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tv   [untitled]    September 25, 2021 5:30am-6:01am AST

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widespread florence lee al jazeera. i'm finally house before a royal w pairing. the new queen of british tennis m. a radical new pair up with the duchess of cambridge, k. littleton, at the national tennis center in london for a friendly match. 18 year old right. economy shot to fame after winning the us hoping to become britain 1st female grand slam champion in 44 years. feet and the teenager found this and all over the world, including the duchess. ah, i talked to the headlines here on the canadian citizens, michael coverage. micro stable have been freed in china after being detained for more than a 1000 days. they were arrested in 2018 shortly after police and vancouver arrested . a chinese tech executive. there is going to be time for reflections and analysis in the coming days and weeks. but the fact of the matter is,
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i know canadians will be incredibly happy to know. right now this friday night, michael covert, michael's favor are on a plane and they're coming home. while the release of the to canadian comes just hours after hallway chief financial officer mang, when joe was freed in canada, a canadian court discharge among after us expedition case was dropped. she's now on her way back to china. over the past 3 or my life has been turned upside down. it was the reparative time for me as a mother. i wife and the company. exactly. but i believe every county has that. we're lining it really was an invaluable experience in my life. yes, president joe biden says he takes responsibility for the harsh treatment of patients. migraines on the border with mexico. president promised that border
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patrol agents will pay after they were filmed using force reins against people trying to cross over from mexico or the last of the mostly haitian migrants who accounting along the us. mexico border have either left or been removed. heavy equipment was later brought in to clear up the site. 15000 people have gathered there to seek asylum in the us. 3 more towns have been evacuated after explosions from interrupting volcano on the canary islands. intensified the volcano on la. paloma started dropping on sunday for the 1st time in 50 years. more than 7000 people have already fled their homes, and hundreds of buildings have been destroyed by rivers of lava. airlines of council, flights for a 2nd day to to a giant ash cloud. those were the headlines. the news continues here now, which is era off of the stream station. thanks for watching bye. for now. across the younger valley, high above the ground, a trouble has taken on
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a different form. people died for they fly. this is no game. it's business makes the bomb and hopefully be swinging high across the valley, facing on every journey. they'll gamble with their lives. just one living. risking it all on al jazeera news. i me okay on this week's bonus edition of the stream. the bonus is a special guest host. hello melissa flemming from the united nations. it is so good to see you now as well as being my guest host. you do have a day job. we tell everybody what that is and what you do. great to be with you and co moderating with your family. yes, i'm the head of communications for the united nations, which means i tried to get the news out to the entire world in languages. people
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understand and format that people are accessing for their information. and yeah, and to get people to sign up to, to the values that we are trying to promote. whenever you appear on the screen, you always come with an issue, a passion that is very important that you want the well to know about. today's no exception. what she would be focusing on what you want to tell us. oh, well, you know, we're still a year and a half into the cobra, 1900 pandemic. and we know that the way out is that everybody in the world has access to the vaccines. but we're not there. so i'd really like to talk about vaccine equity. i'm going to show a tweet that you shared, and this was a few months ago where you can already say that you see that you're trying to get that message out. tell us more about vaccine inequity. did you say that was from a few months ago? yeah. maybe. yeah, it was. i'm going to, i'm going to ski out here. we can, we can actually have a look the way you see maybe 81 percent have been given in
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high income con countries a few months later it's still really high and just 10 countries. it's like 733 percent of vaccines have been given in just 10 countries. that means the rest of the world is really desperate for vaccines when you take the content continent of africa, for example, only 3 percent of vaccines have been received by africans. and, you know, i'm here in the united states and all the talk is about 3rd doses. and a friend came up to me recently and says, when are you going to get your 3rd dose? you know, you wouldn't be, you would be able to. and yet, you know, and it's like someone from w h o said recently, it's like as if you were wearing a life jacket and the life jacket was just a little bit frayed. but there were all kinds of people around you who are drowning . and then somebody were to give you another life and the others would continue to
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drive. so we need to give those life jackets to the people who need the most. and we have a goal to, to vaccinate. 40 percent of the world by the end of the year and it can be done. it's just we need those who pledge to share the doses to actually give them. and we need to double manufacturing. and we need much more funding to spend some hopeful messaging coming out of the general assembly on that. but it's it, we have a long way to go and people are still dying. 4.5000000 people have died from cove at 19 around the world. and it's just unacceptable when we have a way to stop these deaths, not to be doing everything that we can. melissa, we are going to get this show started. thank you for bringing that issue vaccine inequity to us. we have talks about it on the stream, but today we have a very special program, which is why that you will co hosting with me, because the string teamed up with the u. n. for a few days to talk about pressing global issues. you're about to see us some of the
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conversations that we had after the live show as melissa would say, behind closed doors. now of course we have to discuss climate change, but i gave guess my phone ac. you saw ya. hindu maro, emperor him and, and you have a challenge. what is the best example of climate change adaptation on medication? you've ever see free child the tree, john. i absolutely love our campaign. and our project to plan for 1000000 trees over what started as 2 rainy seasons, but will now be 3. but what so exciting about it because it's a major b solution. it's owned by communities. we are, we are restoring biodiversity. we are creating, contributing to the carbon sink, we are preventing land live in communities. we are restoring mangroves and all of this was creating hundreds of jobs. i'm really building
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a sense of community ownership. i'm together as we work on transforming our city. oh, i didn't even hesitate in and do you need to women that are doing fantastic projects on equality where the combined distribution of money to restart a bios, compare these data and match path where the piano in indian 3 and data doing. ready in the country for the cost down, and he's are having a car to play the can be nation. been you and have a direct impact to the best example of how we can build a climate and the tissues techie. now what is a special advisor on climate actually the new and see all the un refugee agency really, and i fear about litigation adapt patient if you're going to come up with andrew,
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it's difficult to follow those to. it's always difficult as to but what we have to be doing is not any will, can't mitigating access to energy. we actually have to be changing it to empowering people. if you look at how many people been displaced around the world, and like it's 900000000 people who displaced it's days, just looking at cutting off pal, we have to provide more power in the any way which we can do that is we frog use of fossil fuels, they don't have energy at the moment. we have to provide with energy because that's a cornerstone of empowerment of dignity or providing access to livelihoods. so providing renewable energy to naughty the 90000000 people have been displaced around the world. but to the hundreds of millions of people who are also in very fragile energy, efficient areas is not any the right thing to do. it's amazing opportunity for the private sector development act is to establish markets. because if you give people
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hope, you empower people, they will deal with 3 consult. but we, we, if it's no use, is always coming up with a top down approach. but the be from new york or from geneva or from capital, you have to listen to the people, see what they want people to do not want to move. and this is where and what hindu and mary von was saying was so important. we need to support adaptation. we need support preparedness, and we need to empower people. it's going to be a win win situation. both the people enter the environment it was really great actually that's my former colleague and friend, andrew harper, to hear him and these amazing to women. i think it really what they're, they're all love this concept and they're all 3 saying that same concept of empowering people locally. and people do not want to move. and climate change is
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threatening many more people than those 90000000 who are already displaced, to have to move in to be forced to move. but there are local solutions, and i loved the planting trees and, and also the, the what, what andrew mentioned about providing energy. so it's not just all preventing and mitigating climate situations, but it's also provide empowering people to, to with jobs and livelihoods, and energy that is renewable to transform their community. so it's a really great ideas here, and it's if you look all over the world, it's incredible the creativity that people have and how that how they can get ready for climate change. how can they can adapt to climate change? they just need the resources. well, i was thinking what became very obvious, that conversation was political willis, how important it will get so many things done in terms of global emergencies and
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global solutions. so, how do you persuade governments and policy makers to take meaningful climate action? i asked 3 climate advises how they would convey the urgency of the climate crisis to governments. so in charles hot, got the conversation started in 2019. i was a bunch different capacity, but i had well, i visited the bahamas after her recon dorian, 2019. and what i saw on that island, it seemed as though after a devastation, hurricane a look to the door a bomb had dropped on the island. and quite frankly, if this is the future of humanity, the old battle recall and be bold and tackle in the climate crisis. i saw towns washed away people's entire lives and their life and just gone in
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a flash with scores of people still missing. weeks after this disaster and we're seeing this all over the world. regional need to do everything we can to stop this crisis and my simple message. it doesn't look good where off track, but please don't lose hope. we cannot lose hope. we know what to do, and we have the tools to do it. cow. your story. i'm going to to, i'm going to tell a personal story actually, and it doesn't cast me in a very good light. i've been working on climate for over 20 years. been involved with the intergovernmental panel on climate change. i was a former climate negotiator in the car process. and 3 years ago the i p. c. c. put out a report on what on $1.00 degrees of warming, what would we need to do to keep warming to that level?
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what would be the impacts if we were able to hold the temperature there? and you know, i've been working on climate for ever and it was that report that just woke me up. it was like all of a sudden these temperature targets are not some time in the long future. this is now and i, it just made me completely look the way i live my life. i drive my car, i fly airplanes. and it's embarrassing to say it took, it took that, but it really was a report that should act. we have to act now and it woke me up. and now you're woke . that true rain work. misery wrap us out with your story. i want to be can from what god just mentioned. it's not really the future. it's now not here that had a poor lot since the 100 here. so i think like
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a century off. lot. but never that devastating. i visited many areas that was a factor like let me change and bye bye bye. so and all of the stories i was hearing was so coming like deeply into my heart. not only because we did not close this because we didn't go this, but because these simple farmers, simple citizens, he didn't know what he thinks by or what is coming to them. and now i've been receiving a phone call every every few seconds, asking me, should we like do the farming processes, should we start the farming costs this year? we. ringback have a lot begin here because for people who don't know what happened, it doesn't want to destroy the existing or so forbidding you are to farmer from doing other agricultural reporters because they need to wait and do the what the
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right. unfortunately, both of our apartments are very much depending on my call, like my other dry cross, but like drive for example, that needs a lot of water. so making these very one global community, very rural area and very vulnerable sector, which is for example, ready to climate change. ready? on the warning system, we're building the communities with stopping global warming at this moment. i really what i wanted to see if that well, you know, it's interesting to hear these, these climate experts actually giving these examples where they themselves even felt that they needed this to wake up to realize that climate change is happening now. and i was struck by what cell when said, you know,
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this is the future of humanity. we all better wake up. but he also said, and i know and also co mentioned, we need to act now because it's not some theoretical thing that's going to happen in the future. it is actually happening before our eyes and i think of so many of us were struck by our own examples. i mean, i was in the west coast this summer and it, it was a 115 degrees. i've just never felt that heat. the drought was just terrible, the lake mead was drying up. a few weeks later i was in greece, and people were telling me that they no longer had spring and that their gardens were not growing. and a few weeks later, you know, it was a blaze and wildfire. so i think i'd just like to reinforce though, what, what all of the panelists said, and that is, we know we know the science. we're seeing it happening before our eyes, but we can't lose hope and i think that was cell one's appeal. i worked with him so i know there are
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a lot of very distress people. there been studies recently that children are feeling terrible. anxiety about climate change right now and their future. we do have the tools and there is a way out let's of we all need to you, i'm together. you and the advisors was, were saying that this is very possible and i just want you to give me a yes or no on a scale of 0 to 10. the urgency as a un headquarters right now is what? 0 to $10.00. 10 is incredibly urgent. where is it? tad ike? good town. it has to be a tad. we are. we are in this the, the high commissioner has. sorry that the secretary general of us has called it a red alert for humanity in anti car. many times i've heard that. yeah. yeah, for humanity and it's been quoted over and over and over again. really. so i'm going to, i'm gonna move on that the climate crises is never far away,
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but i'm going to take us now to italy, the homeless chef massimo, a book tura, he is a u. n. environment program, goodwill ambassador, who is on a mission to tackle global food waste his maxima, explaining how his work caught the attention of the you. i start this project on universal exposition and that after that we start that we move to the olympics, that the, the year out there in rio de janeiro. and these projects they get so successful that we start opening all the is the record audio, as we call these amazing soup kitchen. and that the united nation started watching us because that our project is much more than just the feed that people need. but it's about to, you know, that rescue their food ways that otherwise would be because of climate change.
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and, and that, or like hell but you know, people to, to, to have another opportunity in life. so if that and the same, you know, all the electricity that human capital there, water that takes to produce. so imagine how many goals we are embracing, you know, within the project. so that's why the united nation, they were so into thinking what i was doing. and, you know, like that we became, we became and we arrived where we are and we keep working. we keep opening. and now we are ready, new york in san francisco. we are open 2 days ago, sidney. and we have that. we also have geneva before the end of
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the year. so i'm just wondering, i'm just looking at this picture for you here on my laptop. i am wondering if the united nations have what they dealing with ships, all legendary carries my take a little bit complicated. they have egos, all of this, you are throwing up the united nations environment program. how was i handling that? you know, i wrote a book that is called, never trust this guinea di denisha. you know why i gave that little because the chef are taking themselves too seriously. we have to have a little bit of irony. we have to have a little bit of playing job on and be open any ronnie, 2 hours that but the end we are cook and that, and that's what it is, you know. and so, you know,
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when i say when, when i have to say and express what i'm doing every day, i say, you know, guys what i'm doing everyday. if it's just gonna, i compressed into edible, by my passion. you, dick, are, you know, all the fact guard but also ceiling. go to the story because mike was in the deeply valia but feel there by a contemporary mine. that's very important because be no style. jake, you don't evolve but being critic. you can take the back from the back into the future, and that's our, you know, our goal as an italian shap. i cannot leave all our, the story on the side. what, what a, what an amazing ambassador to fight against food waste. because his project is
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actually to take the food waste of these gore many restaurants and turn that waste into its not even waste a very edible leftovers into 3 course meal for people who couldn't afford it. and who are vulnerable and who are hungry. and just to say that, you know, we are increasingly finding personalities, celebrities, in all kinds of sectors. to help us spread spread our messages, whether it's peace and security, we have messengers of peace or whether it's it may you may, i just use the center of music may help us reach more people than we could ever dream of fem me when i know the exam, what you're about to read. it brings me when you a nice feat melissa, we try really hard not to use acronyms, but i'm going to use one now b t s. i am going to show you interviewing bts just
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a few days ago. your, your, your tweet that went out there. it had over a $121000.00 likes it was retreated so many times is that your most valuable tweet of all time. yes, that is my most viral tweet of all time. and actually the interview on our youtube channel has over 4000000 views. so this is definitely the most viral interview i've ever done as well. but it's for the un, it's been the social media posts around this amazing b t. s. appearance at the u. n. have actually been our most popular post in the last 2 years. so at the un enabled us to bring people, all kinds of people who never would have thought to click on the us website or you and you too much and to, to come to us. melissa, what was
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a b t s always saying to you just very briefly because we're almost at the end of the show. yeah. you know, what was really wonderful was to see the reaction of the fans which are called the b t. s. army, which was really just so full of positivity. and what i loved about it too was that they took time so many of them hunters that's about a 1000 and took time to comment and not just to say, oh thank you for bringing bts to the un, which they did. but also, i'm going to be the change that they're suggesting. i'm going to do things differently. i'm going to to, to learn more about the sustainable development goals. and so this was really wonderful way to see, i don't think we've ever seen this kind of engagement and positivity among become ordinary. then we talked about bts without playing them. so i'm going to say thank you so much for being my guest co. how. how would you like to take
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a bi to our audience around the world? well, a thank you to the al jazeera stream audience for tuning in. it's been a great to be co moderating this session with me and take care everyone. thank you . melissa fleming. all right, so i'm going to leave you. i never thought i'd ever say this with b t. s. and permission to dance film that the united nations general assembly. thanks for watching. the next time i got it. ah, what it seems like, john, which i got
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the the news ah, i know the thing with the diesel ah ah
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ah ah ah, i talked to al jazeera we oh, what give me hope that it is going to be peace because the situation on the ground seems to be pointing the way we listened. we were never on whatever road to off migration. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on sera pitches. joint. why? that's the beauty of telling me in general with i've always wanted to make the audience feel something to create an emotional connection with the story. ah,
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sometimes you have to go to great lengths to do just found i . when we made a film on the point of honor, without fear or favor, we thought this hand up fee of the pandemic record and the behavior you later on the truck, you realize what's going on. the police investigated and right, and i was expelled me, but i couldn't hide from the truth as a tax on press freedom escalade. i work the al jazeera because i hold the line. mom drew ambrose in on the streets of greece. an immigrant violence is on the rise, the road you have to go from. i was 20 and this and that this is from fuck system and increasingly, migrant farm workers of victims of vicious beatings. jo reed is helping the
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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, me, the aircraft carrying micro coverage and michael steve or left chinese airspace. and they're on their way home to canadians detained in china are headed home after a day with us, prosecutors allowed a chinese tech executive to leave canada. ah, everyone on jamal santa maria. this is the world news from al jazeera. it's an embarrassment. it's beyond an embarrassment, it's dangerous, it's.

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