tv [untitled] October 6, 2021 1:30pm-2:00pm AST
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for is stumbled 20 degrees down in antalya. we'll get you up to 29. western africa in northern parts of god are picking up a $140.00 millimeters of rain over the past 24 hours. so that's about twice the amount of rain you should see for the month of october. look at this on wednesday, it slides further towards the south. we've also got some heavy falls for cameroon, affecting to walla, with a high of 31 degrees. that's it for me, we'll see again soon. ah. after decades of conflict between successive colombian, government and the fox marxist gorillas and historic peace, the code in 2016 so fight his lay down their arms. 5 years on a bit, rising defense and fruitful police repression. a new like of the violence has robbed the nation. people in power off if the agreement is failing and what's next, that a country columbia killing the p on al jazeera when freedom of the press is under
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threat. so in all he just called to talk genuine, the about your false towards the beijing government step outside the mainstream. the has been a policy to implement a tiered system of access towards the internet, shift the focus. the pandemic has turned out to be a handy little pretext for the prime minister to clamp down on the press covering the wave. the news is covered to listening post on a job 0. ah ah, ah, hello again, i am associate, am doha. let's remind you of our top stories here. the south. taiwan is defense
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minister says tensions with beijing up their worst in 40 years. that's after a record number of chinese aircraft entered the islands air defense. ern, he said china could launch an invasion within 4 years. leaders from e. u and western vulcan countries are gathering for discussions and sabina talks will focus on investment in the balkans and coven 19 recovery, as well as afghanistan, china, and european energy prices. and the nobel prize in chemistry has been jointly awarded to, to scientists for development of a precise new tool for molecular construction thrills readers. academy of sciences says their work had a great impact on pharmaceutical research. let's take you to a live event. now, british prime minister barak johnson is currently addressing supporters at his conservative party conference in manchester. let's listen one of the most open economies and societies. and on july, the 19th,
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we decided to open every single theater. and every concert hall with my club in england, we knew that some people would still be anxious. so we sent talk. government represented is to us what is what the need for so that anyone could dance perfectly safely. and more than he brilliant. i read very, very good john, davy, living room, living room. meaning that we, we, you all represent the most jiving hip happening and generally funk a bottom party in the world. and how have we managed to open up ahead of so many of our friends you know the answer. it's because of the roll out of that back c a u
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. k. phenomenon. the magic potion invented in oxford university, bottled in wales, distributed at incredible speed vaccination centers. everywhere i saw the army in action in glasgow firing staple guns like carbines. as they set up a huge vaccination center in from manor, i saw the needles going like a collective sewing machine they vaccinated so rapidly that we were able to do those crucial groups. one to 4, the oldest and most vulnerable foster than any other major economy in the world. and though the disease has sadly not run away, he him the one on the impact on death rates has been, is astonishing. and i urge you all. i got you all to get are your jobs because every day of vaccine defense is getting stronger and stronger and you,
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you all of you and everybody watching you made this rollout possible. you made each other safer. so battery chill. thank each other go. i mean, he can enjoy courses, right? courses says bun hill, it's okay now. and we in turn, thank the volunteers, the public health workers, accounts workers, the pharmacists, but above all, untiring, unbeatable unbelievable. and h s. ah. and as a responsible, conservative government, we must recognize the sheer scale of their achievement. but also the scale of the challenge ahead. when i was lying in san thomas is hospital last year, i looked blearily out of my window at
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a hole in the ground between the the i see you had another much older victorian section. and amid the rubble of brick, they seemed to be digging a hole for some one or something, or indeed some one possibly me but the n h has saved me in our wonderful masses, pulled my chest nuts out of that ta tarion pit. and i went back on a visit the other day and i saw that the whole had been filled in with 3 or 4 gleaming stories of a new pediatrics unit. and that you have a metal for my friends for how we must build back better. now we have a huge hole in the public finances. we spent 407000000000 pounds on cobit support, and our debt nightstands at over 2 trillion pounds. and waiting lists will almost certainly go up before they come darn. cove id pushed out
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a great bow wave of cases. people did not or could not seek help and that wave is now coming back a tide of anxiety washing into every a any and every gp, your hip replacement, your mother's surgery. and this is the priority of the british people. does anyone seriously imagine that we should not, not be raising the funding to sort this out? is that really the view of responsible conservatives? i can tell you something, margaret thatcher would not have ignored the meteorite that has just crashed through the public finances. she would have wagged her finger and said more borrowing now is just higher interest rates and even higher taxes later when this country was sick. r n, a chess was the nurse frontline teleworkers battled against a new disease selflessly risking their lives sacrificing their lives. and it is
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right that this party that is looked off to the n h. s, for most of its history, should be the one to rise to the challenge. $48.00 new hospitals, $50000.00 more nurses, $50000000.00, more g p appointments, 14 year diagnostic centers, and fixing those backlogs with the real change. because the pandemic not only put colossal pressure on the n h s, it was a lightening flash illumination of a problem. we have failed to address for decades. in 1948, this country created the national health service but kept social care local. and that made sense in many ways, generations of older people have found themselves lost in the gap. when kobe broke the one 100000 beds in the n, h s, and 30000 occupied by people who could have been cared for elsewhere, whether at home or in residential care. and we all know that this problem of delay discharge is one of the major reasons why it takes too long to get the hospital
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treatment that your family desperately need. and people worry that they will be the one that they will be the one in 10 to suffer from the potentially catastrophic cost of dementia wiping out everything they have and preventing them from policy on anything to their families. a we conservatives stand by those who shared our values, thrift and hard work, and who faced total destitution in this brutal lottery of old age in which treatment for cancer is funded by the state and care for outsiders is not or only partly. and to fix these twin problems of the n h s in social care, we aren't just going to siphoned billions of new taxes into crucial services without improving upon performance. we will use new technology so that there is a single set of electronic records as patients pass between health and social care, improving care and ensuring that cash goes to the front line and not on needless
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bureaucracy. when i stood on the step when i sit on the steps of dining he, i promised to fix this crisis and after decades of drift and did this reforming government, this can do government, this government that got bricks, it done that getting the coven vaccine roulette, done is going to get social care done, and we're going to deal with the biggest underlying issues of our economy and society, the problems. but no government has had the guts to tackle before. and i mean, the long term structure weaknesses in the u. k. economy. it's thanks to the vaccine rollout that we now have the most open open economy and the fastest growth in the gc we have unemployment
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we have unemployment 2000000 lower than forecast. we have demand surging. and i'm pleased to say that after years of stagnation, more than a decade, wages are going up faster than before. the pandemic began, and that matters deeply because we are embarking now on a chain of direction that has been long overdue in the u. k. economy, we're not going back to the same old broken model with low wages, low growth, low skills, and low productivity. all of it enabled adam and assisted by uncontrolled immigration and the answer to the present stresses and strains which are mainly a function of growth and economic revival is not to reach for that same old lever of uncontrolled immigration to keep wages low. the answer is to control immigration to allow people of talent to come to this country, but not to use immigration as an excuse for failure to invest in people in skills
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and in the equipment, the facility machinery. you've been listening man to british prime minister burns johnson. he is addressing the bosses and the conservative party conference there in manchester. his praise the national health service for their work during the grant of iris pandemic, and promising as by their party slogan to build back better. apple brendan is also at the conference and has been listening in portland rather idiosyncratic turns of faith that seem to get a very warm welcome. well, a very typically perfect bravura delivery by the prime minister boris johnson. there has to say it's an overwhelmingly domestic speech that he's giving here for an overwhelmingly domestic audience. so no mention so far, at least of international affairs or foreign policy issues. but you her just at the end of the clip that we've been listening to there, that the main central message or all of his whole week here in manchester and that
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is that the u. k. economy under this conservative government isn't in a transition period from what doris johnson sees as a low wage, low productivity as sort of a high immigration economy to a new sort of highly skilled, high wage, high productivity economy. he admits that the process of that transition is likely going to be painful in the short term. certainly here in the u. k, we've seen a 500 percent increase in wholesale gas prices, for example, that not specifically just a u k issue. but for example, it has also led to things like supply chain issues. we've seen a shortage of h t, v lory drivers. queues at the petrol pumps. some petro pumps running dry, the army on the streets to, to deliver fuel. and the, and there is the feeling that there is a cost of living crisis in the very near future facing the u. k. population. none of that so far from boris johnson. although what he did say was it, this was
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a reforming can do government, which is so determined to get things done. we've been briefed to expect that he will say that his government is the one that has the guts to push this through. he's making this a kind of gutsy messenger and, and somebody that is a typically prov, you're a brave and, and, and thrusting kind of government in can. in contrast, he says to the opposition and the labor and pull this all sounds a lot like damage control. as you say, the country remains in crisis. will british voters be buying it? do you think? well, i mean we've been here for 4 days up here in manchester and we've been out who we spent. i see surprisingly that little time here inside of the party conference, we've actually been going out and speaking to low income groups businesses around. and for the moment, i have to say that many people, it's certainly in the business community, at least are giving boris johnson the benefit of the doubt. yes, there are grave concerns because said among low income groups,
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because today is the day that a benefit called universal credit, which had been uplifted by 20 pounds around $27.00 a week. during the pandemic. that 20 pounds $27.00 is now being sought from to day . and so there are grave concerns that people at the lowest brackets of income. people who rely on that benefit are now going to face very real hardship. as inflation goes up, as energy costs and under the cost of heating your home, for example, go up as well. but for the moment, as far as the and i could also say that there are misgivings and simmering concerns, even among the cabinet or his cabinet ministers. and the conservative faithful here about this idea of higher wages and that the fact and the tax that's having to be raised in order to pay for the costs of the pandemic. the conservative party is very traditionally a low tax pro business party. so anything that increases business costs,
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such as the policies that the prime minister is advocating it creates disquiet. but for the moment he's been given the benefit of the doubt. many people here political analysts see boris johnson is somehow being able to defy natural gravity in the political sense. and he's continuing to do that so far. proven in there at the conservative party conference for us in manchester. thanks so much for on living. are now and one of sedans and most vital forts remains blocked by protesters in the countries east. members of the beach, a tribes have forced the closure of ports. you don and protest of what they say is the regions lack of political power and poor economic conditions. the dedlock with the government has raised concern about a shortage of medicines, fuel and wheat. ma madeau reports, they should be lumbering up and down sedans, roads, shifting supplies across the country. but dozens of heavy goods vehicles on hold up here at the parking lot in ports had done. some of them are laden with goods,
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but with the port androids leading to the family closed by the protesters, none of them would be going anywhere. a one and a half hour layman that it in lot are only god knows how badly we've been affected by the port closure we've been here more than 20 days. we've spent the little we had and the government seems unable to resolve the crisis. protestant from the beecher, and had done daughters fights of instances done, have been blocking robes and exits to the port, forcing it to close these in protest at what they said that he jumps, lack of political power and poor economic conditions. the protesters are also under the deal. the transition of government signed with sedans, rebel groups in october, last year, the crisis at the blockaded port is now slowly turning into a national crisis. the sudanese government says the country is about to run out of a session medicine, fuel and witt at the main market in put should done trade us say business is bud revalidated and i'll let her send her. some businessmen have chosen to close down,
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get me a few customers, and we have all been forced to re negotiate our financial commitments. whether it was under the love of the local, on behalf of them, i've never seen port sudan in this situation. and the closure of the portion roads has really turned our lives upside down. port sudan is also experiencing full shortages where they still does a low potential. it is easy to spot government officials say the blockade on ports had done this was sending an economic crisis that begun. under the former regime. this port is not just a lifeline for sudan, but also for its landlocked neighbor, south sudan, which ships $160000.00 bottles of oil. through here, every day, a government delegation managed to convince the protesters last week to allow south sudan to resume its exports of oil. costume has warned the protest as it won't allow the closure of the porch to continue any longer. the tribesmen say they won't leave till their grievances are dressed for now,
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the standoff continues. mohammed i da well just either put to done while the world is going to run shores of water unless big changes are made according to the united nations. whether agency does the number of people without water will soar because the global population is increasing and there isn't enough everyone. expense believe 5000000000 people won't be able to access water by 2050. meanwhile, hazards linked to water like floods and droughts, increasing because of climate change. and $170.00 countries will not meet a target to achieve sustainability and their water resource management. by 2030 will only we spoke to max dilly. he is the director of climate at the world meteorological organization and also one of the lead authors of that report. he says, bolstering global was monitoring systems should be a priority. the main theme of the report are, is, 1st of all, to highlight the, these trends that the that were just mentioned. but secondly,
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to increase the investments that are going into the systems that monitor water. ready and water resources and the services that help planners and farmers and public health officials of water managers to use the resource in the most effective way. and what we're finding is that those systems and the, the services that are based on them are, are deficient in a lot of countries in the world. our ability to monitor the weather and the water. and the climate depends on, on a global effort to take observations and to share that data and then to use that data. ready for, for cason and for supporting decisions. and we are not seeing enough of that the data sharing. and that's why in this month actually there
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will be a resolution table by the world meter, a logical congress to promote the free and unrestricted sharing of those observations. because they're very essential for all countries in the world to have access to the information they need. ah, is downtime passport and his visa massage. thank you so much. we'll start with boxing, and the pre fi theatrics softened, deliver major entertainment, and the best in the business is all you be tyson fury, the british world heavyweight champion is gearing up to defend his w. b. c. title against american deyonce wild aft. and there's plenty of history between the pants. the 1st bounce in 2018 ended in a draw before fury. one they re match last year with a dominant victory. wilder later claimed fury had cheated during their 2nd meeting . i'm living in wildest mind. rent free the whole time,
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2 years every to every time you look in the murray seat, tyson theory, a semi bin them up and then knocking them out. you know, many things that are as many things that are, that i, vis last in the 1st by, along with the 2nd you know, and i day as cute game plan. every time he goes to bed before we close his eyes at night he sees a gypsy king, and every thing he wakes up on thinks about in the morning. he thinks that i some fury, but this time around it, is it just a different feeling? you know all the way around, you know, just all the ceramic around me, the atmosphere. yes. and the just the energy and as a whole, when we was 1st going to fight for, it was a decent man like a family mom, you know, tony for his kids and allah. but now i know he's a real piece, a garbage piece of rubbish. i look forward to porn on a great performance. come october to night. you know, when are those is going to be in the arena? they're gonna feel the electricity is in there. i'm going to knocking spark out saturday night and i cannot wait to get him in that ring and give him
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a good i did for sure. i might even take it slow of him. i might take his long pullman ship, make him say no mass. the boston red sox have beaten the new york yankees as 2 of sports biggest foes, met in a one off shootout for a place in the next round of major league baseball playoffs. on tuesday, it turned out to be a one sided contest as boston dominated from the start of to taking the lead. in the 1st inning through a zander, bogart 2 run homer, they never looked back. kyle schwaber added a home run of his own. as the red sox, 16 to boston, advanced to a best of 5 division series against the tampa bay res game one is on thursday. obviously, you don't want them to, to win for the, for, for, for, you know, for the right reasons for us. but you know, you just have respect for them. you know, i know it just happened that and i, we, we played better the future of brooklyn, nick star, kyrie irving is still up in the air with just 10 days to go before the new
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n b a season starts. that's because the player has so far declined to say whether or not he has been vaccinated against coven. 19 the nets are prepaid to or forced to pay without him, because players are not able to practice or play in new york. if they have not had at least one vaccine jab as in new york health regulations in san francisco, also, i mean players base their needs to be vaccinated to play home games. golden state warriors forward, andrew, wigan says he felt forced to get the job. you want to work with me, the rules are with you. and hopefully there's a lot of people out there you know, stronger than me and keep by in and you know, and for the believe and hopefully works out for them. good news for cricket fans. the ashes are set to go ahead off to england, captain jo root confirm he will travel to australia for the series. this follows
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weeks of negotiations between the critical authorities of both countries. england's main sticking points was whether or not their families would be allowed to join them. given australia is strict corona virus protocols. if they dragged from pillar to post with their, with their schedule over the last couple of months, the quite a lot of test crickets i yeah, i can understand where they've come from having families around, especially in a pandemic gauze or on the road for a lot longer than what was used to go when you adding on quarantine at the start and, and potentially the end anyway you company going so yeah. awesome. awesome. so with that is difficult. us open champion emerald. a kanu says she won't rush into making a decision on a new coach. the 18 year old parted ways with her former train or shortly after grand slam victory read a khan who returns to tournament tennis this week at indian wells. falling a busy few weeks, which included the met garner in new york,
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playing tennis with the duchess of cambridge, kate middleton and attending the world premier of the latest james bond film. her focus is now firmly back on continuing her career and looking for someone, hopefully even more to our experience at a high level because like i'm now 22 in the world and. 6 it's new to me, so i, i wish i would have someone who had been an experienced debt but. 6 yet my coach, andrew from us open was gray and we had a lot of good times together. but i think for this next chapter, i just want someone more experience. well, at the us open squash in philadelphia, egypt will number 10 must suffer. our soul has reached the final, it's the 1st time he will play in the final. will that to a platinum event, a soul beads perused diego las in a find them through a loan to there waiting for him in the final is another rejection. sorry moment. look at it and it will be an all egyptian affair in the women's final to will number 6, honey, or al her mummy. so or world number one inert,
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i'll shall be in the semifinals at despite being again down to start with. she'll face defending champion mood and go heart in the final ok most 70 year olds are winding down and looking to into a peaceful retirement, but not dear dre we'll all make. she celebrated her 70th birthday by breaking her own record of being the oldest person to climb the el capitan peak at yosemite national park in california. she is the mother of the famous free. so low rock climate, alex arnold. okay, that's all we'll even for now. most policies coming up a little bit later on this does yeah. like so much piece m. well, now the international space station is about to become cinema's, the most expensive movie set russian actress eula. pet assailed and director clim chapin go have arrived on board. they blasted off in a so i use spacecraft to shoot the fest, have a feature film in space. it's about a surgeon who has to save the life of a kaufman ot while defying gravity. well that's,
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that's the news. our nic clock will be here in a moment with one of them and frank assessments. what's the point of the un if multilateralism isn't part of its dna? we need somewhere. we're sovereign states can exchange informed opinions in focus likely to change biking behavioral. it's not going to change their behavior, they're going to continue to do what they do when it's going to be more in trade and less in terms of trying to match with this more games mentality. in depth analysis of the days global headlines inside story on out j 0.
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0, for the congolese, the journey to work or means unimaginable. hodge. i prefer to like go because don't do. i've got the captain tooth chancing life and live on a dangerous journey through the jungle. no, i fell on to the rail. i nearly died of our children 8th. go to school and live because of the prank. risking it all the democratic republic of congo on al jazeera boston clearings and now taking over what used to be pristine forest, where giant trees once too tall and cheap and see you scroll conservationist say the air? yes. warming with nico tim. below. gus and butcher's. 4 years ago, the government is here in the, on the east to ban on the timber trade. but that decision only opened a floodgate of uncontrolled illegal looking sierra leone is home to more than $5000.00,
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was to chimpanzees more than $1000.00. $500.00 of them are found on the law mon, to regional and their prop, from safe. cuz the vision is under pressure to save them after the resumption of lugging and the return of cultures. ah, the vice president weighs in on taiwan china. tensions has taipei warns, bay ging will be capable of a full scale invasion within years. ah, 11 o'clock, this is out 0 live from the also coming up the nobel prize. the chemistry is awarded to, to scientist for a tool to build more.
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