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tv   [untitled]    September 29, 2021 5:30am-6:00am AST

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and, you know, home contacts the movie, the also the most frequent been them all go is as well. so, you know, we don't wanna lose cinema streaming or anything like that. but i do think that you know, you can go and feel that you already get your money back. we're going to bring more people back into the cinemas. ah, sir, again, i'm fully back with the headlines on al jazeera, america's top military officer has called the end of the 20 year war in afghanistan . a strategic failure during questioning by senators on capitol hill. defense officials admitted that taliban forces advanced on capital faster than anticipated . patty gall haine has more from capitol hill determined during she's a staff mark. milly say that there was an intelligent failure. and he said one reason for that could it be could be that they withdrew advisors from those units 3 years ago. again, that would have been under the trump administration. and he said,
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you can't really tell if people are willing to fight. if you're not around them, we can count tank. so we can count guns for we can't know the willingness to fight unless we know the soldiers. so that's really the only clear indication that the military is starting to realize what went wrong in this absolutely chaotic withdraw . taliban says its spawning to reinstate the constitution from nearly 6 decades ago . i've gotten it sounds new wall is 125-1900. 64 charter but only way doesn't conflict with their version of islamic law. the world health organization is promising reform and accountability after dozens of allegations of sexual abuse by workers sent to fight ebola in democratic republic of congo. the agencies head has apologized to victims lava from country view. volcano on the spanish island of la palmer has now reached the atlantic ocean. a huge cloud of toxic vapor and gas has been released into the air as a lava mixes with sea water. nicholas' hoc is in la palmer with more. the spanish,
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gorgeous he built, pushed all of the people that were there to watch the spectacle out of the port. i have told people to stay on log down to where goggles cover their mouth stay close as much as possible, not exposing your arms because in the air is north of gas is such as sulfur dioxide down there. monitoring the level of sulfur dioxide from these toxic gases also is hydro chloride, and in other gases emitted by this volcano, a group of political parties. indonesia has announced the correlation to oppose the president. the group says k 5 has lost legitimacy, accusing him of a cold. those are the headlines next on. i'll just 0 firth why stay with us? teach, you know, you can watch english streaming live and i do 2 channels. plus thousands of our
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programs. award winning documentary and you get to choose subscribe. you choose dot com. forward slash al. jazeera english ah . in town. and she just came up with some more savings. just visa fans. set that up. so my just call me on a office that you thought a month in viva, my joy sent you this too that you get this month and i
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thought i had bass will stick with you the plan. a thought that he will be georgia . see the, the, the last on mom was back is not a sub or not, but i wanted a follow up with you. my boys boys said legally he shed me and my son on the bus, they me on the phone and he's not from a small family show to me, but i'm if i'm, if i'm it's not that has been muslim. is my good? i was amazed why someone, what is some of them, some of engage in this stage or the g and the money now, but then that's what is space. so if you look at the us to get
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some input, you have both on a society and so then i will keep them up in the last couple months in the last one. but at that point, you know that the kimberly in australia is from northwest. it's one of my logically intact regions in the world, that remoteness alone comp protected for that. and now it's under increasing threats and activities. traditional owners have lived thousands of years, taking the late and caring to their country, teaming out with scientists and government to create a sled marine protected area. i'm excited to say this collaboration through my work as the marine scientists. i've become passionate about bridging the gap between traditional knowledge and science. over 800 islands make up the can believe, buccaneer archipelago, a place, reach him by to see it now under threat from development and climate change.
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carl often provides an early warning system, so i'm making liberal and from the kimberly marine research center. she's been monitoring local carl's to signs of stress. what's important about a car was and they, kimberly, one of the biggest stand out faces is their exposure to the elements on the law taught. we sort of have non made a taught around here which isn't saying to me any other blessings of the world. you know, they've got this thermal resilience, which we don't say with a lot of other called the carl here can we stand? i'm president, the temperature extremes of up to 8 degrees celsius a day, enabling it's a better code. as ocean temperatures rise. so we use one called every made or we get a shot and it's the sign photo year after year and month after month. so why do we do a little think marks along the lawn, which here is just a little spirit level into the center. well, that's tricky to get it phyllis, man. and i can fix that easy and then carry on. okay,
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60 more to go me implemented, allows liam to compare the state of the curl over a period of time and have noticed signs that even this have resilience. karl is reaching its limits here fully, but it's not, not our growth on it. bleaching occurs when the water is too long and al gave the carls food source is expelled, really completely why it's really flowing in life. it's just a huge pitch. you would look at your rafer co system engineer and to lose that building block, you just lost your structure. you lost your community block, taking someone's house. and we have a co system out here which is pretty day, but it is also on the cost of having the watching events. so it's, it's definitely something we need to keep very close eye on me. carls support a quarter if the world's may be fit, scientists predict, but up to 90 percent could disappear by 2040 it makes creating
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a marine impact even more leading the way is the indigenous by our community. they range a tame, regularly work closely with scientists. so we're going to speak here. so you can do that, or if today, marine biologist scott, why thing is joining them to carry as a research trip known as a tear to radio. your little point here is a really dramatic turning point. they also come on how come on that settled on your right? it badges so they must be pretty important for you guys. stories in, in history reflect data as being closes secret to the body body guy. people were with a lot of people, always lived off the ocean. we still go hot and do get turn on. share what i tried for thousands of years, the body jelly hit hunter green sea turtle sustainably. these days,
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the knowledge of the church was behavior is proving invaluable to scientific conservation. working with local people, it's really important. i don't think of any way in understanding completely what local people now about turtles is important. we put a medical plan out there to make sure there's a bunch of turtle for our future generations, you know, but recent pressures mean they can't do us align. we don't have that other data from other areas to show the full effect of what's happening. basically, when didn't really think about climate change, pollution need to work with science. i would the knowledge that we have is traditional owners and to better the environment. not just for dental stuff, which has been as of everything, their lives, in the se, in 2019 the body. joey paper presented. they're designed for the back in iraq, appellate guy marine pac. it's now in the planning phase and likely to cover 6000
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square kilometers is combined native title area. integrating modern science and indigenous cultural values from this early stage is rarely achieved. the, the now it's time to hit the water and planning into action. apparently there was a carpet outside this morning. they better out of the pretty much say, alright, i live is a really big what i mean really made it was, this is what i call it a search already. i the ranges jump on the boat right onto the turtle back. wow, the run around, but eventually one quick, so straight on the credit lose
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a lot of the other person. so what we'll be able to do is tell where they come from . and that will management, so it just says tagging with the individual tags on a want to get the other one can be the time to move on to the main bite. and i've been trusted with the tape measure. and the way that happens with a lot of things in handling with was my luke craft, but it doesn't harm them. green globally invaded and gathering this data is conservation. 67 please. yeah. she's gotta get to 97 centimeters before she grade them all through. there is the fact that nicely for the help of the population that's happening this trip. it's kind of the range of scientific training. after
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this, they'll be independently catching turtles and collecting data on a regular basis. and it is something you would so when you are very rude and you learn, we even just one of our grandfather, then they get a little smaller than the funder get to learning. and i don't think it's clear there's real merits and using traditional knowledge in scientific research sciences, sometimes it will get a snapshot, a very brief insight into what's happening and on what attrition knowledge is that longer tend to bring together to knowledge systems for those progress back in iraq remains until recently scientists and you've very li fill about and this one place of extraordinary by diversity they would never found without the
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body. joey. but guessing that today is proving tricky when you thought 5, why? very the timing, any 3, the the, the, the dream type may be difficult to navigate, but twice today as the was received, a hidden world is revealed in what unique todd springs, despite the changes that we have here, which the titles rely on. when the tide goes out, these rock pools here, and these pools of water can streamline to 40 degrees. they're living that the age that i seem to be driving working with we started to understand the grass grow one centimeter day. wow, that's really fast. so i'm going to see grass we said a healthy tells me this is unprecedented for a plan that has been rebuilt, warming and the grass absorbed carbon dioxide up to $35.00 times faster than rain.
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for us, it's conservation, it's racial, it's extraordinary discoveries like these that are driving the creation of the moraine pack. this area, it hasn't been mapped before and say that that's the big thing is, is mapping it all out. knowing way you want to protect things, we got the clan roles and they started wrapping their own areas, what they value put into marine parks, planning for zoning and all that type of areas that you want to protect. but even if you're indigenous or less and scientists, you still get the same object to protect their country for future use the back in iraq, appellate guy marine pac should be established by 2024. with scientists saying that at least 30 percent of the world's oceans need protection in the next decade, creating a refuge in areas like this. because a long way to achieving that goal. and working with indigenous people is proving
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essential to safeguarding bio diversity. can you tell me what the marine environment means to you and some people in the body that we believe we can be separated to see and whatever is in this he may this what glee oh yeah. we have to look after country. we have to keep it. i said was when i was young, i have to do it or i think i've always paid a lot of paper. afraid, by the way, ah, ah, i am part of the autonomy toltec indigenous community which is located in the highlands of central mexico. and for me, coming from an indigenous background means that i leave my live in a more holistic way. one of reciprocity where we acknowledge that what we give to the earth is what is to us. and so it's our responsibility of human to protect that relationship. when i grew up, i had the idea that everybody saw the world,
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the way i did not everybody had a made love for a mother. i soon realized that that relationship was being broken by a lot of different companies and extractive is projects around me. i see it now my role to communicate to people that indigenous philosophy is not only for indigenous people. anybody can embody that philosophy or reciprocity, but anybody can have a connection with mother nature. i think that indigenous communities are not only being neglected, but also in this respect that and that is really ever then when you've seen a lot of industries that are perpetuating the climate crisis, actually going to envision of communities to put their infrastructure up. you can see that with fracking with pipeline, with the wayside, with all sorts of polluting, infrastructure. so that is why the fight for the committee of indigenous communities is the same as the fight or climate justice. when you lose your forest,
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you lose part of your culture. and when you lose your culture, you lose your identity. and it's our duty to tell people you have to. you are reset on your settings and connect with mother. you have to realize that right now we're living in a world that have lost it and we need to recover that. and there are people who know the way deerish around in the south could do a mountain range in the hard to brazil is home to a unique ecosystem where the amazon rain forest meets the tropical savannah of this ad dish of and is, are indigenous people who have been living here for over 500 years. this territory is sacred to them. with their homeland is under threat. climate changes impacting the landscape in illegal invasions like mine and sly plantations,
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and cat arrangers are common occurrences here. the same story all over brazil. indigenous land has been seized by profiteers enabled where government focused on short term game. the cost of the environment was very indigenous. people remain. nature flourishes. i'm on my way to meet in special gardens of this land. there are 18000 chevron. and 1500 of them here. 2 our i have filed a kid for mr. bar bozza l. d. a money that you keep weekly ads. this is i'll be as you star. i'm went to what stamp you. what's problem, my origin star vision. all yonder there. i put the gear with one set of 2 to the views you have
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a kid at. the vision keeps who don't. takes me to see you know, house which your own 40 years ago was occupied by a group of over 20 farmers. motherfucker jim resolves, move to my vision. my pleasure to be able to give you my mother. i you before. she would say please don't move. i eat. what did and what you have to be done with food. i see what i'm a budget money. don't believe that we're going to buy it or what to do? what do they, what do, what, what are they working? lou, trudy and martha was yourself, boston, don't you keep up with this him that i can from
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that you'll want to. he wanted, you know, you're asking mr. about either your me don't want to get invasions such as the one at his house, forced to shavone, testified for the rights to their land. from the 19 sixty's onwards. omega was his sanction. i saw the fish that i never was in the out of the mac. i thought of my, my dad just simply is put was he was what is that there? a c. c. mush can again, i can use and show what they sell the lanai bavarian. well, by today he was not for the bicycle, seattle demarco. one of the people who instrumental in this process was matters who, who is go to in as britain was 1st indigenous congressmen in 1982 and chevron today in the article in the middle of the numbers. if you get the main report to see
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jenny follow, wanna keep that research plus don't revision and as he said, bill history in 1988, a new constitution was passed. we recognized indigenous people as the 1st occupants of brazil. the seventy's were given the legal rise to their land, an area of more than 328000 hector's. but despite this, the invasions continue in 20198 implemented by boise over the past 2 decades. this advantage of the last 18000 hector's, of the territory down to one of the lookouts responsible regarding the border get faster and get a significant a lot of the the what the morning while i'm on the, the, the off by adding the hawaii off that all lot, we are in the off there by the pilot. what it was thought about in your thought on
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the wow. human of that was of the but it was me was what you are human. see, it was a lot for me when the one who know that feel that a through i was there recently rented, were given a useful tool of history, which has enhance their surveillance capacity drawn. the money to when money will be will be there is this jerome issue once they're able to watch over an area of $600.00 actors at one time . oh, melissa brown. steve was on the pharma said, now thank you so important. you know,
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you school would be shot at be meant by boys, and i've seen how the shavone to protect nature were trained to keep intruders out . my next stop is the village of here, where the community is preserving biodiversity, using seeds. well, i see again very mean to muddy is a traditional expedition in nature. today the whole village is going on to get your see this? oh, the bracelets necklace which is made from whose teeth and tackle are believed to have the protective property. oh, good mom. my mom had the so i seen the with this
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a mom on the why. why on the days now on. i want to grow with d. s. m. would you rather me to cooper him into and would it you for us i you can of using the competition here. just got a few in the quite use the booty cheap tomorrow they were going to put in warm water for one day and they didn't have it for breakfast. big part of the food supplies, the village, negative decision. we'd enjoyed
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if i just got video and i just mentioned, when you do this, the dental ball was the right. i lose. did he who the one of the is the it a cd 3. who is the one on the home. i love the last day when a man who or who's, who's been a few minutes the so they take the food and then have all the seeds you boil it, feed your family. like a seed bank is real gold or the 600 kilograms of seeds are connected by the community every year. summer. so the local fairs to both indigenous and non
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indigenous communities and others representing 52 species from this unique ecosystem or planted on village lands. thanks again for getting into it old. you know the very do you get a proficient i can do my work that asked me you vote for the chiefs from an s plan. you did make a lot of 18 d. c built, the community can help to preserve the areas reach by diversity. house minutes that could you know, new mama, florida actually the know the strengths h as in most to the model. but i was little i doing my time here. i've gained
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a real understanding of how intricately connected mission french's way of life is with the world around, and how deep their knowledge epic runs. your true defenders of nature and their rights to remain here serve as it's guardians must be defended to me to be the most. i mean, neither time though i am, i didn't know that other be the phone any that, but that's up to being me up a bit later the line and will be at the end of it is enough for many of them. this some of the things that need to know,
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but most me you know what they have read that on the book. yes, i was there to be the, i meant to say to another man, but he met i studying and it was a while you but i yes. in the, in the idea that the name of the input in for me like that. yeah. you know what i mean this up, but i see the one this up, but it's similar to the suffix from my people sac, if enough that he but he made amended that will be at least get a can know my, you know, my, i'm in the, in the in the, in the back you can on the left hand to get the mall, but i don't get a good idea or the anchor to get it. but i
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mean, my dear is a tipping point. scientists are telling us right now that we have just 12 years as the world's lead, to agree upon a solution. people are taking that into their own plan. what happening now? we're trying to get people to understand people and that it kills people. now it's ridiculous. birthright with the people's voice. oh, no jazeera ah al jazeera went as a you ah, all stories that need to be tone. find
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a way these are my babies, my witness job cases in firing documentary. change the world on al jazeera. ah, the job us military officer admits to a strategic failure in afghanistan and tell us congress he wanted to keep the contingent of troops there. ah, hello, i'm emily anglin. this is al jazeera alive from joe. how are coming up? i'm sorry.

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