tv [untitled] October 17, 2021 1:00pm-1:30pm AST
1:00 pm
we'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 jazeera. ah, this is al jazeera ah, the time is 10100 hours g m t 1 pm here in doha. hello, i'm come all santa maria. welcome to the new south fighting intensifies in yemen, the saudi that coalition claims to kill around a 16040 rebels. also in the news anger in sri lanka, against what people say is poaching by indian fishermen. the tributes continue to come in for david amos, the british empire who was killed while meeting his constituents. and we're looking
1:01 pm
at how africans biggest film festival is bringing diversity to global audience. and as for the international olympic committee head south have plans to say that more regular woke up the i see says football as governing body is putting money ahead of sports. ah. starting in yemen, the sunday where the saudi le coalition says it's killed at least a $160.00 or de fighters in moderate province. dozens of air strikes were launched in support of government forces, trying to push back the rebels. last month, the heard these renewed their offensive in at province murray, the last stronghold of the internationally recognized government in northern yemen . hey hussein. locate the political commentator journalist who is aligned with the movement he spoke to earlier and denies the claims that those killing took place.
1:02 pm
do we see on the ground that there you know many out of me here? i'm subtle, the whole the advancing toward the mighty be city. i mean, they have not actually do all do. so the strikes and all disclaim of the, this huge amount of killing who device did not stop the show you that i do think that the so the it is that i now have any effect. the reason of that is because of the many defense has actually take out also the drones of which those don't actually the so the depend on them to collect information for ada to attack. that's why they have liberated in the last 48 hours. i love the little ones, i know they are advancing towards south of mighty, but most of the fighters who are now advancing toward might, if they are put on my boyfriends. this is one of the strategy that here can i have
1:03 pm
been use in the mainly try to use fighter for them that they are going to liberate i. this actually sends kind of a good message to the people that it's all at people. they're against a human anatomy. i didn't think that they could advance a portal one meter, but they may need to know that there is a huge support that an area under the control of. so the back for the support is actually toward a son. i voted it is because you've seen the security, the bad it is it to asian in those area. i will keep an eye on that story, of course, out of yemen and bring you updates throughout the day. for now, we will move on to afghanistan, where the interior ministry says goals will soon return to secondary schools have only been permitted to attend primary schools since the taliban takeover. male students and the teachers were allowed to go back. that was in late september to cobble we go, stephanie decker reporting 1st. if we were talking about this yesterday in about
1:04 pm
the importance of the education issue, a taliban knows that particularly in the eyes of the west. this is one where they need to step up. absolutely, and it's one of the issues that the international community is demanding of them. the, the rights of girls and women to continue their education and to go to work. because one of the things that we discussed with katie said hosty, he's the spokesperson of the interior minister. he seemed to indicate that this is going to happen very soon. i have been hiring from the taliban, that it is going to happen. but they need time to, uh, basically what they're doing is segregating boys and girls from education, particularly secondary education and university. but i think we're getting an indication that it's going to happen very soon almost within days. but i think we're gonna have to wait and see we discussed um in the range of object of, of issues with him, particularly security economy. also the fact that a lot of people remain terrified of the taliban and what the taliban was doing to address that. but i started by asking him what the impact of the international community withholding so many millions of dollars is doing on their attempts and
1:05 pm
efforts to run the country without the bliss that what were originally. there are 2 aspects affected. first is running the system and the 2nd one is the ordinary life of the afghan people. one, it can have a bad impact on the ordinary citizens because of course need help in the economic sector and other areas due to withholding this money. the oven community and the business men are suffering what it did in g mart. sara, i asked him about recent reports that secondary schools for girls will be opening imminently. the kick walked us, the exact time will be given by the minister of education from my understanding and information in a very short time, ali, newest, his and schools will be re oakland who and older girls and women will return to school and their teaching jobs. he'll visit about the movie. many people remain terrified of the taliban. there is no trust. i tell him what is being done to address that. he tells us amnesty has been granted to everyone or monitoring their fighters and have opened a complain, telephone line, or other halleck to the who on those people who are fleeing to concretely who have
1:06 pm
already left or have a plan to leave. we are giving them assurances that you are the people of this country, sons of this country. let's come and work for this country unless built this country and they slamming emeralds together. but trust takes time to be rebuilt and only time will prove whether the taliban will deliver on their promises. these are unpredictable time. you don't really know how they palate. you have, you know, that was an insurgency just until 2 months ago. now having to run a country and particularly that withholding of millions of dollars of cash is having a crippling effect. i was talking to one gentleman because what you have now is that you do have the ministers in place that are taliban. but really underneath that running the ministries or the old civil servants of the old government, one of them telling me that hadn't been paid in 6 months. so that goes from the previous government here and now to the taliban. so new saying things are so difficult, right? now, and this is what we're hearing from every one here. so i think if we do see
1:07 pm
potentially girl schools opening secondary and university eminently that could be seen as a concession to the international community to perhaps release what is very much needed cassia, stephanie deck. ellen, the new sal from cobbled, did i thank you, stephanie, in sri lanka, hundreds of fishermen are protesting against what they say is poaching from neighboring india. i said their livelihoods are being threatened fishman, demonstrated by sending dozens of boats flying black flags to the northernmost point of the island. it won't bear government to enforce a 2017 law that would prevent indian fishermen from encroaching into sri lankan waters. michelle fernandez with more now from caliber at the root of it. it's about livelihoods about she lankin fishermen struggling to make ends meet and what they see is mass scale. poaching by indian fishing boats that come into sri lankan waters and take valuable fish dogs away with them. now this has not been
1:08 pm
a new phenomenon. it's been going on for years and the fishing of community right across. 5 the coastal boat from the east of sri lanka right through the north and going even into the north west of the country has been complaining over the years. some of the most valuable stocks are the stocks of shrimp that these trawlers carrier when one of the problems is the fishing methods of use. it's called bottom trolling where these massive trawlers have huge planks that the left right down to the bottom of the sea bed. and essentially the scrip, the sea bed as they go along. and following our massive net that scoop up everything that's been kind of whipped up into those nets. the problem being that it also causes a huge amount of environment, destruction. so this brought us to day that started out in the east of the country
1:09 pm
in mila 2. and the fishermen 150 to 200 boards essentially making that journey right along the coast to the north of the country to show their protest what they say. all forms of bottom trolling have been banned by an amendment to the existing laws that were brought in 2017. now ceremony have taken place in paris to mock 60 years since the massacre of algerian protest, as in a police crack down the mayor of paris. and he del go was among those attending the event on saturday, my new macro, and became the 1st french president to attend such a commemoration. but he did stop short of issuing a formal upon the precise number of victims is unknown. but some historian say several 100 people were killed during demonstrations against french rule. lauren, this with tanya gaga. 60 years on from the paris massacre and the wounds run deep. one day before the anniversary, president mccord attended the official commemoration alongside relatives of the
1:10 pm
victims. he paid tribute to them, yet no word of an apology from the man who was running to keep his job in next year's election. not even a public speech. in a written statement put out by the president's office, mccomb observed a minute of silence in memory of the victims of the bloody repression of october 17 1961. he admitted the facts. the crimes committed that night under the authority of molly's papa are inexcusable. for the republic was that conveyed regret but too subtle for many who point to the decades of silence surrounding the killings. egon don't listen to me and it's high time on this 60th anniversary that a strong statement be made at the highest level of the state to recognise the responsibility of the french state and this massacre. this, the massacre occurred against the backdrop of the algerian war of independence. as a conflict dragged on, the public began to turn against the savagery of the methods used by french forces
1:11 pm
. throughout this turbulent time, one man came to embody those traits. maurice papa, a senior police official in france is nazi collaboration, is to be she government, papa, and forcibly deported more than one and a half 1000 french jews to die in concentration camps. after the war, he rose to become the officer in charge of power, says police forces in his ro papa ordered the violence oppression of the october 17th march in paris, where $25000.00 men, women, and children gathered across the city to protest against the curfew. that prevented algerians leaving their homes at night. police charged at the crowds, killing dozens and held many into the river send to drown their bodies never to be found. and the precise number of those killed still unknown. it took 51 years for a french president to recognise the killings in 2012 and then president francois on acknowledged the massacre and renounce frances colonial passed. but he stopped
1:12 pm
short of and upon she was roundly criticized by right tween opponents and what's the sensitivity in which some regard the killings comes down to holding frances colonial power to account the rise of the far right in the country has further inflamed and already toxic debate that home was eventually imprisoned for the crimes he committed during world war 2. but for the victims of the 1961 massacre and the families, it is an event which expose the unrestrained powers of the therapies at the time and the grief and damage that it left behind. when i go out era, we are 12 minutes past this, new one coming up, the threat from hypersonic, mis 5. now the u. s. believe china, i've been carrying out scott hiler in southern thailand. we're a fishing community standing up against the government development project. they say will decimate the environment and crush their way of life. and then sunday for the wages strike
1:13 pm
a leading his team to top spot in the german football late on it will be here at around 10 to the out. i live in and now where there are calls for rallies in the capital to mark 2 years since the starts of major protests against the government, demonstrators are also planning to gather at the barret port. of course, the sight of last year's massive explosion. let's go to jamalia shale now in beirut, and jamal divisions and lebanese society a common but they really seem to be at a high point at the moment indeed, come on. it's kind of ironic because as you mentioned, it's 2 years since those protests took place. here are protest movements which had the headline of all of that means all of them i eat, getting rid of all the different heads of the different sex, some parties here or where to pull to have
1:14 pm
a revision of how the political system walls rather than it being based on a sectarian one, the irony is that 2 years on 11 and probably find yourself in a much more pen secretary of situation than that has been 24 months ago when we sold up boiling over on thursday with those deadly clashes in one of the areas of bay route, which resulted in 7 people being killed there. that was some of the protests from the movements block here, as well as the law were protesting against the judge's decision to call and question some of their ministers in their role where they were. it's our last thing that was a politicized decision because the judge did not call upon ministers and officials from other sectors within the government, as they protested they were killed. and i, initially the accusations and the fingers were being pointed towards the lebanese
1:15 pm
4th is the man i section of society here for shooting those protests. however, in the past 24 hours, video has emerged showing that actually a soldier within that had been his army, was the 1st to fire out those protesters and kill one of them, which is making things even more tense because lebanon is all about a failed state one of the only surviving institutions in it's if we can say that is the military that is seen to be implicit in stole kingdom, sectarianism, or at least failing to protect people. then that's going to add a whole new level of difficulties in a country that is struggling economically, socially and of course politically. so those protests have been called for later on today. but there is a very clear awareness among small sections of society that the situation is extremely turn on the brink of turning into something
1:16 pm
a lot. so that's why we've been here here on calls from the patriarch from the other different religious leaders from the president falling for com, calling for people not to soak up. so sectarian tension. so there will be a lot of attention directed towards those ports at different did they take place how big they will be? because beside all of this tension come out just very quickly. there is also a sense of maybe i wouldn't say defeatism, but there is maybe a despair amongst a lot of people that haven't. let's hear anything. lebanese lira has become close to worthless, in terms of its value, with no real hope by what the people will still take to the streets or not. we'll wait to see on a knife edge, isn't it? jamal or shells and bay rates, and we'll be checking back with him later in the day to see how those projects do pick up a vigils been held in the norwegian town of kong folk for 5 people killed
1:17 pm
in a bone arrow attack on wednesday. 3 other people were injured in that attack. the alleged perpetrator appeared in court on friday, governance announcement independent investigation to look at the police response. morning have been holding a vigil in the constituency of the british m. p. stab to death on friday. david amos was meeting members of the public in lee on see when he was attacked. police have extended the detention of a man who was arrested epicene and his word challenge report. this murder has prompted a review of security arrangements for british politicians. for a day at least, british politicians put aside the divisions and united to more than one of their own. the prime minister and the leader of the opposition laid wreaths where conservative m p. david amos was murdered on friday. police arrested a 25 year old british man and are investigating the killing as an act of terrorism . reverent clifford newman is the minister of belfast. the church where david amos
1:18 pm
had been meeting constituents when he was fatally stabbed. he was personally genuinely light people and try to help him as best as i can. so room for this to happen to somebody was trying to do some good in the community is really the worst comics person. you just don't understand it. a good man and a fine public 7 says that message, a true gentleman, he supported his communities as one down here and there's another over there. thank you for your dedicated service to our community for so many years. so many of these tributes have a similar message, david amos die doing something that was integrity of his job. he was out there meeting the public face to face, but it raises the question ah, and piece safe enough. although westminster can seem like a fortress with arms, police never far away. most m. p 's have little to no protection when they're in their constituencies. and this is the 2nd m,
1:19 pm
p to be murdered in 5 years. joe cox from the opposition labor party was killed by a white supremacist in 2016 on the streets of the area. she represented the home secretary as lawrence to safety review measures underway. right now, i can be in meetings yesterday. i've been with the speaker of the house and with the police and security services to make sure that all measures are being put in place for the security of m. p so that they can carry on with the duties as elect to democratic members. one conservative m p tobias elwood says, face to face meetings with constituents should be stopped until they can be moved on line in 2017. he tried to save the life of a police officer fatally wounded in the westminster bridge attack that left 6 people dead. but many more m p say meeting the public is a vital part of their jobs and the functioning of british democracy. and even a tragedy such as this shouldn't be allowed to disrupted for each allen's out as
1:20 pm
era, leon c and essex. japan's new prime minister thing because she has made ritual offerings to a controversial shrine. the 10s of japanese aggression in the 1st half of the 20th century. see the yes. can you shine in tokyo as a symbol of the countries militarism. she did not visit it's autumn festival person that was attended by the former prime minister. you'll see the suca. he said, the offerings respect, those who lost their lives. in southern thailand, a teenager is helping lead a growing campaign against the development project. in her c side community, the government says it'll bring jobs better living conditions, but those against fear it'll end their way of life and cause environmental damage. scott high, last report from china in time it on this stretch of coast where the pine trees meet the beach. on a southern bend of the gulf of thailand, the government wants to build
1:21 pm
a large industrial zone and deep sea port. this whirl region of thailand is home to abundant marine life, an undisturbed nature. if 19 year old cover, rough men ya has anything to do with it. it'll stay that way. here in china. she's one of the leaders in the prominent and growing protest movement, calling for the project to be cancelled fund. i know i used to think that my fight to save to not was just about protecting my homeland, but they came to realize that is much bigger. so we still have to live on this planet, no matter who we are. we still have to breathe. you still have to depend on natural resources. i think it's only right to speak up. she says everything she has comes from the seat and for most of the people in china, it's been that way for generations. the fishing community here in china looks at past government development projects as to what their future could look like. if this massive project moves forward. they don't like what they see,
1:22 pm
and they don't think that their concerns are getting the deserved attention. in run by curry has been a member of this community, his entire life and the fisherman for 34 years. he feels helpless and thinks all the control rest with project investors and the government equipment is, i'm good. good. and if the china project gets to green light, small boats like a house won't be able to head out and fish because they will be pick freight ships, which will effect a way of life and dark. on the sprawling and ambitious $3000000000.00 project will have several phases and cover 26 square kilometers. it receive preliminary approval from the national cabinet. 2 years ago. we have to pick everything into a cow because there are some people who are against the idea. some people with a party id, and if that's the case, then we have to find the common ground that everybody accepts the idea of what's going to move forward. but to korea, common ground will be difficult to find. if the project goes ahead,
1:23 pm
she believes traditions like this, solving fish and bearing them in the sand will be lost. i keep going because i have my eyes on the pry. i know what i am fighting for and who i am fighting for. and that fight, she says, is to make certain that even more generations of china, families are able to live a life where everything they have and need comes from the see, it's got how they're al jazeera, china thailand know africa. biggest film festivals opened in between a foster capital after an 8 month delay due to the pandemic, the pan african film and television festival has been running for more than 50 years and it represents a rare opportunity for story tell us to showcase their creations on a global scale skates, who stage nicholas hoc reports are marketed in the act of defiance in bertino sa. so a country where arm groups linked to iceland. now, kate are gaining ground despite threats. hundreds of africa's top actors, directors and producers have gathered for the fic tackler opening to the pan
1:24 pm
african film and television festival of walker do. which is also known as fest packet had 2 candidates senegalese directories in the running for the golden stallion. for her tv series on the cynically hip hop movement, this is a place all of us want to be. we don't want to go to come on to go to look, i know we want to go back when you have a something different than a classical, typical fill. you want an area where you can show it and not be judged before it is shown to a general public. and this is the place for a vanguard cinema. normally held every 2 years, fist by co sorted in 1969. the theme for this 27th edition is african cinema and the diaspora. a new perspective and new challenges. hundreds were lining up to watch the opening movie atlantic. it's the tale of a migrant going to europe, but seen from the perspective of those left behind, french and english director mattie job has already won
1:25 pm
a prize at the cannes film festival. but she says it's still important to show the movie here in walker. do you think that the deal for me to share this movie weaver with the audience tonight with the milton abbey again, to my beyond the festival, the and the price. again, the competition. we tend to forget that the most important thing is very deep relationship between a film and the cater. beyond the glitz and glamour on display on the red carpet fest, pack o is about this, watching movies in cinemas, from young, african talents that are yet to be discovered by the film industry. there's more than $200.00 films this year, including white lines. a favorite among the jury is a story of forbidden love, a set in namibia, a country often used by hollywood to portray africa, but never to tell stories of nubians. then there's a production from la soto,
1:26 pm
a nation that has no cinemas, to watch films in, but has produced an outstanding dark drama that has already won a prize at the sundance film festival for visionary filmmaking. for people in burkina faso, this event is an opportunity to experience the diversity of african narratives and for african storytellers, a chance to get their work seen on a global stage. nicholas hawk al jazeera while good to go selected for you on this news. our b hatch tigers, living near a childcare center, that of spots. plenty of debate over south africa's while 5 more film years return. we're looking at why scary movies are making your come back after the listen locked on. the sport, the atlanta braves strike 1st in their playoff series with the los angeles stock. ah
1:27 pm
hello there. the unsettled weather is going to continue to cling to the edges of europe over the next few days. we got weather systems pulling into the west, wet and wintery conditions up in the north, and no storms across the southeast. but there is still a lot of fine and dry and settled weather across those sensual areas. but if we look to the southeast, those torrential downpours. we've seen across the balconies in parts of greece have shifted further east. the heavier fords are going to be found in northern areas of turkey. and that's thanks to low pressure. pushing across the black sea is going to monday for much of the balkans. we are going to see some warmth come back. temperatures pick up, but further north it is looking rather wet and wintery. for parts of scandinavia, we've got some amber alerts out the heavy rain for northern parts of sweden, and some of those strong winds blowing showers into the baltic states and on to
1:28 pm
western parts of russia. for britain, an island at times wetter in the south. as we go in some mundane northern areas of france liking to see some of those heavier rains, but in the south it does remain finer and dryer lots of sunshine coming through for bordeaux. if we look at the 3 day, we are well above average with lots of sunshine coming through on chew, say, and it's a similar story from a north of africa with a few coastal showers. fortune is there that sure update. ah, the question the narrative. you don't have ways to check whether this information is real or not. you don't have any way to verify, identify who is telling the story their motivation. these are multi national corporations that are interested in profit, anticipate the consequences. the media was complicit in perpetuating the smith. i'm here to tell you that i think that many people died because of it. the lifting pace,
1:29 pm
deconstruct the media analysis era, stripped of their citizenship, thousands of haitian dominicans, a penalized for their heritage, a state sanctioned racism, forces them into legal limbo, a young attorney, mouth grassroots political campaign, advocating for social justice. but can she shine a light on the racial hatred and institutionalized depression that lakes the dominican republic, stateless, a witness documentary on al jazeera. lou . ah, this is the news from al jazeera. these are the top stories. the saudi le coalition
1:30 pm
in yemen says it's killed at least a $160.00 earthly fighters. in modern province. dozens of our strengths were launched in support of government forces to push back the rebels. the afghan interior ministry says girls will soon return to secondary schools have only been permitted to attend primary schools. since the taliban take over. access to education has been a key demand of the international community and hundreds of fishermen in sri lanka ra, protesting against what they say is poaching from neighboring india. i want a government to enforce a 2017 though that prevents indian fishermen from encouraging you to sri lankan. now china has tested.
36 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on