tv [untitled] October 3, 2021 12:00pm-12:31pm AST
12:00 pm
important how this could impact their life at the height of the storm. water was too high. it would have been above my head. this is an important part of the world . people pretend to work with one year from now to be was very good at bringing the news to the world from here. ah, the u. s. warned saddam that failing to move towards a civilian government could put its economic and political support at risk. ah, hello, i'm on inside. this is out. is there a lie from doha? also coming up, lebanon's water system is pushed close to collapsed by the nation's financial crisis. a child was killed by flooding, brought on by a tropical cyclone hissing oman. the palmers are opting volcano is now much more
12:01 pm
aggressive after 2 weeks of ne, constant activity. ah, see dawn as being warned that failure to progress to add civilian leadership could put us economic and political support at risk and attempted coup. 2 weeks ago has caused more mistrust between military and civilian groups that share power in a transitional government. there is still no date for the military to hand control to the civilian side. and now this tension is pawning pressure on a piece. steel signed between the transitional government and rebel groups. a year ago. the psycho juba agreement was meant to resolve a conflict that killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced millions, especially in the western region of da 4 and the southern states of south quarter fan and blue nile c dawn's revolutionary frontal,
12:02 pm
so known as the sr f sign the deal, the 2 other powerful rebel groups, the sudan liberation movement, and the sea don people's liberation movement north did not. and in recent months there has been a resurgence of violence among rival tribes on groups. as gave to him a morgan whose life for us in call to him, hipaa. tell us more about this jew, but agreement and how it's actually holding up in life all the recent pressures in the country. well, 1st of all, it's worth remembering that when this agreement that you were peace agreement was negotiated, it was divided into tracks, which means every region incident had its own track. so you had the western track that represented dar for you had the eastern track. then there's the 2 regions, or 2 areas track which are present at software to find, employ nile. and then there's the center and the north track, each one with its own demands and its own needs of for this peace agreement, its own visions. now when the agreement was signed, it was hailed as something historic and that it would and conflicts in the country
12:03 pm
. but some of the major groups are yet to join the peace agreement and to sign on it. this also the issue of the reintegration of the arm groups and that was one of the main clause is because by the end of this 3 year transitional period, all the armed groups should be part of the national army. now, while some of the armed groups brought their forces to the capitol, cartoon and others have already res started the reintegration process in their areas. many of them are you to actually start doing reintegrating and becoming part of the national army. and that is causing concerns among the security organs here in the capital and around the country. then there's the issue of the displaced people, many of those, especially of those people who are in dar for say that they were not negotiate to it. when the peace deal was signed and they don't believe that the peace deal represents them. many of them, of course, believe that i've been why had mm hm. but no, the head of the sedans liberation movement. who's yet to join or enter into peace talks with the government represents them. so they say that this agreement doesn't
12:04 pm
really represent them. and they're just one of many groups who think that visual p seal falls short of ending conflicts in sudan. and we know the protests in the east of the country have lead to economic blockages and a whole to crude oil to the capitol. how is this impacted the deal? well, in the ease, the betia council believe that this whole piece agreement, or rather the ones that the part that represents the eastern track does not represent them and does not meet the demands and the needs of the people in the east. despite the fact that those who signed on behalf of the east were from the same beecher tribe, they say that they were not negotiated. so it comes down to the elders of this community. now, over the past 2 weeks of shut down the main road that leads to rec, c state as well as the main ports of sudan. and that has affected the economy of the country. they've also shut the pipeline, that imports or oil,
12:05 pm
an oil on derivatives to sudan. so they all concerns that there will be shortages of patrol and fuel. and, and this has for the government to try to find ways to deal with this issue. the issue of the fact that the fact that some people are not happy with the peace agreement. however, the government and the arm groups that signed the deal say that they are not going to renegotiate the eastern track, but they're not going to start signing or talking about a new piece deal. and that as much as they want to hear are the people in the east and understand that they are demands that are there that are being made. this deal, the deal that was signed a year ago is not up for replacement. but he, thanks for that. hipaa morgan, in cartoon, lebanon's long travelled public water system is close to collapse. agency. se taps could run dry for 3 quarters of the population. there are carrots has more from berries. john dark lived in bayville, and is one of 1000000 suffering during lebanon's water crisis. if she didn't pay
12:06 pm
for supplies from private companies, had taps would run dry. water has been in short supply for decades, but the situation is now critical. not enough is being purified and pumped due to electricity blackouts caused by fuel shortages. the state is nearly bankrupt. so as much of the population didn't and not be nearly the same as it used to cost $90000.00 lire. now it costs 700000 lire to have water delivered twice a week. some of our neighbors can afford it. so we covered the hudson, asked the government what it's doing and if the situation has become unbearable, we don't even have electricity anymore. although i didn't follow, i should've done it. private supplies are too expensive for mice. at least 70 percent of the population could run out of water in the coming weeks. with long, ruthless ray admire that, i mean, like hospitals and businesses we are unable to get hold of, you will easily maintain his costs are also high. so we are forced to increase our water prices. we get about 90 calls a day from those needing water,
12:07 pm
but we can only respond to about 10. we are providing a service that the government isn't and should be doing. but unicef warns the sanitation system could seize altogether if millions of dollars aunt invested the cash draft government can't afford to import chemicals needed to keep water clean. we have been supporting toward the establishment what they're meant to ask for the past year. but it has come to the point that they're our support each both equally enough. so therefore we started 30 our lobby international community to really get the boy more direct support toward the either life of people. if we don't, ok, now this good point where people nampa can right even up to 4, maybe the nozzle cut water infrastructure is widely blamed on decades of corruption and mismanagement of funds and increasing land development and water pollution is making it much worse, lebanon set forth is so pop,
12:08 pm
you can't even bring it and the infrastructure to deliver that. is that breaking point? i absolutely note here not because natural sources of water like miss one of so booth. but water born diseases are common, especially among children aid agencies, warning vulnerable communities, including hundreds of thousands of syrian and palestinian refugees in lebanon. are most at risk. water is already being rationed in the worst effected areas. once that runs out, most people and likely to go thirsty, thought hated al jazeera, they don't. a child has been killed in oman, asked sceptical sancho and shaheen hits the gal, stays authorities urging thousands of people to flee coastal areas. and had the majesty counted all flies to, i'm from the capital muskets have been postponed, or counselled. shahida is expected to bring high winds and heavy rain. a weather
12:09 pm
presented to harrington takes to look at where the cyclone is heading as it moves through eastern portions of india, right across to the west. and here we find it right now in the gulf of oman. so i want to get you the latest numbers on this. are the winds, were seen them at about a 139 kilometers per hour. so here we go. it's about 80 kilometers away from moscow . we're going to track out all of this, but 1st i want to talk about some of the big risks here a for this region. so the 1st the, we've got a desert climate here, so we need to remember that the ground is bone dry. it will not be able to absorb any of this rain that we're seeing as a result. second part, this is a mountainous area. so what that means is the rain falls high above and it gushes rate down to the ground. so the combination of both of these will lead to the risk of some pretty intense flooding that we can see. all right, let's track out where this is going. so again, right now, about 80 kilometers away from moscow and take into buy off and adding a another location because this is
12:10 pm
a very important port city as it moves by it's looking like its effects will be felt there at this storm is also going to bring up that sand and does places, se saudi rate across the united arab emirates. and also for cats are as well. now they're concerned with this system. we're going to see some of the humidity bump in for the gulf. stayed. so our show the next few days for us as we look toward to bye, look at this size. so when got here, look how far away this is from this storm system. and we're still going to see wind gusts of about 55 kilometers per hour. temperature shoots up with that tropical influence, we're up to $39.00 degrees, but with the humidity it's going to feel more like $45.00. so big concerns here with flooding and winds the potential to produce some very serious damage. official results from georgia's election, so that the governing policy, georgia, dream, well ahead of the main opposition of i took place a day off to the former president mc house because really was arrested. he returned from exile to support the opposition in the municipal vote. suckers really was
12:11 pm
convicted back in 2018 for obese of power, but insist the case was politically motivated. as geisha correspond, robin force your walker, who is in tbilisi for us. so robin, what is the picture that is emerging now that the results are coming in? i there well the big take home, i think his 2 key things have happens overnight. we have those preliminary results in the 1st is that the governing party received almost or just delivered over 48 percent of all votes cost. and that means that the opposition had been hoping for the government to perform far worse that this was going to be like a vote of no confidence in this government. they needed the government to school less than 43 percent and then they would have demanded that the government's a hold snap parliamentary elections, something it,
12:12 pm
it agreed to to do earlier this year. that's not, it seems going to happen in the government will be boyd by these results. the 2nd thing is that there will be run off elections for the positions of mer in major cities in, in georgia, including here in the capital city, tbilisi. so the biggest opposition party, their candidate performed much better than expected and it looks like there's going to be a runoff between him and the governing parties are current man in tbilisi and the flip. the reason why that happened may of had something to do with this surprise. appearance of me call secretaries. you mentioned, well, i was gonna ask you that. is it? is it been a wasted trip for him? i. he's now in jail at what happens to him next. well, mikasa has really made a calculation and he's a, he's a bit of a special character. he's a showman and he snuck in under the radar. he illegally re entered georgia just
12:13 pm
before the election. he was calling on george owens to vote decisively against the government. he talked about bringing out a 100000 people on to the streets today after the election. it really looks like that is not going to happen. so if his bids to so chaos or at least to upset the political scene here, if that was his objective it's, it's failed. he is now said he's going to be on hunger strike from prison. he faces up to 6 years, potentially more if he's convicted of further or he was convicted of abuses of power while in office there may be further convictions waiting for him. i think this is a, this is going to be a disappointing blow for me. how suckers really, and it looks like this mercurial character, his or his influence on the george and political scene may be over. many thanks, that robin force and walk of african to be say,
12:14 pm
emergency response seems in the canary on and say the condo via her volcano on la palmer is becoming much more aggressive news. streams of law that have been flowing from 2 cracks, which broke open on friday. so far more than a 1000 buildings, including homes and farming infrastructure have been destroyed. and away from the volcano exclusion zone, life continues as normal from most of the island. still had on al jazeera petitioning parliament in china. single women seek the right to freeze that and the european space mission to mercury sends back ah
12:15 pm
hello, they let start in southeast asia and there's more wet weather on the way for much of indo china. you can see the dense cloud cover in this satellite image. we've seen widespread flooding across thailand. we could see more, we've got some fresh flood alerts out for bank cock as those rivers continue to rise. now the scattered storms and showers continue for much of malaysia and indonesia. heavier for, for borne yos, we going to monday, but tuesday is going to see the wet and windy weather dominating in the philippines . particularly up in the north. we could see some localized flooding here, and that was we moved down under to australia. we've seen severe thunderstorms roll across the southeast. and that's scary looking cloud looming over sydney over the weekend. but the unsettled weather has moved out on monday. there is some sunshine coming in. it is looking rather unsettled though, for victoria and tasmania. a bit of a brisk wind blowing in as it is for the west. we are looking to perth. we got wet and windy weather sweeping in. that's gonna bring the temperature down as that
12:16 pm
system moves over the byte, but more centrally are not north. it is looking a lot finer and dryer. and it has been that way for new zealand over the weekend, but we have got a vigorous weather system sweeping in, bringing some very heavy rain up in the north and a winter remixed to the south. ah, the earth is it tipping boy pines? his are telling us right now that we have just 12 years as the world's lead, failed to agree upon a solution or tweaking that who's into their own with happy now, with this actually to get people understand that it kills people and that it kills people. now it's already killing both fries return the paperwork boyish. porno jazeera. ah
12:17 pm
ah ah ha, you're watching out a 0 mind our top stories this our see don is being warned that failure to progress to add civilian leadership could put us economic and political support at risk. the tension is also pushing pressure on last year's peace deal with rebel groups. lebanon's long troubled public water system is close to collapse. agency stay that taps could run dry for 3 quarters of the population. tropical soccer and shaheen is making land hole in the gulf states of oman authorities as thousands of people to flee the coastal areas and head to shelters or flights to and from the capital muskets have been postponed,
12:18 pm
whole council. the chinese government is trying to encourage people to have more children, but unmarried women are denied access to reproductive services. now that could soon change as a landmark cold case is challenging the law that limits fertility treatment to married couples. katrina, you explains a couple hugs when theresa shoe asked, debating hospital to help freeze her eggs to later enable her to have a child as a single parent. she was turned away as an unmarried woman. she is denied reproductive services in china. in 2019, she filed a lawsuit to change the law, and her case has been heard in court today. are you hiding you or is it fuller? i don't have much time to waste. i'm an ordinary single woman. and these pastor, 3 years were very important to me. if i win, i hope i can help other woman to save yourself there live in the future. in china,
12:19 pm
if single reaming want to after x frozen, they can do it. the case is the 1st of its kind in china and spunk debate of a women's right to reproduce. china's health commission says freezing eggs is risky and unreliable, and the bad is designed to prevent companies from exploiting the technology. but activist jung allan says it's discriminatory as single men are allowed to freeze their sperm. she's petitioned members of the parliament, the national people's congress, asking them to rewrite fertility regulations the so you, when the ability to give birth shouldn't be connected to being married as a precondition. it shouldn't be restricted by policy. i think theresa shoe and her supporters are optimistic, the daughter will rule in their favor. china is facing a demographic crisis, and the government is desperately trying to boost the countries birth rates. china's population is rapidly aging, and few of babies are being born every year. staging announced
12:20 pm
a 3 child policy in may, but government support is limited to couples. some women have traveled abroad to access eg freezing and ivy f services. but expensive fees and pandemic travel restrictions mean this option is out of reach for merced, including theresa shoe. we out yourself from that. if i have to borrow the money from friends already, tips, i'll get loans from the bank. it goes against my original intention, which is why being able to choose my lifestyle and not be forced to marry someone in order to have her child. she's awaiting the judge's verdict and says she'll continue to raise awareness of her case regardless of the outcome. katrina, you out a 0 teaching tens of thousands of people have rallied in cities across brazil, calling for the impeachment of the president valuable sanara. they keys them of mishandling the coven. 19 pandemic, which has killed nearly 600000 brazilians. and as monica yanna cave reports,
12:21 pm
many people also angry with rising unemployment, poverty, and inflation. ah, the protest was held exactly one year before brazil's presidential elections. tens of thousands of brazilians from all walks of life, took to the streets of rio de janeiro, and 19 another state capitols. they may disagree on who should govern latin america's largest economy. but they say, they know who should not. the protesters dance to the same drum beat, to demand, present jade bull sonata impeachment. ma'am, he is destroying the environment, the economy, the democratic institutions. this government is squeezing the air out of the people, protest against shade bull. so now to began, since he publicly denied the coven 19 pandemic, which has killed almost 600000 brazilians to date. but now
12:22 pm
a growing number of left clean political parties have joined forces with trade unions and social organisations. even if they don't see i twice, they have a common goal. without some brazil is politically polarized. polls show 46 percent of the population supporting the former president, luis, and jasa la da silva, was on the left us workers party and 25 percent in favor. of boston aro stapo, that leaves 30 percent of resilience still looking for a candidate from the center. but polls also indicate that 59 percent of brazilians reject bal sonata, emulated both scheduled and impeachment is unlikely to happen because, although there are enough reasons to force both scenarios out, he still has supporting congress, but it's important to show the country. the majority of brazilians want him out, and these protesters say that can only be achieved by making their voices heard out on the streets, monica inactive. i'll just 0 in ecuador, police,
12:23 pm
and military have moved into a maximum security jail off to rise in a neighboring prison, killed more than a 100 inmates this week. a 1000 officers patrol the grounds to gain access to one of the presence, according to police inmates 5 shots at them. though able to seize the weapons. the government says it will pardon up to 2000 if it's 39000 prisoners to relieve severe over crowding and shells. there's holes in the colombian town. as nicole clay say, they're being pushed out of housing as landlords favor haitian migrants able to pay them in dollars. around $22000.00 migrants are taking refuge in the town. they are waiting for boats to continue their journey to panama, and from there to the u. s, and as alexander ram p at your ports, a bottleneck of migrants is only increasing a k jamie money asian migrant by then presenting my shows as the shack where she
12:24 pm
and our family have been living for 2 weeks since arriving in this columbia beach town. there is no running water. look, this is what we have for 12 people all crammed here, spending $8.00 a day and making a bill up as a knock. i mean we have kids who need to eat prices of food have doubled since we arrived. and we had no plans to stay here for weeks ago. there she is, one of nearly 22000 haitians, mostly arriving from brazil. and sheila, who are hold up waiting to catch a boat toward the dangerous jungle of the dorian gap, to continue their journey north. but panama is allowing only $500.00 migrants to enter each day. a human bottleneck that has brought the towns infrastructure to a breaking point, but as also revitalized and economy devastated by co 19 mostly to detriment of the migrants patients are paying premium prices for food and other basic items often being forced to pay in dollars. a cottage industry has grown to respond to their
12:25 pm
needs. solved like this whenever peered all over town selling everything. the migraines need to cross the jungle from sleeping mats to boots raincoats, headlights, portable kitchen, and even special bones that people here say protect you from poisonous snakes. over a 100 term lease have been expelled from their apartments by landlords hoping to make quick cash like mechanic victor lopez who has lost his house and work shop and is now working on the street and living with his daughter that a lot of farm. they kicked me out to make space for the haitians from one day to another and gave me no time to find an alternative outgoing is mail, give out is hosting up to 30 migrants per day in his home, which he is now expanding. he rejects accusations that he's taking advantage of people's despair, saying he's providing a service. he is as well. it's
12:26 pm
a mix of opportunities and needs. they need a safe place to stay with the women and children, a roof, a kitchen where they can cook. and we opened the doors of our homes. yes, we and money, but not every one opens its doors to migrants. fearing she'll end up having to pitch a tent on the beach. guadalupe spends every day hoping to change her boat ticket. scheduled for october 18th to an earlier date, but she says its all worth it to offer her family a better future. just, you know, you know, get casey. i say all i want is to reach a place where i can live safely and freely where my children can study and make a life for themselves. estimate column in officials believe that precedent by vince efforts to the port asians from the u. s. will halt the flow of migrants through nickel clea a for now their numbers keep growing. allison, empty, and jesse and nickel clear climate activists have full with police in milan as environment ministers met ahead of
12:27 pm
a u. n. conference occurred during the global march for climate justice where activists called on governments to take more ambitious steps to cut carbon emissions and tackle climate change. international delegates have been meeting in milan to see what progress can be made before the culp $26.00 client summit, which takes place in glasgow next month. we have kept 1.5 degrees within reach and as i said, that was a clear view that was coming across at this meeting. i think in terms of the the g 20, we've always said that they represent 80 percent of global emissions around 85 percent of the global economy. and therefore what the g 20 daws absolutely matches a joint european and japanese space mission to met. curious, sent back, it's very fast images. the bep he colombo, made the fest of 6 fly by seizing the planets gravity to slow down. the mission
12:28 pm
launched in 2018 will soon release 2 probes into mercury's orbit. take a look at this animation of our inner solar system. the probe is marked by a white x. it takes one and a half years to just complete a fly by earth. that's the blue orbit line. and another 18 months to get through venus is all bit in red to the point where it's now flying past mercury. if all goes according to plan and off to 6 such fly poss, pepe colombo, will be fully imaculi's. oh, bit. by the end of 2025 very kel bass is a space scientist in boston university. he says, this is an extraordinary moment located and really wonderful because of the fact that we use the gravitational port of mercury to put the spacecraft in grocer enough. so that we can see the picture and we have not been there for a very long time. the only 2 missions visited, murky before so, expecting
12:29 pm
a great deal of information. we do not know whether ever there was any water on the planet surface. we know that there is probably some left over water, tiny bones in the polar regions in areas that never see that fast. but we are not sure about that. and we hope that this mission will give us some, some good guys, whether or not there is a little bit of water in the polar regions where they'd never see that. so they're always very cord freezing cold. but deployed, it, moves that are out there, understand very fast it's, it's only dates it days. it rotates all around the fact. so it is, it is very different from the other planet. and we would know we need to know what, what is, is made of how did it develop, whether it has a reputation or she and, or not, and all of these 5 different things. so we understand something about the rest of
12:30 pm
this, or is it every mission we use something new from the same different point of view and all of the, the technology that we're using. so that's acknowledge that we use and the science that we use in all of the mission helps us greatly like forties is the fact that i'm talking to you and you can sort of see me in to where you are. and then people are indoors or can see that mean a huge thing and he would say about a, how did he come about or live from space missions because we needed to do this. whereas as us read the lunar surface. so the developments that we can figure out for these missions with help us greatly in our lives. no question about the me this is out there are these huge help stories sit on is being warned that failure to progress to a civilian leadership could.
25 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on