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tv   [untitled]    October 18, 2021 11:30am-12:01pm AST

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of the canary islands, they've recorded more than 600 seismic events in the past week, and at least 42 on sunday alone, the largest, the which was magnitude 4.3. now one thing they are trying to refresh to residents is that the seismic activity does not provide any evidence that the volcano is going to grow any larger. but a new vent has apparently opened up just below the main cone. now, sciences of lava are blasting tens of meters into the air and with it, it's sending thousands of tons of smoke and ash while the ash is continuing to cause problems for the transportation industry. it's apparently causing a boom for the tourism industry. hoteliers and restaurants staff are saying that they're having an increase in customers who are coming from neighboring either exclusively, to see this volcanic spectacle. ah,
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it is good to have with us hello adrian, sitting here and how the headlines and i'll just 0. china's economic growth is slowing, as it's post. pandemic recovery loses momentum. the world's 2nd largest economy grew by 4.9 percent in the 3rd quarter. that's the weakest figure in a year. but the government says it is on track to meet its annual target. to sunday or nothing is done for sure. so the legal issue, although the economy growth rate into a quarter has been effected by various factors such as pandemic situation, flight conditions, and rising bays, numbers, china, as economy development, has shown strong resilience and white timothy on the whole, economy continues to recover and to trend towards high quality live wolfman is constantly changing, and it has the ability and conditions to complete expect goals and tasks for economy and social development. throughout the year. flooding at land slides killed at least 27 people in southern india. rescue operations by the army and navy are
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continuing in corolla. thousands have been stranded in parts of the coastal state authorities fear the number of dead could rise significantly. me, animals, military john to leader has rejected demands made by the association of southeast asian nations to comply with its plan for a political transition. he's promising to release thousands of protesters who have been detained since the military coup in february. police in haiti say that a well known gang is behind the abduction of foreign christian mission, risen their families. they were kidnapped as they left an orphanage near the capital port, a prince on saturday. thousands of people of riley, the venezuela's capital caracas, calling for the release of a government envoy who was expedited to the u. s. from cap 3rd. alex sub is due in court in florida on monday on money laundering charges that as well as government is now suspended, talks with the opposition that were meant to resolve outstanding. if divisions are those are the headlines. we'll have more news fiance's era. what after the stream,
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which is coming up next, talk to al jazeera, we ask, what gets you hope that it is going to be peace because the situation on the ground seems to be pointing, otherwise we listen. we were never on the whatever road to off migration we meet with global news makers until about the stories that matter on al jazeera. i hi, it's emmy. ok, welcome to the bonus edition of the stream is to show that brings you the candy conversations. i half of the gas after the live broadcast, coming up the to museum, singer songwriter, m o moth luthey. but let's start with classical music. the 1st time since the metropolitan opera house was founded, a 138 years ago. it is stating a production by an african american composer. by shut up in my bones is the story
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of a young man's journey from hardship to success. it was co directed by camille brown . the libretto is by cathy lemons and the music was composed by celebrated jazz musician and composer. talents blanch out his terrace. i wanted this abra and everything that i write to sound natural and feel natural coming off to boys. so i would read the libretto out loud, and when i would read the libretto out loud, i would hear the rhythms of that. i would hear the did it up here and see that would start to inform me what the melody should be. what the piece should be, then i would just take it from there and then i would have these workshops, what a certain person, who's on this screen with me right now. and then they would tell me about how i want to kill their voice by writing too many high knows. wow that and pass through that certain person like to speak. ha
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ha. i tell me. no, i love, i love it. here it is. music on my nose there. yeah. oh no, you got, oh say some i use like the in those or you say i got to say, but you would have our, its at favorite gotta say something say something but and 30 is, is that is there like a terms you can tell us you can tell us this is our secret, this is the, the extra stream extra. and was, was that a sort of a one? 012 opera conventions that you looked at and then threw away. or did you just know it? because i know that your dad loved oper music, so it kind of seat into you as your grandpa what, what part part of it was the fact that i had my, my father not the app and i heard a lot of oper going up at the not a part of it was, you know, i just loved it for myself. and the main thing is you want to tell
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a story. so when it comes time to tell a story, there's a certain kind of, of structure that you, you want to have to do just a normal beginning, middle in an, you know, and to karen's point, that also goes into how you want to write for the voices because you want to make sure that those voices are pivotal moments. have that registered or have those melodies that could really allow them to blossom and really express themselves. and when karen did, the 1st production of fire should have been my balance. she helped me a great deal, and understanding just that in terms of like howling to save certain phrases for certain parts of the oper to make sure that there can be a climax in the piece of michael you do, you know, up for so so. so while, when you look at new pers being written, one of the comments that we had on youtube was that up for shouldn't be an old awful issue continue to develop. sometimes we get stuck in the,
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our art form. what are the trends that you're seeing right now? what gives you how, what are you excited about? oh, well, couple things because i think it is, a oper does rely on the can't the rama it roll eyes. the industry just relies on the certain shows certain composers and that's part of it. for me, i actually thing and maybe you know my bias as a director for, for is that i think what's also interesting to me is when we're re imagining the classics and re imagining the canon and re imagining. how can we tell those stories in a new and exciting way in a way that that is palatable to people? we want to see the shows. and then i'm also really excited people like terence and people who are actually like writing in a way that sort of adding to the story, telling us that it's not. we're not, you know, going into
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a place that's completely different, but we're actually widening the table. we're letting more voices at the table. we're not getting rid of puccini in order to get to add turns blanchard, but we're actually adding turns blanchard, to the story tongue that we get to tell me how and what are you thinking? i'm thinking 2 things and i love harrison. i know he was the court, me a saying this. i wish there was more discussion around casey lemons and camille as well because they may history too and here is knows this, but i'm super, super, super supportive of women in app are particularly diversity behind the stage, you know, gender and race and inclusive. and i wish that we, we saw more on black women outside of just being singers and, but it would actually creators. and the way we see in other art forms, we see a literature the way we see in our dance, you know, i,
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it also makes us believe that we have, we have 2nd careers outside of the singing. yeah. you know, so i wish, and i'm not here as a, as many, many women in his life, you know, and i know, you know, you know, wish i wish man and, and to that. but i know you means them right that are running my life and how a category it was a is as it should be. tyrants obviously, no, but to her point she is exactly right. one of the things that i've been screaming about is how much of a genius, camille brown is i've been saying and over and over again. you know, chasing lemons has also been my sister for a number of years. we've worked together and there, there would be no fire should have been my boss if it wasn't for how beautiful a brutal she took that story, that most people couldn't see an opera and she created something extremely beautiful. she also created 2 characters, a loneliness and destiny. oh no. and they manifest themselves into
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a 3rd character grutter. you know, so it goes without saying that their contributions are huge, you know, and to them and to the development of this production. and we need to celebrate them just like we need to celebrate anybody else who's been a part of this production. the young kids that have been a potters production who are amazing singers, the chorus tell people all the time. one of the things that's been blowing me away about this thing is that you don't know what it feels like to walk into a room or 40 people and be the only person that can sing it. ha, ha. yeah, i, i, he, i do know that feeling that back oh god, that when you will, the composer that's again, your musician. you, you have all the skills. wonderful to be surrounded by that talent just just from watching the clips. the videos from listening to you talking about it. i really need to see this. all right. now i may not be able to see it at metropolitan,
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but i know is gonna come to atlanta is gonna come to see, see, this opera is going to go run and run and run, run and run. how exciting will hold on is going to be so i will also is going to be some will go on until the 23rd and $7.70 countries around the world. parents, blanchard, a michael mohammed and karen sat, bringing that passion for opera to the stream. fire shot up in my bones will be simile costs in cinemas around the well this month. go to met upright dot org for details. and now to some disturbing video filmed on the cray shop bosnia border in europe, there are countries are so determined to keep out asylum seekers that they beat harass and chase them away from their borders. these push backs are legal and brutal, but some viewers who are watching the stream on youtube this week suggested that european countries can't save everybody and no visa equals no entry. i shed the
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sentiments with the guess and i post so discussion. we're nothing enough that these people don't have be that they can not have visa because they ashland seekers or by definition there do not have the legal i think that may be a point that, that we should emphasize if we want to talk about law, you know, i mean to how people enter the counter doesn't matter whenever, when they seek, i don't know. but frankly, to look at the broader feature migrations as always interested in any sort of mankind. he's a mankind, he's made a migration. so, you know, we are not seeing as an invasion, as we have seen. i mean, something that has always existed and people always have tried to call us and it always deal. and we should try to apply to be proactive anti, to manage these, these phenomena. rather than trying to count them as it is happening now and call
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i think what, what sticks with me are in it's in the last 3 years is also a lot of it is happening increase on both now and these countries are they had the worchester 27 years ago, and many of the people that you meet there like the locals say like like we understand the refugees and the asylum seekers because we were in the same and in the same role just it really a short while ago. so also not forgetting that this is something i must have said that this has always been without that people need to flee from somewhere because their homes are destroyed. and yeah, like that for sure. you don't have a visa if your house is destroyed or if you can't go back where you have your draw with your documents. like how should you have a visa? and if you, if you leave with your children on your arms, just out of your country like that,
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you need to go somewhere and just ask for protection. and people who should really not forget that this is something that has always been happening to certain mom to certain groups of people. maxima, i feel like the way countries in europe are dealing with asylum seekers has got more to do with politics than empathy. because it wasn't that many decades ago when most european countries were refugees, most europeans were refugees because of the 2nd world war that is correct. not only must, it will be as well if it is because of over 2nd war 2 was for war. but also many europeans, economic migrants. i mean the recently of south and europe is made of economic migration, you know. and now that the stands that have change in pro read things, improve the in the european union. now people tend quickly to forget what their
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grandfathers did. i mean, and let's be clear history on file that we would have more private with. these are the permits, the requirement exactly the same way language people are doing to me is that a political solution? i mean, you from, i mean, it is making the problem i think may be 2 points on that. the 1st one is remembering that the vast majority of refugee leave in low and middle income countries and compare it to you know, who lives in europe. europe easily receiving them very small share of, of this refugee. so that's may be a 1st point as for whether we can find a political solution to the situation. i mean i, i think this is yet to be seen the issue of migration and asleep as become so sensitive. and since $21516.00, i would say the situation is getting worse after every crisis of perceived crisis of bike. that really, there is this perception,
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but we can not manage your rivals. and this is making really difficult to find a solution at you level for, you know, a common armnaya manage solution to and hosting this people. i mean, we've had that old discussion on silicon already and, and we're seeing like every time there is this list deadlocks, and between between you and the states. and so either i'm not sure if they, there's a solution in sites. i. susie's problem, what is your, is like at operational levels. this is where things can change to see where, you know, independent human right monitoring mechanism can be set up. and also this is where, you know, i, sl, emergency can be more active to make sure that when i swim secret get to the country they, you know, they are adequate reception mechanism. they iceland claim are being processed in due time. and so that prop people have access to, to fair process when they get to europe, nicole v. so up close the violence against asylum seekers. where do you
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think that comes from? because it wasn't just a few bad apples as some of the governments authorities was i just missed a few of them. it's systematic. it's organized. it's fun gate. i like that's beyond prejudice. now. no. and it's also even orchestrated. so i think that, i mean, where does this come from? it's, it's for me, it's for us still difficult to say if there's even an order to use, to use this violence. what we know that the, while instead we filmed this to a medium violence or it sounds already so cynical. but there have been cases of sexual harassment, of like will torture or elements of torture. and so we are pretty sure, and especially in how widespread this is practice,
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this are that, that there are commands and that there are special groups that are known for doing a very good job at bidding people up because it all is about the motivation. so what they're trying to do is to, to give all they can that they don't dare to come back. you can watch the full episode about the illegal tactics being used on asylum seekers and refugees in europe at stream. but algebra era dot com. ok. full confession here, when i prepare for election shows, i do a lot of reading and then i just cross my fingers that the guess we book are really good at explaining domestic issues from international audience. just after iraq's october election, the stream brought together a panel that did a brilliant job of unpacking iraqi politics. so any luck, they're not, we don't have just 2 parties like there is in the united states or there isn't in britain, britain for example. we have several parties,
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the voting process also is different on how they work for parliament members. and it in different than how it's a direct vote for the president. and also because we have a prime minister, we don't have a president, that's another difference. and then we have the local governments also with that, that's that also with that also is very different. over the past 15 years, a lot of the both both has been identity based. we do see that happening in the united states today. however, in iraq, it took some times of violent, it was very violent, and we see that also sort of shifting. so unless the international audience understands that they would not really see how significant these elections have been. when newcomers actually broke that chain of, of the dominance of the mainstream political parties into very important, very sacred provinces and south iraq. and also the importance of the islamic party kind of being defeated with instantly politicians as any politics. that's all very, very important that with that's a different that i would focus on. all right. of you a 2nd to have here because you are a politician. you've experienced iraq politics. how would you describe it from the
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inside? no repeating whatsoever shows mansion, but from an economic perspective in the air state patronage very much controls the economy. so everything here and iraq is in the state own state manager, state controls are which are very much it limits the possibility and, and the opportunities for private sector to flourish. m m m. ringback l i care, for example the, the, the, the government is the primary operator of everything was in a free market economy is when we could see the government's regulator, a policy maker and a tax collector. anything but a and operators or we don't like, for example, the united states produces more oil than iraq and saudi arabia put together. but they don't have a national oil company where in iraq, if we want to talk about,
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for example, privatization and introducing the market economy and so on. this is a big red line that we need to explain to the traditional mindset. that's it, very much controlling everything. well, if a young person said to you, i want to be a politician and that were in iraq. what would you honestly tell them? i would honestly advise them to read more about politics and an old democracies that's basically didn't develop democracy across the world before suggesting anything. i still remember during the days of the protest that young people approached me and saying that we would like to produce similar to the french revolution. so i told them, did you read anything about the history of the french revolution? democracy didn't come in the day after there was
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a dictatorship and bloodshed and so on. and it was going to be a journey of 20250 or so really need to think and a different way. ready and much smart have them to pass. so i would advise them to read about what's happening across the world before improvising any solution from local mindset, the big political party. they are on their very organized and disciplined in the way they continue to have influence and power. i also know just as a citizen and being based here very much about religion and try how influence on, on politics. and you can ask any, any citizen, any person, and young people here, there's a lot of influence coming from regional countries. and sometimes we feel like we are ruled by a neighboring country. so i think that or the
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young people, we always feel that you need to belong to a certain political party or institution or group to be able to thrive politically . so, but the young generation are bringing a lot of change. i see there's also back in a day as a courtesy woman. i used to have so much fear of anything coming out of the criticism region because i'm still reminded of a time of how i used to flee from, from the war that i experienced. but the crisis that happened now, especially women, showed that they could really be capable and, and take home the crisis and brought a lot of women from all of the different provinces and city together. and we kind of found ways of to reconcile. and so we have new conversations. i have activist friends from back that from muscle, from sin john,
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from money and do have me meet more, we gather we do activities. so the whole conversation around influencing politics or change and policies and laws, especially those very close to my hard like finding ways to, to and gender based violence. the conversation is moving forward. it's shifting. i feel like the young people are just bringing it towards a new way, a new generation and you wrote and so there was definitely so much hope for a less complicated politics. like the way it goes for people like me, it's still very complicated and we still do our best to understand it and we can't, but there are social media and then each other. thank goodness for social media.
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finally, one of the streams most memorable music gas return for a chat via instagram his m will miss lucy, that she is in singer songwriter talking about her latest project as it was supposedly a feminist. i haven't really cooked her so much of that in my own kitchen. i, i just had this realization that i wasn't really offering so much space for other female voices. and that as female voice it always try to take more space throughout my career. i felt that it was time for me to give back and to also receive but from a different source. because throughout the many years i was performing in creating and producing albums, i most exclusively worked with, with man,
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with man. and i decided that it was time for me to explore female creativity and female sisterhood. and i just started reaching out to many female producers. and also i had the big motivation that everybody kept telling me that it was impossible. they was just very hard that most of the people i was asking didn't know any female producers. so i decided to that's, that's really depressing. you in the music because he said people you are asking didn't know female with jesus. yes, yes. and i even asked, i am talking about people. yeah. in the music about people you know, on the scene people who are radio programmers and i'm, i'm sure they're coming from a, from a good place. they're not just trying to sabotage anybody. but that's, that's where we are, because even myself, before anybody else, i just,
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any time i had the idea of reaching out to somebody, i would always find a lot of our mil producers or musicians. and i mean, i love all the partners in all my collaborators and i still collaborate with them. but i just felt that i, i, it was the time for me to start taking some action. and i got even more motivated after all the complications and obligations get coming along the way because also a lot of female, we tend to not trust each other enough internet trust ourselves. as you know that it's people who have a voice and we can come to so much and we are currently going. ringback accomplish even more together and he might sound like a cliche might sound. ringback like cute in cheesy but it's, it's, it's not, it's not that simple. and i found myself really supportive in
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a way that i haven't felt that before. and i found myself creating, interacting in ways i haven't interacted and created before. i move my thing, you see on it? i'm like wrapping up a shaday. thanks for watching tv. ah. i prefer to see things for myself. to look at things, not through the lens of politics, but through the lens of humanity. ah, i've been to the playground where to mere rice was shot and killed. i've been to the streets of ferguson, a protest. i've seen the anger and frustrations of so many americans. but what was most clear was a desire for change. it, you could see black lives matter transforming from hash tag to
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a movement ah, being a journalist is about listening to people and understanding where they're coming from. following a story, no matter how long it takes or where it leaves. i'm christian salumi. ah, i never getting this resolve but nothing can stop them in their trucks chasing american dream, escaping poverty. but the illegal route is their only option and their hope for a better life can lead them into trouble. breathing tough conditions. generally, with the law, they'll put their lives in danger, just to hurt them. risking, you know, when l g compelling journalism we keeping our distance because it's actually quite dangerous. ambulances continued to arrive at the scene of the explosion in spy
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program making. i still don't feel like i actually know enough about what living under fascism was light. how much money did you make for your role in deliverance? i made fabric al jazeera english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 5th year running ah ah, floods and land slides killed dozens of people in the southern indian state of carola, many others are missing. ah, hello, i'm adrian said again. this is al jazeera alive from doha. also coming up, china's economic growth slows energy shortages of property slow down.

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