tv [untitled] October 17, 2021 4:30pm-5:00pm AST
4:30 pm
and yemen says it's killed at least a $160.00 hurt the fight. as in mary province, dozens of airstrikes were launched in support of government forces to push back the rebels. the afghan interior ministry says girls will soon return to secondary schools. only been permitted to return primary schools are fastened to taliban take over. access to education has been achieved. demand of the international community and thousands of people are rallying in paris to mark 60 years since the massacre of algerian protestors in a police crackdown earlier. emmanuel macro became the 1st french president to return such a commemoration, though he stopped short of issuing a formal apology. in sri lanka, hundreds of fishermen are protesting against what they say is poaching from neighboring india. they said their livelihoods are being threatened and demonstrated by sailing dozens of boats flying black flags out to the northernmost point of the island nation. they want the government to enforce a 2017 law. that would prevent indian fishermen from encroaching in 2 sri lankan
4:31 pm
portraits or from an el finance, choosing caliber at the root of it. it's about livelihoods, about 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 docs away with them. now this has not been a new phenomenon. it's been going on for years and of the fishing, a sort of community right across 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 stalks of shrimp that these trawlers carry 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 a let right down to the bottom of the c bed and essentially the scrip,
4:32 pm
the c bed as they go along and following a 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 in mila 2. and the fishermen 150 to 200 boats, 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 and southern thailand, a teenager is pushing back against a large government development project in her seaside community. the government says it will bring jobs and better living conditions goes against it, fear it will end their way of life can cause environmental damage. scott idler reports from china, in tot on this stretch of coast,
4:33 pm
where the pine trees meet the beach. on a southern bend of the gulf of thailand, the government wants to build a large industrial zone and deep sea port. this rural region of thailand is home to abundant marine life and undisturbed nature. if 19 year old curry, yar rockman yard 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 on like net. no, i used to think that my fight to save jeanette was just about protecting my homeland. but a came to realize that it's much bigger carina, so we still have to leave on this planet. no matter who we are, we still have to believe they still have to depend on natural resources. i think it's only right to speak up. she says everything she has comes from the c and for most of the people in china, it's been that way for generations. the fishing community here in china looks at
4:34 pm
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, 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 luck. 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 take everything into account because there are some people who are against the idea. some people were supporting earlier, and if that's the case, you know, we have to find a common ground that everybody accepts the idea of what it's going to move forward
4:35 pm
. but to korea, common ground will be difficult to find. if the project goes ahead, she believes traditions like this, salting fish and bearing them in the sand will be lost. i keep going because i have my eyes on the prey. 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 harder al jazeera china thailand. a growing anti immigrant sentiment in turkey is led to a conflict with a local people in refugees. mobs targeted work places and houses of syrians after scuffles broke out between the groups and with the nation eyeing a turkish general election scheduled for 2023. the issue of deporting refugees is rarely dominated the public agenda. cynical, seal. you reports now from a stumble. ali how to return to it live in northwest from syria. 5 months
4:36 pm
ago, after having lived in turkey for 6 years, he had crossed the border to escape the fighting. but his says, the long working hours and being away from relatives made him feel like a stranger in turkey. now he has the shop to make a living with our cache and his love y'all's for his daddy in recent years, racism has become more common turkish. people have started to look down on us and dislike us. you then we began to hear them saying, why don't you go home? our government pays your salaries and rent your houses in the yellow ali and his wife say, having an autistic son who needs more attention. made integration in turkey even more difficult, but live back in syria hasn't been, is either caught in a been gotten no not settled. we had to choose between c foot and more modern ones . but for our child, seagly came big cecilia with short of electricity walker here, but we have, our family is that we rely on the dinner in 2016 target. signed a deal with the e. u to keep series from moving to europe in return for financial assistance. that
4:37 pm
agreement came about after more than 1000000 refugees in microns from syria and elsewhere entered the 27 nation block in 2015. this is the little syrian neighborhood in the stumbles as say, your district 55 year old mohammed is from damascus. he moved to stumble 5 years ago with his family. he says he hopes to become a turkey citizen one day. john gosh, mother in damascus, i lived like a king. i cars carrying goods between syria and lebanon, but i didn't want my sons to fight the war. it's fine here. we love turks. my life is here. now, are you going back to syria is a start from 0. turkey host more than 4000000 refugees. and with more coming from afghanistan, they're growing fears of fries in social tensions. the sooty a year to danish, according to the un returning to syria,
4:38 pm
is not possible at the moment. in turkey, 2400000 syrian refugees are under 25700000 were born here. these figures show why turkey had a heavy burden. when warren's 1st arrived in turkey, the government thought they would soon return once the conflict was over. more than 10 years later, more serious has how this new law is here and their children speak turkish fluently . but what is the election do in 2 years time? opposition is likely to put pressure on the government to send them back, and with a weak economy in currency and unemployment to rising men of fear. this will feel seen a phobia across the country. soon i'm castillo al 0, a stumble, vigils been held and an which in turn of cransberg for 5 people killed by an attacker using a bone error. 3 other people were injured in the incident on wednesday, a suspect has appeared in court. the governments announced an independent
4:39 pm
investigation into the police response. it has take him 16 years in office for anglo merkel to mention much about her east german routes. but the ongoing chancellor has now criticized negative remarks about her upbringing biographer, say her roots played a crucial role in her leadership. steadfastness, travel to the form east german town where merkel grew up. i figured this is how a russian teacher remembers on glam merkel, shy, but hot working, growing up with little freedom in the town of sampling and east and germany. merkel focused on our education and won a russian language contests. a skill that came in handy decades later during often tough meetings with russian president vladimir putin rep who didn't had the escalation. and it was with who sin of all people that she made a mistake with. she never made mistakes. she's sitting there and he's in, and his large dog were brought in. she told him, i'm afraid it will ease me. she meant by it. but she said,
4:40 pm
eights medical recently sat for the 1st time in public that she had felt insulted by negative remarks about her background in the east kind of warner. am i not a born federal german? not a born european. someone who learned to be european get this, are there 2 different kinds of germans or europeans, the originals and the trainees with the head of the house where she grew up in former eastern germany, unglamorous learned at a young age. that freedom is not a given. according to her biographer, this experience has influenced her youth and office. but she also learned that as a girl from the east she had to do better than the rest to be successful. and while her successes, as a leader, have been lauded internationally many here in the form of g d r. i disappointed. there were high hopes at merkel be in what germans call and asi, someone from the east would make a big difference in her homeland. but 16 years later, the reality is that many people have left for the west to find work. towns are
4:41 pm
getting empty and industries have died. most we are becoming extinct in the east. nobody in the g d wanted this and when we die, how this will become empty to vote. this boat is all the former fishermen has to remind him of his family history, etc. his business collapsed years ago, despite several meetings, he and his colleagues had with angela merkel since 990 when the outgoing chancellor and politics after the fall of the iron curtain testing hospital field. that's why many people in the east did not understand where all went down hill. they were angry at mac because shipyard to close down. fisheries disappeared. of course we believed she would help us because she was one of us. when i'm going to merkel was awarded an honorary citizenship in tempe. lean. it was a former teacher who told me or not to make a big fuss about it. nearby. didn't he liked enough people? he would be even angrier. they would have asked, what did she do? to deserve this. for hans,
4:42 pm
you are him bull. it makes no difference. if the next chance le doesn't have roads in the east, like many others and for my ease, germany, his experience with merkel made him lose trust and politicians steadfast and al jazeera reuben. okay, this is a little different to russian filmmakers have returned to earth from their mission to shoot the 1st movie scenes in space. they landed in kazakhstan early on sunday. the crew stayed at the international space station for 12 days to film segments of a movie. a hollywood also planning to send a crew into space to shoot a full feature film picture. like let's go to washington and took the army tub. go show as the former chair of the science operations working group at nasa and has been a mass scientists for more than 20 years. and we'd have thank you for your time. it is one thing for ha, william shatner or jeff bezos, or any person to go up in one of our space ships spend a few minutes weightless and then come down again and think there's any massive
4:43 pm
training that's needed for that. sending a film crew into space that fairly major. well, it's um you don't have to do anything different from an astronaut. ah, you don't have to do of, for example, they did not do a speech swap. so i think the trimming is aligned and i think the more you'll see both spears store is screwing up. ah, common people without much dreamy redoubt farmer. they being an astronaut. i'm so this is perhaps is, but of the larger access dispute that, ah, common people are getting common people and tom cruise. i bet not in this film, but i believe tom cruises planning to, to do something similar. i mean, once you start putting that sort of star power in there gets pretty big. yes, of course it gets big. so that is really fascinating. if that happens and there was an announcement by the administrator on twitter rob, perhaps last year that he's going to shoot something on the space station. and that
4:44 pm
is going to be fascinating. so, you know, it is not the act of shooting something which is significant. whether the box office really reverberates and captures that imagination is going to be the teacher . and i think the reason you have from crew than the other people getting interested is because public attention is focused on speech right now. if you, if you think last, maybe 2 months or 3 months, how many times says space tourism and being that the news with jeff bezos and richard branson and everybody going to speak. so i think it's a market opportunity for the best 3. and so i guess it depends on how the public would take it, but all indications are big. if you remember, there was a firm called the martian starting matt damon. yeah. nobody thought of movie about mars would attract in the box office structure, but it was a very big hit. but you can feel that on earth. this is what i'm thinking. the business case for this whole thing is that there's another film and the names
4:45 pm
escaped me, but i know it was george clooney and sandra bullock and i were floating around in space and it was old on green screen. i'm just wondering, is there a real case for, for doing this? no, i don't think that is see, this is when you're talking movies your drink talking entertainment. ah. so is there, can you feel great business or not? that has been difficult. you can feel weightlessness on a different leg, matha, hello, airplane, where it goes very fast and it's called the bomb it comment. you can feel weaknesses, but i use this is a way to do it. and different supports the story line that if it gets you the box of as well that and so do you think that you get a vote if you're in it? i guess sir? yeah. me to have goes. thank you for your time. and ben, my direct to reliably informs me that that film i was thinking of was cold gravity . so thank you ever absolutely battles, congress, which thank you. thank you. been now 2 tigers. living next door to
4:46 pm
a day care center in johannesburg. this is spot a lot of understandable fear and anger within the neighborhood, and it's renewed the debate about the ethical treatment of wildlife. now, the government drafting a new law to ban the domestication and exploitation of some wildlife. some those saying it doesn't go far enough. that african reports from johannesburg. standing close enough to touch their coats. you can feel the power of these tigers, even though they're confined within these enclosures at lions rock, big cat sanctuary. visitors must sign a form saying the owners are not responsible for injury or death. yet in johannesburg, a couple has posted social media videos, walking their 2 white tigers in the neighborhood like dogs playing in their back yard, and even licking the head of the owner. last month, the children at a daycare center next door were playing outside when they saw one of the tigers.
4:47 pm
peering down at them while perched atop a jungle gym and his vacancies because anita still coming to my parents that the kids are safe, yet parents pulled a dozen children out of the daycare center. tanya is the owner had asked, we not mentioned her surname or the name of her day care due to concern, she'll lose more income. she says provincial officials visited the property where the tigers live and the owners had installed a higher electric fence and covered the wall. o egan, have a lucky on a government only going to do something. as soon as somebody gets hurt or die is that when a government is going to stay in. and how does a lawyer for the couple did not respond to repeated requests for comment? there is no law banning people in south africa from breeding selling and buying big cats. there are also no restrictions on where these wild animals can be housed. the
4:48 pm
government is drafting a policy that could end the domestication and commercial exploitation of lions and closed the facilities where they're held captive. the proposed law only applies to lions, which are indigenous to south africa. animal rights group say people should be banned from keeping all exotic animals as pets to animals that are currently being housed in a back yard in janice, big a ambassadors for so many others that are actually being held in captivity as a, as parents or in tens of breeding facilities across south africa and they highlight the fact that the she needs to protect all the checks, the government declined our request for an interview. some experts say in time, the animals, wild instincts, may kick in and these pads could soon become impossible for their owners to handle . the best option would be for them to live out their days in an animal sanctuary
4:49 pm
like this one. natasha name al jazeera johannesburg. let's get you straight to sport with santa i'm a world cup every 2 years. well, actually man, but we're not sure if it's going to go. yeah, thank you so much about. well, the internet olympic committee has hit out at plans to stage more regular football . well cups the ice, he says the idea is putting money ahead of sport and improved bosses have a cold for talks with footballs governing body. she felt wanted to hold the woke up every 2 years, instead of every for the proposal is said to be voted on in december by footballs, member associations. the plans, in particular doubling in the frequency of the woke up would create a further massive strain on the physical and mental health of the players. the i see concludes the i c shares these concerns and supports the calls or stakeholders or for all international sports. federations and major event organizes for
4:50 pm
a wider consultation by athena's are through to the semi finals of the asian champions league, the south korean team at b. japan's nagoya graham has a 3 now to reach the law school for the 1st time since they won the title in 2009. they'll take on another south korean team in that semi hold on here and i am beating joan book, motors 3 to after extra time. now the last full game is a between the saudi sides on nasa and alkaline chelsea have regained top spot in the english premier league and they as to pass a fellow london side, branford, on fender, bender, coin the only goal of the game just before half time chelsea r one point the head of liverpool. and this is the goal that prompted that liverpool manager yoga club to call mohammed fella. the best player in the world on such vivian gibson striker produced yet another stunning dividend strike. a law has
4:51 pm
now scored in each of his pos 8 games for liverpool. the scene went on to win this game against watford. 5 mill. it's obviously not about me else or whatever to say who is that? who is the best for me? he's the best. i see him every day and that makes it maybe more easy for me, but there are mr. lemon dorski all dairy stuff like this. ed, melbourne, algo still scoring like crazy, messy m still pulling our performance as soon world class level. so, but be all these kinds of things and others will come, but yes, and this moment is for sure. on top of that list on play, a challenging salary for that position at the top of the world. rankings is erling holland, in our regions strike escort twice for bruce. he had workman on his return from injury 21 year old. that has now scored 70 goals in the $68.00 matches, paid up for the german club. this effort helped jordan and 231 win over means and
4:52 pm
moved to his team. top of the buddhist leeker, austin riley was the key man for the atlanta braves as they claimed a game one and their playoff series. with the la dodgers. riley had a game tying home ron and followed it with the game winning arby. i single in the bottom of the 9th inning, a secured a 3 to win for the braves over the raining role. that serious champions, the teams will remain in atlanta for game to later this sunday once we kind of got over the hill, um, you know, after the all star break and was able to kind of get that momentum going, we can have that, that vibe of, we're not we're not out of it until the very last out and you know, just our, our bullpen campus and again, campus campus. and again, we're actually we're able to pull one out. and the boston red sox head back in came 2 of this series that were the houston astros watson became the 1st team to hit 2 grandsons and a post season game. the red salts went on to win at $95.00,
4:53 pm
and neville, the series at one game. each. game 3 is in boston on monday. is a very good approach right now. we're not getting greedy. like i said a few days ago, it's not about him and 30 home wrong. so driving our 100100 runs is about winning for games. i can see asked row. so now we got to warn them. now we go forward and we have some surprise finalists to add the indian wells at britain's camera. norie will face it, and nicholas a slash b leo of georgia. 26 year old norie produced a dominant, took performance against his opponent, gar dimitra. he broke the ball going at the beginning of the 1st 2 sets and cruise to 6264. when this is his $46.00 match, when of the year later, the sunday he will be playing for the biggest title of his career. basil ashville is also one win away from the biggest title of his career. the
4:54 pm
georgian a, be to american taylor fritz in straight sets of her thumb, in more than a decade. indian wells will be won by play ranked outside the wolf top $25.00. and a team of 4 golf is how broken an unusual world record. players teamed up to relay the ball to the green on a par for her. at the valderrama golf club in spain, they managed to complete the task in less than 25 seconds. 3 seconds off the previous record that had stood since 2018 honda nasa swat me a hand you that to come up santa thank you. finally, more film news don't get to say that off and a major hollywood shut down has been avoided, thanks to an agreement reached between a union and a produces the international alliance of theatrical stage employees represent 60000 film and t v. crew. it says the pandemic caused a backlog, that left staff working 14 hour days on streaming services, threatened to strike if producers didn't meet its demands for shorter shifts and
4:55 pm
higher pe. now halloween, a couple of weeks away, but this year's london film festival is showcasing a host of new horror movies and drawing people back to the cinemas. they've barker with a look now at what's giving festival, go as the goose bumps. oh, now we have your attention. let's talk. all right. this is london film festivals. a wash with a list who's plugging oscar fodder. lurking in the back grounds, a glut of horror movies the delve into our deepest anxieties. among them, british movie shepherd. when i can see the story of a man seeking solitude of the mysterious death of his wife, only to find himself trapped and spiraling into madness on a frightening weather beaten island. if that sounds uncannily like your experience, a cove is locked arms, you're not alone. and there are
4:56 pm
a lot of parallels to what we've been through the last couple of years, working remotely on zoom with editors and san designers and music, which is a very bizarre way, but also quite pleasant. we're working on making a film about a guy, his ice lights, physical strength, cautious and he won't horror movies ever won an oscar the song of the lambs in 1991 with this guy. how can catch him carrying, believe me, you don't have order inside your head with the wants marginal genre is being taken more seriously now, especially as a form of social commentary for audiences they are cathartic experience. it's really fun. feels great to sit in the dark can be scared and we, we do seek that out as audiences. but i think also for some makers, horror is a space where you can use on the sort of story telling metaphors to explore urgent, sexual and political issues. the haunted house, the spooky cemetery. you know, the drill, but given the nightmarish 18 months, we've all why?
4:57 pm
anybody would want to sit in the dog for 2 hours with a bunch of strangers. getting scared, witless is something of a mystery. but apparently, horror movies might actually be good for us. introducing professor neal martin, renowned expert and all things scary tux up 1st fallacy. people tend to school low on empathy, tend to enjoy horror films more. and also people who score highly own what's called sensation seeking or dimension of sensations called dis inhibition, which is either the ability to lose control or to be impulsive. so that personnel to trace correlates with the person to job for horror as a form of escape. horror as a way of helping us connect with others. the verdict is watching. someone else go through hell. might just help us feel a bit better. naep aka al jazeera london film festival. busy news day
4:58 pm
here now to 0, we're back with more in a month. for question the narrative, identify who is telling the story, their motivations. these are multinational corporations that are interested in profit, the listening pace, deconstruct the media on al jazeera planet. earth is approaching a tipping point in the lead up to the cop 26 climate summit. al jazeera, so cases programs dedicated to one veiling the realities of the climate, emergency witnesses green films documenting the human experience on the frontline planet. as the west report from greenland on how the rapid rate of melting ice is having a profound effect on the population. people empower us why politicians have been so unaffected in fighting climate change. folk lines investigate horizon temperatures
4:59 pm
of fueling a water war in the us. out as they were world shows how a community in senegal is dependent on the preservation of their natural resources . the stream takes the fight for climate justice to our digital community and upfront, he thought, demanding environmental accountability. the climate emergency. a season of special coverage on al jazeera in the world's most populous nation, one in every fi women's health is domestic. wow. amazed investigates, china's battleground at horn, one out 0, 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 mouths a grassroots political campaign, advocating for social justice. but can she shine
5:00 pm
a light on the racial hatred and institutionalized depression that plagues the dominican republic? stateless. a witness documentary on al jazeera aah. fighting intensifies in yemen, the saudi lead coalition claims its killed around a $160.00 with the rebels. ah, logan and come all santa maria here and go home with the world. news from al jessie . a mass kidnapping in haiti is put the spotlight on gang violence and become.
41 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on