the, a russian we will deploy, not only the civil guard who are already there, but also the national police force firefighters and members of the military emergency unit. now from above, you can see the area isn't densely populated, but whole buildings are already being consumed by the slow advance of lava.
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thousands have already been evacuated, and many more will have to leave their homes as the authorities can't be sure of the love as path. leaders at the emergency relief operation are hopeful that no one will be killed. but loss of homes and livelihoods could be colossal. andrew simmons, i'll just go ahead and i'll just say that back in haiti, the us deport hundreds of migrants from a border time was mexico. the cape of diplomacy wasn't to have more in the world, the biggest boy by the special appearance that the un general assembly ah hi there, good to see you. it has been particularly active month for our monsoon brains
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across india. i want to go in for a closer look, in particular the northwest, so we're talking about who draws you should get about 81 millimeters of rain from september 1st to the 19th, but we've scooped up to 150. so that represents about 209 percent above average. and i'll tell you what we could see about another 100 to 200 millimeters. we do have amber weather alerts in play for rochester and goods right. over the next 24 to 48 hours again to get that $100.00 to $200.00 millimeters of rain. and the falls for westbank gall and disha on tuesday can be expected. and next, stop se, asia, we've got our storms come and go and hear nothing out of the ordinary mix of sunday club for singapore with a high of 33 degrees. it's drive for central parts of china. so ward the se. okay, we've got a few showers in storms for the coast. hong kong is dry though with the high of 33 degrees, a batch of what weather moving across the northern china, the korean peninsula is going to find a home in the waters between korea and japan. press play on wednesday. widespread
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rain, top to bottom for japan support rate through to cargo shima saca. what whether it's fall with the high of $28.00 degrees. that's it for me. the who's talked to al jazeera, we what gives you hope that there is going to be peace because the situation on the ground seems to be pointing, otherwise we listened. we were never on whatever road to off migration. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that imagine on sera showcase of the best documentary films from across the network on al jazeera. ah,
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the me. you want, you're going to have a reminder about top stories. this according kigali is delivering is a virus and the case of the man whose life inspired the hollywood film hotel for wanda paul recessive, again, is credited with saving hundreds of people during the countries 1994 genocide. voting is underway in canada and a stop parliamentary election by ministers just seems codo is hoping to consolidate his leadership for the majority for his liberal party, but he's facing stiff opposition in an unexpectedly close race. russia's ruling party the backs the kremlin, its own course to retain its super majority in parliament with the most votes come to it, but it's lost some support compared to the previous election. opposition says fraud was widespread decades of water and i've got to stand have left large parts of the
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country littered with unexploded munitions that taken a devastating tolan civilians. many of them children were the country under taliban control. experts can now clear areas that were previously inaccessible. so i'll start the reports from more doc problems. 8 year old marty was playing with his friends when the explosion happened. the blast blew off part of his leg. he joined other children in his village at a talk organized by a local organization about the dangers of unexploded munitions left by decades of war. marty is not the only injured child here. the same blast on the outskirts of the village ripped through 12 year old smiles. leg 12 year old molly her last and i and she was partially blinded. and the other rhonda up on her gums, what will we do? he's a little kid and he has a long life in front of him. i worry how he will code. if he doesn't have any land
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to about and we have little money, we are worried and afraid about his future. the children are told to listen carefully because the area around the village is littered with hidden munitions and unexploded bombs ability to loan. the children were collecting, dried grass for burning fuel when the explosion, how that was it just got she lost her eye and 2 of my sons were also injured. i tell every one, not to touch anything suspicious, looking and just move away. a local bomb disposal team leads us to where the blast occurred. the taliban blew up an afghan army weapons called boy here in 2019 the attack scattered ammunition across a wide area either side of the road. much of it was then buried in mud during floods. after carefully collecting some the team tell us we can leave the camera but move back to a safe area before they conduct
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a controlled explosion. before the taliban retook control last month, no bomb disposal team had come to this area of water, the province because it was too dangerous. bombed out the villages show how intense the fighting was. the situation is calm now, but a lethal and hidden legacy remains. 5 children killed and another 12 injured in one incident near this village experts are saying that there are hundreds of villages in this area around which they believe that could be tons of unexploded ordnance. the teams coming into this area to try and clear it are appealing for international health. taliban fighters take us to an abandoned us space on a hill close by a few destroyed military vehicles. ransacked, planning and living quarters, surrounded by blast bag walls is all that remains local. se foreign soldiers use
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the surrounding area as a firing range, which is now littered with unexploded ammunition, expert se if lives i'll be saved. the international community has to release funding that it froze when the taliban took control last month on the main planets . and the minute organizations were funded by the international community that has now stopped and there are incidents every day the u. s. and need to need to come hear them senator, you want to clear it up or send other organizations to has a life is on the surface at least returning to normal in this village. but the people are afraid that what lies hidden around them could destroy many more lives. for years to come. child stratford, al jazeera, one duck, afghanistan, hundreds of migrants who haiti have arrived important prints, after being expelled from the u. s. and recreation flights. among 13000 people who
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gathered in a border town in texas, someone spent years journeys in south america to the us. like a lot of a lot of them. when we didn't want to leave on the bus on board the plane, they locked us up in the bus to come a stand. some women even took a, beating the beat men and women. not they will be ready to receive and process these migraines reported by force in our to airports. but the problem is that the people don't accept the false deputation because that is the reason the left. they did not want to live in haiti, john home and reports from aconia on mexico's border with the united states. for many, margaret said they've suffered too much to return home now. mary, this is how one us border patrol officer to receive patient migrant crossing the rio grande coming about with food to camp. they've set up in texas women. why is
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the the oh. 6 no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. i mean we've got our families inside dying of hunger. you've had to go out to buy the you can see this one is getting back into the camp off that they went across the street to get food . they said, because there isn't enough food for them. there. in the there's more than 12000 migrants, mostly haitians in the kansas sprung up in del rio, texas. over the last 2 weeks. they want asylum. the us authorities were overwhelmed . this is just the latest splash point in a month long surge of people illegally crossing the border. and there's little in the camp for them. because i found the sanitary product. there aren't any food
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there isn't any either. they don't give you anything. we met nicholas on the mexican bank of the river, searching for food and medicine for his family. he hadn't realized until we asked him about it. the us authorities are also now flying haitians back home. days, planes now going to court and people. what do you think about locking them up? what kills me about that is that everyone knows what we have are going through places. there is no president. crime is high. students can't go to school. there is no work. the economy is down. people can't put up with the port. taishan is not good for like many others. he said he suffered to get this pho on a journey through south america, past gangs, and through a patch of jungle called the daddy and gut notorious for rate robbery too much for most of them. so that it was really difficult. i saw a lot of us who died. he told me now he's touched ground in his promised land, the us. but it looks unlikely he'll be able to stay the in the rush with food. we
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didn't see him make it back across the river into texas. and by the afternoon, mexican security forces were patrolling the river to it was getting even tougher. mexican authorities have opened the dime further upstream, which i do quite regularly. but it will, it means is that these people are now struggling even more get across the waters a lot deeper here. it's just another obstacle in another danger. held them as they try and get into the united states john home and how does it? i couldn't, you know, the 1st vote in hong kong held under reforms imposed by beijing has selected an election committee with just one off position leaning candidate. fewer than 5000 people from mostly pro establishment circles are eligible to cast ballots. the committee will choose the territories, next leader, and nearly half its legislative council, pfizer has announced it's covered 19 vaccine is effective for children between 5 and 11 years old. the pharmaceutical john test of the job with
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a lower dose than adults on find it produces enough antibodies. pfizer was and its findings to us regulators to request approval for global rollout. what leaders are gathering in new york for this year's un general assembly, the united nations, on the united kingdom, a convening a high level meeting on climate change. they helped to build momentum ahead of the cop 26 summit in glasgow in november. that will make some money going to another planet. we need to end the war on our planet. this means committing to 0 emissions by 2015. ambitious climate and bio diversity panel, and no new coal plants. after 2021. we must mobilize a $100000000000.00 a year for climate action and help developing countries make the shift to green. economy is a top priority ahead of the upcoming top 26, meeting in glasgow. normal diplomatic editor james bays is out the united nations. he says the pessimism about the progress that can be made on climate and other issues
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a lot of ground to cover and we've only got 6 weeks now before those crucial negotiations take place in glasgow in scotland. i can tell you there's a degree of pessimism in the u. n. about this. the secretary general himself told me he's worried about a mistrust between the developed and the developing world. and that's why this meeting that's taking place today, one day before the actual proper start of the un general assembly, which always traditionally starts on a tuesday, is a to nudge world leaders forward. when you have something like this, normally it's a pretty set piece event. and you did see the 2nd general speak, and we also saw the k pop band bts giving a performance trying to get the youth on board with the climate arguments showing. i think what an amazing stage the un building and campus is. but the actual meeting itself, the climate round table is being held behind closed doors. and that's for a reason. i think they want to be very, very frank with the leaders about what is at stake and how little time is left. the
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clearly you're going to climate uncovered 19. and right now i think the issue number one in terms of crises around the world is afghanistan and the takeover of the taliban. you're going to have a meeting that pipe permanent members of the security council at foreign minister level. you're also going to have the foreign ministers of the g. 20 group of countries speaking about afghanistan, meeting to about women and girls in afghanistan. but of course, there are so many other issues, such a range of issues. whether you're looking at syria, you're looking at lebanon, you're looking at libya, t gray, man ma, so many issues. and if you look at most of these, these crisis points around the world, none of the issues that have thickly improving biggest caper band in the world bts has made a special appearance at the united nations general assembly. the job as members are appointed by says to me in president one j. m. as a countries especially in voice
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a future generations and culture. media has been working with the us since 2017 on campaign to stop bullying and promote self esteem. now it's one of the biggest nights in television, the prime time, emmy awards tv answer to the oscars this year on demand streaming service is one a series of top prizes cementing the rise to prominence in the industry. victoria gave them very reports netflix the on demand streaming service 1st entered the emmy awards nearly 10 years ago. this year at one television toner for the 1st time. and the emmy goes to the crown i into the television academy. thank you, netflix. thank you, sony. thanks this lot. yeah. lady diana spend seal my just i was speaking netflix took the best drama series for the
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crown. a series about the british monarchy and the queen elizabeth, your majesty. your majesty chess isn't always competitive. netflix also won best limited series for the queen's gambit. beautiful . the one thing that no algorithm can predict no $1000000000.00 budget can manufacture is word of mouth. this award is for the fans who told their friends and who became friends, fans who told their friends to you got to watch the orphan girl chest drama. cable channels one dominate the emmys. this year, netflix is 140 for woods, equaling the broadcast network records set by cbs in 1974. a further sign that relative newcomers have ended the traditional broadcasters with programs of better quality, cadillac. netflix is success kept a sweet voice streaming platforms. apple tv,
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ted less. so one best comedy series. are you nice? i think that's what it's all by breaking change. unlike the virtual ceremony of last year, due to the k, the 19 pandemic this year. so the red carpet rolled out for the stars once again in los angeles. but while some things have returned to nuno how people watch television has changed, streaming services for the traditional broadcast as to alter their concepts of the business and their success at the emmys shows they now dominate the tv industry. victoria gates and b is eric e. r g and this is obvious here that these are the top stories according to galleys delivering it's about it's in the case of the man whose life in spite of the hollywood film hotel, wanda paul, again, is credited with saving hundreds of people during the countries 1994 genocide voting.
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