tv [untitled] September 24, 2021 10:00am-10:31am AST
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which is era play an important role checking human. ringback face in the moon, the u. s. ran expulsions of haitian migrants despite criticism of the actions on the southern border. ah, hello, i'm emily, angling this is al jazeera live from. so how so coming up climate change is again raised by ladies of the un general assembly with a warning that a reckoning is coming. a volcano when the canary islands threatens to cause more damage, as it continues to spew out lava. and opponents of chinese use president accused
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him of staging a coo and trampling on the constitution. ah, the u. s. is ramping up expulsions of haitian migrants from his border with mexico . the department of homeland security says it's conducted 12 repatriation flights in sunday. returning nearly 2000 people back to hygiene. it's after the us special envoy for have he resigned over what he calls the inhumane treatment of haitian migrants by his government. in a statement, daniel foot said the policy of deporting thousands of migrants and refugees is counter productive and deeply flawed. al jazeera footage showing the mistreatment of migrants along the us border coast outrage earlier this week in an attempt to diffuse a situation, the white house is banned. the use of horse patrols around the del ray or border
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area, thousands of haitian migrants remains stranded there and make shift camps. she had pretends he has more from washington dc on the sidelines of the un general assembly, anthony blink. and attempted once again to present the u. s. as making human rights central to its foreign policy. you know, when asked about the treatment of haitian refugees, of the u. s. a southern border. the secretary of state blamed disinformation. some people are misinforming haitians, whether in haiti or haitians residing and other countries that they can come to the united states and, and state. because of the temporary protected status that was granted the haitians who are already here. but there is a fundamental contradiction between the u. s. allowing haitian refugees to stay in the u. s. under its temporary protective status scheme because of the home countries. instability only if they arrived before the end of july, while deporting those seeking asylum now to a country,
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it admits is dangerous. it was a question of the white house spokesperson wrestled with in washington. we are still under title 42 because we are in a global pandemic. john sucky neglect dimension is the reason the u. s. is still under title 42 is the bite, the ministration has fought to keep it in its place against all legal challenges. title $42.00 is the obscure, 75 year old public health law that was used by the trump administration to reject and deport all asylum seekers out at southern border. at the time centers for disease control scientist said it's invocation of sensibly to prevent the spread of code that had no basis in science. saki also misstated us an international law regarding asylum seekers. they're not deportations. people are not coming into the country through legal methods. in fact, the us immigration and nationality act is clear that any alien, irrespective of how they entered, is eligible to seek asylum. international law also prohibits will refuse more well the expulsion of refugees to countries whether face persecution,
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a point raised at the u. m. the max expulsions currently underway without screening for protection needs are inconsistent with international norms in may constitute reform. in his resignation, letter, special envoy, down foot didn't just object to what he called the inhumane counter productive decision to deport thousands of refugees to hazy, but took aim at the bike. the ministrations wider policies toward the country, which he said would only work. the refugee situation across the region, he knows that the administration is supporting ariel home reef as the country's current leader over the objections of civil society. put said it was just the latest floored us intervention. but hubris that makes us believe that we should pick the women again is impressive. he writes this cycle of international political interventions and history has consistently produced catastrophic results. the white house has foot never raised any objections, blink and acknowledge disagreements, but said he appreciated. full passion. foot says he was ignored. i'm dismissed. she
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had her term see al jazeera washington and jem fees, the executive director of the black alliance for just immigration. she says racial inequalities in the immigration system worse under biden, than they were under his predecessor, donald trump, and hard back to a much wider time at time of much more blatant white supremacy. that's clearly weird, it's head up again during the jump administration, and folks thought it would be back in this by the administration. but here we are. i mean, think about if this had happened during the trump administration, the outcry that would have come from the democratic party and it's happening now and you do here and outcry. but the administration doesn't seem to be moved. maybe even today announcing that they're getting rid of the horse patrol to be honest, the horses, one problem. that's not the issue would go on the horses that are the problem and as long as they continue to be allowed to operate in such anti black races,
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ways with impunity. it's not going to matter whether it's a horse or a car bike. it's all going to be thing like you saw during the trip administration that there had had a floor and the by and ministration came in and said, we're just, you know, we can get lower than this. and this is what's happening. then the 1st 4 months of the bite and ministration, more haitian curricular asylum seekers, you were expelled, corman quote, from this country. then during the entire time of the trumpet administration, based upon the border policy, there was the opportunity to not reinstate it. in fact, by an administration reinstated, it just seems that every turns that the, by an administration, it has a choice of fork in the road to choose racial equity or not. they're choosing that to the rest of the day's news in the us house committee investigating the january capital ryans has painted for senior members of donald trump's administration.
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trump's chief of staff, mark meadows and former advisors stays. bannon are among those who will have to testify me. they'll be questioned about what happened at the white house on the day of the riot. in the 600 people have now been arrested in connection with the storming of the us capital on january 6. weld ladies have been told a woman planet will also be moved, violent one, the security implications of climate change report to a meeting of the un security council during a general assembly dominated by calls if a stronger environmental action. kristen salumi reports from the us from flash flood, to drought and famine. the united nations warns that a reckoning is coming for climate change. the united kingdom's prime minister boris johnson came to the general assembly with a message for human kind. it's time for humanity to grow up. it's time for us to
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listen to the warnings of the scientists. and if you look at cove, it, if you want to see an example of the gloomy scientists being proved, right, it's time for us to grow up and understand who we are. and what we are doing, johnson is trying to whip up support for major new commitments to reduce carbon emissions before it's too late. the international community travels to glasgow and early november for a major climate summit. well, virtually all countries agree that a warming climate is a risk. some are making the case that it's more than just an environmental problem . they say it is also a threat to international peace and security. some argue that means the security council can take action. that's an argument that should have been settled a long time ago. look at almost every place where you see threats to international peace and security today. and you'll find that climate change is making things less peaceful, less secure, and rendering our response even more challenging. china,
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as the world's largest consumer of cor, prefers to keep the subject off the councils agenda on the way it would be inappropriate and so forth to replace the collective decision making of the international community. beijing has promised to stop building new cold plants abroad, but the u. k. prime minister argues all countries will need to step up even more to keep the temperature rise below the previously agreed 1.5 degrees celsius and humanity on track. we must come together in a collective coming of age. we must show that we have the maturity and wisdom to act. and we can the cop 26 climate conference. his hosting is now just weeks away. christian salumi al jazeera, the united nations was the flow of lava from a volcano on the canary. islands has slowed but days, fear it could still cause more damage. the volcano on la,
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paloma island erupt at 6 days ago, and hundreds of homes have been destroyed. nicholas hark reports from the village of tazz cortez above the picturesque coastal village of does corte is what seems like a looming storm, but is in reality a giant cloud of volcanic ash. the crater has expanded, does the court, it has not yet been evacuated. the villagers, mayor on a coast is not just concerned but deeply worried. lava is moving 4 meters per hour, and it's less than 2 kilometers away from the village. what happened this year? i'm concerned this may affect your banana plantations. this is the principal economic activities. people here, so it would make big losses for so many families. 500 hector's banana plantation have been you reversible, destroyed by thick blanket of ash. microscopic volcano rocks are seeping into the crop, making them inedible amounts of last sized martine to an island. that gets much of
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its revenue from banana production last year. a devastating fire destroyed the crop, followed by a long spell of drought. and now this looks. no, sir, i'm so upset. it's a disgrace. what we're going through here. we live off and buy the banana plantations. if we can't work, we are about to lose everything. it's another tragedy of all. a royal visits and screens came to boost the small and remote islands morale. thousands of people are displaced, their homes and belongings, turned to ash the volcano showing no sign of letting spewing a continuous flow of lava. experts don't know if this is going to last for weeks or for months. and so people on this island are learning to live in this new environment surrounded by fire in lava and what they describe as an unpredictable and intense climate. well can ologist headlong predictive disruption,
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but failed to anticipate its magnitude. there now studying the site for clues for what may happen next. it has left them with more questions than answers. you have a person that may happen, right? so we are dealing with somebody adoption, the nomic of the gothic of the kid. when you set up to use a gun to make these kind of different faces, much more explosive. but this is common to see this kind of changing character movie character. what is this volcano trying to say wonders? mayor costa has failed to see its beauty. he feels powerless in the face of this force of nature as the future of his village hangs in the balance. nicholas hawk out 0 lapel, my fortune is in political parties, demanding an end to what they say is approved by the president. earlier this week, i said gave himself extra powers, including the right to rule by de crane said has held nearly total powers since
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july 25. when he sat to the prime minister and suspended parliament, citing an emergency. the hunting has no. yeah, watching as to need as president does everything in his power to gain more power, political rivals are uniting in opposition for parties issued a joint statement saying that he has lost his legitimacy while the largest party in parliament. another accuses of trampling the constitution borne out of 2 nieces, 2011 uprising shabbat was you. what have you found at the store? the tunisian people are against violence. we hope that in nevada, the other parties in the civil society will fight to recover their constitution and the democracy ah, law law shot on wednesday, i said, declared that he will live by decree and no longer abide by parts of the constitution. what he says he's preparing to change the political system. after
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stacking the prime minister, freezing parliament, and assuming executive authority in july, denying charges of a qu, place insist, his aim is to establish a true democracy. where the people are sovereign, unheard of as many as he now has been justice and executive powers in his hands. which means that as he has now entering a new transitional phase, which can be called a temporary phase, the country will suffer just like it has or the past 2 years. yeah, many tunisians have backseat and believe he's trying to oust the political elite viewed as corrupt and incapable of the case. so you must opened his door and hear the people he must listen to the qualified people. we do not want him to listen to the politicians, he must listen to the top talents that exist in the country so that they can draw an economic roadmap. but even one time political allies are now turning against the president, not to say that i use as we ping that the christian has now decided to deviate from
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the constitutional legitimacy. and the legitimacy of peoples in 2011 denisia was the 1st country to rid itself of the autocratic rule and what would become the arab spring. i would expect that in one or 2 months because of social economic keys, and we may see the beginning of opposition in the street that was actually join the the police that had been quite now protest are already planned for sunday in the same square where more than 2 decades ago, the people rose up against then president ben ali leo harding al jazeera. still ahead on al jazeera stolen treasure returned to iraq. how the priceless ancient tablet is making its way back home. and why these wild base is dominating a local election campaign in the easily capital.
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aah. hi there. thank you for joining in. we've got a vigorous system over scandinavia, so another round of rain coming your way for norway. also blustery conditions here for scandinavia in germany, poland and the baltic states. so in any of these countries in any of these regions, i think we'll see those wind gusts. okay. about 65 plus kilometers per hour, the potential to see them war up to about a 100 kilometers off to i bury a pretty good run of rain. we'll call it from the drill rate down to the bottom end of spain. and in the zone, we could pick up about 30 millimeters of rain within a single hour. so flooding a big concern is quite across the bulk in just a few spits of rain. for romania, bucharest will be dr. with a high of 22 degrees off to turkey and really a cool pool of air. here is stumble. 20 degrees,
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but look toward the east 10 degrees and we may see some high elevation snow. but we will bump up your temperature and assemble. sunday will get you back to more average temperatures with the high of 25 after western africa and southern portions of gonna have scooped up 50 millimeters of rain over the past 24 hours that pivots toward the north on friday. and we see those storms in senegal and the gambia banjo has a high of 29 degrees. that's it for me season the when the news break was like the people when people need to be home. 6 with exclusive interviews and in their report, they're choosing those sites because their civilian card era has teams on the ground and say the numbers are benefits of what they were before. the 3003 invasion
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because of iraq, to guarantee to bring you more award winning documentaries and live nice. oh i a hello, you're watching 0. i'm emily angland. a reminder of our top story says the us is speeding up expulsions of haitian asylums take it from its southern border with mexico. washington special envoy to heidi resigned on thursday for what he called the inhumane treatment of haitian, my friends. the un secretary general has ruined the security council. climate change will make the world move violent and unstable. the general assembly has been dominated by the stronger environmental election and volcanic eruption on the
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canary islands has destroyed hundreds of homes in nearly awake. the flow of lava has now slowed on the island, but their fees still cause more damage. climate change has become one of the hottest topics in the upcoming german elections after july's floods killed nearly 200 people, while anglo merkel has been dubbed the climate chance luxury in his 16 year term. critics say her commitment internationally is being contradicted by a lack of action at home. step vatton reports. this is lake night, one of the dirtiest forms of coal mines from a 50 square kilometer hole that has swallowed dozens of villages and threatens another 6 in the coming years. the gas while mind providing power to the western, most industrialized part of germany, ice in the same state would that the flood struck last july. a result of extreme rainfall attribute to global warming is kind of funny for skin. i can't understand
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why germany continued just policy. they say we will stop in 2038, but that is too late. it isn't thinkable that in 2027 villages will have to disappear to mind coal, the damages the climate. marita family has been living and cook them for generations. a nearly abandoned village now since many residents have left due to plants of the mileage, the houses are w e. the energy company is expanding mine because according to the coal exit strategy, it can extract lick nitro 17 more years. you had time as the police came off, a big merkel has signed a pair of agreement. but here we see that the climate goals are undermined it. the mind should stop where it is now. otherwise, germany does not stay within the goal of 1.5 degrees temperature, right it. while germany can rely more on renewable energy than other european countries, fossil fuels have recently made a comeback to prevent blackouts due to a shortage of wind and solar energy. to put pressure on politicians to speed up the
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energy transition. climate activists have set up camp in the village. it is about to be demolished by the mining company. these mines have become a symbol for germany. struggle to move away from fossil fuels to so much shows that uncle merkel should have done more to this or for title as climate chancellor. but to out of this transition to green energy is going way too fast. the static sound for former coal mine is like you are going yakobelli, who spent 33 years working underground until the last deep cold mine close in 2018 . it was the end of an industry that provide at work for half a 1000000 people in the 1950 and how to rebuild germany after world war 2, jacobo to now guide to it, thinks the industry how built close to soon. what kind of color we don't want coal, we don't want lake night. we don't want nuclear energy. and with new forms of energy, we can't generate enough power for our economy. so what are we doing now?
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we are importing coal climate chancellor or not uncle america. lisa mix legacy, looking at policies to reduce emissions. analysts say the next chancellor has no choice but to speed up the energy transition and try to fill merkel law choose internationally. anglo american start was also a motor start, so she emerged as a great leader over time. and the only thing what we can hope is that the future chancellor, whoever be the future chancellor is also a leader which it will be respected. germans fold on sunday, which direction they want the country and it's energy transition to go. but many agree to train moving away from the traditional call industry has become unstoppable. stop. fasten al jazeera, tackling house, the european union plans to impose a universal charge for all brands of mobile phones, tablets, and other take. a legislative proposal pushes for a plug that most device makers have already adopted for the main holdout is apple.
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as charlie angela reports from london, a jumble of different charges in a top drawer. many homes have them and it's a waste. the e you wants to clean up the you commission is proposing common u. s. b c, charging ports for all new smart phones. i pads, tablets, cameras, and headphones. on the other issue of the office good. in terms of waste, this is significant because this measure will allow us to say $1000.00 tons of electronic waste and $2600.00 tons of raw materials per year. there is also the impact on c o 2 emissions. it will save 180000 tons of c o 2 equivalent per year. there's currently 29 percent of all new devices come with the usb cable. the us be micro be sold with android devices. accounts for 50 percent of all charges sold. while the apple, lightening port accounts for the remaining 21 percent the i did streamline all charges is very popular with consumers. the typical person and the
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e. you currently own 3 different charges, but only uses 2 of them regularly. the proposal fits well with the current drive towards to stay in infinity and promises to save consumers $293000000.00 a year in unnecessary purchases. the 2nd part of the proposal is that new charges aren't automatically sold in the same box with new electronic devices, the boots separately, and that the charging speed of cables is standardized and move environmentalists, a welcoming when it's wasted. a lot of toxic substances include which soil into water and the hazardous to the people that are displacing at that waste as well. it's like less than environmental benefit from this movie, any of that, but it's absolutely below within that model of the electronics industry table, some proprietary technology and in the lesson, which is like over consumption if the proposal is adopted by the parliament and
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count. so it could be law by 2022 companies will then have 2 years to adopt the devices. the consumer electronics giant. apple says the standardization will affect innovation 2 years is not enough time. the use as they've given the tech industry 10 years to come up with a solution between themselves. and they failed. now is the time for legislation. charlie angela al jazeera london. somali is foreign minister, has been speaking about efforts to hold a long over due elections in his country, in an interview with al jazeera, diplomatic. as a james space mohammed abdi riz, act did not roll out, running for president himself. as far as i know, the president is standing for reelection. there are also a number of 2 former presidents who are going to stand for this election, the number of other politicians from a prime minister's and so forth. so the prime minister, do you think he's
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a can the current prime minister has said he's not the candidate repeatedly is a good friend of mine. and i said that to me, so i have to believe them and i have to everyone, are you a candidate to be president? i was a candidate in 2016. will you be accounted again? this time i will be a candidate at the right time. when, whenever that is, whether but what we're looking for really is to avoid any conflict or this whole thing collapse. and so my focus is really garnering the support that we need for the technical and financial so that there's elections. and i don't want to my candidacy or anything else to get in the way. so molly comes 1st and we want to have that the theft of cultural heritage, an important ocoee, logical objects is a thriving business around the world. many precious items disappear into private ownership, but one pace of history has been recovered and will soon be on its way back to its
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rightful home. rob reynolds, explain. it is a simple tablet made of clay incised with the script of a long extinct language. but this 3500 year old artifact is beyond priceless. it is a fragment of the epic of gilgamesh, a work of literature written more than a 1000 years before the poems of homer, stolen decades ago from iraq the tablet was formerly returned on thursday. the last of the returning the iraqi artifacts for me means restoring self esteem and confidence in iraqi society. following the 1st us led war against iraq in 1991 iraqi leader. saddam hussein temporarily lost his iron grip. museums were looted and priceless objects stolen. the loading of the museum hit us in our core because our history is really important to us. our history is what
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makes us, we're an old country. in fact, i can say where the oldest country in 2014 the tablet was bought for 1600000 dollars by the wealthy fundamentalist christian who was building a museum of the bible in washington dc. the fragment was seized by u. s. government authorities in 2019 fig documentation lead to its resale and transport for other countries. only to have a return to the us were an auction house, facilitated sale for $1600000.00. the head of the us cultural organization says the repatriation of the gilgamesh tablet, sends a message. this ceremony here is also a welcome warning to the smugglers and looters of this world to those who use conflicts to steal into traffic, cultural heritage, participating in the destruction of cultural diversity. the epic itself is written
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as if recounting a dream telling the deeds of the hero gilgamesh, his contests with beasts and gods. gilgamesh sought the secret of immortality. but in the end, the hero learns a hard truth. what you seek, you shall never find. the text says, for when the gods made man, they kept immortality for themselves. rob reynolds al jazeera, incredible wild boar on the streets of rome, have become an election issue in the cities in merrill raise. the animals are come inside and some neighborhoods of the italian capital they've been increasingly drawn to the city in recent years. attracted by pals of rubbish. may candidates blaming each other for the issues in the capital. say this get probably rough, i'm afraid causes i am afraid. now there are no bull, but when there are, i'm afraid and it didn't happen just wanted, but many times, once i saw them,
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i was going to throw out the rubbish. and they came off to me because i was carrying a bag with rubbish. i left the bag and went away while boys always dro here, but we are always careful with them. we are not afraid because we know they went to tucker, but we always keep a safe distance from them. because if by chance there is a mother with a pig, let's be risk being a top. ok, hello, you're watching al jazeera and these are the top stories. this our, the u. s. is speeding up expulsions of haitian asylum sake is from its southern border with mexico. washington special envoy to haiti resigned on thursday for what he calls the inhumane treatment of haitian migrants. in his statement, daniel ford said the policy of deporting thousands of refugees is counter productive and deeply flawed. she returns he has more from washington d. c. what
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