Skip to main content

tv   [untitled]    October 25, 2021 2:30am-3:01am AST

2:30 am
it features pieces by creators, from around the world, many referencing the location in their works. washer financing a start up coin. 10 artists have participated to rejections and 8 foreigners. as you can see, we have huge sculptures. some of them are made an egyptian factories, it was honestly a great experience. it's about ha, coming together in the time where in a place where civilization ah, basically started and now it's a rebirth because of called ed. we been separated for a year and a half and humanity started to come together again. and it just goes to prove that when we worked together, we couldn't achieve anything. so an international selection of artists including a mechanical humanoid, whether they do risk being upstaged by nature's own display. the diem barber al jazeera. ah,
2:31 am
i'm alamo. he did with the headlines on out you see around. if you of he is military has carried out more air strikes in the t gray region. as a renewed campaign against the rebels who control most of the region intensifies. fighting's, been going on for almost a year. but air strikes and bombardments by the government increased over the past week. columbia's president says the rest of the country's most wanted drug trafficker is the biggest hits to the drug trade this century. di ro, antonio suca, is the leader of columbia's biggest drug cartel. and the central ramp yeti has more from book at her. we understand that the colombian government wants to comply with the extradition request the or to extradite or to near led to the united states. we don't know how long that will take. there is of course, an extra dish and treaty in place in the country and the what the nil was 1st
2:32 am
indicted in the us back in 2009. so more than that at deck in the go, there have been since a number of subsequent indictments both in new york and my year me in 2015. and later, he is requested by the us on a number of charges he will eventually will have to respond to libya's electoral commission says candidate registration for december's elections will begin next month. but the countries to rival legislative houses have yet to decide on how the vote will work. a peace deal struck last year means both must agree on a political framework before the elections can actually take place. and pro military protest is in sit on the have blocked major routes and the capital is tensions grow between the generals and the pro democracy movement. stay with us here on al
2:33 am
jazeera well is experiencing unprecedented extreme weather. reco temperature is being set last year, the nike for deteriorating, for whenever the truck running down world lead is amazing. laws go in the u. k. it a bit to thrash out a deal to slash initially to port to like follow the un climate summit on al jazeera i i am at mad savage dean filling in for family. okay. on the stream this week and bringing you this weeks bonus edition of the show coming up, i'll take you behind the scenes for extra coverage of forced evictions happening in india as well as a conversation about the activist economy. but 1st, this year we witnessed a significant shift in public opinion across the world really when it comes to palestine fueled in large part by the violence and gaza war this past may. and
2:34 am
after the show on monday, our conversation continued with rapper, low key and activists. linda sar sore. i started out by playing a statement from award winning musician john legend affirming the rights of palestinians to live in dignity to journalist mattie hassan. and then we discussed the role of celebrity and the growing movement. have a listen. when i see what's happening in palestine to the palestinian people where they are clearly not being able to experience the full rights that they deserve. and a extremely unfair and difficult life, they're forced to live up. i had to say something is not fair is not just and given that israel is the recipient of so much america in aid and so poor and is, is named is what our strongest allies. we should hold them to a higher standard and what they're doing with the palestinian people is not fair and, and it shouldn't be done in a and in our name and with our resources contributing to it. loki, i mean,
2:35 am
you know, as someone who, you know, also as an artist, makes music. i mean, you see someone like john legend, you know, say something that i guess it's not that bold and kind of inflammatory. and yet when i watched it live, i was kind of like what's happening is this really okay and you know, cuz it's so rare. and i wonder if you think that if there are more celebrities with their followings that speak kind of as directly as he does saying not only should we hold israel accountable, but to a higher standard. what it, what do you make of back comment. but also it's that useful in changing things. yes, it's useful, but it's also a product of books about pressure. growth always comes from the summer. you have the national union of students in this country that have a b, b, s, pos to be the motion. you have the largest trade union in this country, united parts to be the motion in 2010. yet the leadership of the union are yet to
2:36 am
implement this by its membership being clear about why it's why once with celebrities, they are also receptive to that kind of push from below. and it's essential that that continues. and as you see more people within society demanding it, you will also see those within the public high speak out a bit more. israel obviously has 18 understanding of how to kind of this figure, the perception or b s through its proxy, that it has organizations not only in the u. s. this is organization that linda saw . so it knows all about the anti defamation league in 1969, the f b. i had an internal memo that questioned whether the a d. l was in violation of the registration or for an agents act because of how close it was to the israeli government. and what you have seen really is it use
2:37 am
this cover of racial justice to fight against p d. s. to try this figure. this demand for palestinian rights as somehow being rooted in some form of racism. but you also have organizations in this country who closely work according to the trustees report of the board of deputies organization put in its own report. it was closely with the israeli embassy that has strengthened links with the ministry of strategic affairs. and with the idea, this organization is an, an and c diaz organization. and clearly, unfortunately, within the media, a lot of these organizations are taken at face value, right? instead of that more basically, and linda, you know, we talked about being rooted in racism. i, you know, just to quote one small part of this article that i referenced in the live tv part of the show roughly on the moon. talked that linda about how jewish attitudes on
2:38 am
zionism are changing. he said, it's something that really struck me. i don't know, maybe it's just me. zionism is rooted in trauma and fear. it's about survival and love of the jewish people. but like any other ethnic nationalism, zionism establishes a hierarchy. it's about prioritizing our safety and well being, even at the expense of others. it relies on an alternate historical narrative at a time when for 4 years we've struggled with all these alternative narratives and alternative fact center. i just think this is such a salient point because you know, change always comes best from within. so i've always wondered, even as a kid, when i saw this injustice and linda, i wonder your thoughts like is palestine or will there be liberation for palestinian people so long as this aspect of kind of zionism is not addressed. amongst jewish people, i know loki's made the point of distinction between how many people who are
2:39 am
a jewish who live in israel versus jewish people across the world like 60000000 versus i think 6000000. how critical is this aspect of the argument to you? it's extremely critical and in order for us to get true liberation and freedom in palestine and historic palestine, we need a jewish people to be on board with that to understand that our liberation as ara people, as palestinian people, as jewish people is, is intertwined. and that one cannot be free without the other, and you cannot build a nation state that is supposed to promise safety and security for one people at the expense of another people. and when you have these conversations, i've had them with young people in college campuses across america, amongst jewish organizers, and even folks who say that they, they tell me, oh, i love israel, but i don't like what israel's doing. and i have these conversations with them. they to have been fed a long narrative and now they're at a place where they can't deny reality. so when now you have organizations like bits felon who's calling israel the part i'd state,
2:40 am
right. you're having groups like human rights watch, put out reports of hundreds of pages of why israel is in apartheid state. right. having more members of parliament in the u. k. and other european nations including here, of course in congress, calling israel and apartheid state, calling it ethnic cleansing is really starting to get to a point where a lot of our jewish allies and even those who are not, you know, super right wing zionists, but consider themselves to be what they call progressive zionist to say, wait a minute, i can't really put my name on this, right? yes, this is, this is apartheid. this is not route what we support. and so that's why this, this conversation is important. then the reckoning is happening amongst a lot of these jewish organizations and pro israel organizations and really amongst their young people and in it that's what gives me hope. and when we talk about hope, we are to wrap up in a couple of seconds here located. but i want to come, you, you know, we've seen receded, please get reelected here in the us. we saw on omar get reelected despite all the things she said, mm hm. in support of palestine and critically of israel,
2:41 am
betty mc column, who introduced the bill to condition military aid. every time you know, someone shows that actually you can do it in your political career, can be and relative to their districts. and you see labor delegates sparking a row in the u. k with the parties leadership by demanding sanctions against israel for it's apartheid policies. i mean, do you think this really is a watershed moment where we're going to see more and more of this, or is it like 2 steps forward one step back? unfortunately, the label caught c has a leadership which describes itself as an unqualified supporter of zionism without qualification you have it's. he's funded by trevor chim, who is an israel lobbyist. you know, in the united states she, out of the democrats, came at $10400000.00 per day. so the israeli state. so of course, these are massive, massive limitations that we're talking about. the palestinians will liberate themselves. of course, it would be helpful if the united states and britain consult collaborating in their
2:42 am
suppression and oppression. and you know, the vital point at the end of the day. ready is for us here in the esper and in the rest of the world is to point seats with trees that we might not say in the shadow . because while they say that resistance is futile, we say no resistance is football. now, sticking with that celebrity activism angle, i want to share a recent behind the scenes conversation between me. okay. and a panel of activists family wanted to know if they could pick one celebrity activists to work with. who would it be? not right about this a lot and i think for i would be james bond that you know, i think of her as truly someone who embodied celebrity that activism every time she has lent her voice. she's done it with truth and passion. i think about the way that she is rally a climate change now in your promises didn't ever buy another piece of clothing and go about that and gets arrested and she just continues to use platform for good.
2:43 am
and so jane fonda would be my top choice. yeah, i was wondering how many pieces the clothing jane already has. i mean, she's probably already be both of us. i think i'd love to partner with to me actually, because i think it would be really amazing to partner with somebody who has so much experience and actual leadership in terms of leading the most important fights that we have today, which i completely agree are the fights for our right to exist on this planet each and every one of us. so leading an anti racist policy, which is fully based in environmentalism, fully based and democracy in people actually learning to live together on this planet the we all share. i think he would be a fantastic high profile partner. thank you lisa. my vote goes. ready to i press to james on the just say i would vote for i want to come next and lisa. and then in africa i can pick
2:44 am
a range of people. but angela could you, from a friend, this is a student that is a play, mostly indications who religion and most powerfully, the framework for communications and media. that is a release fact against activism. and therefore, i think we have to recognize when we are talking about how to short time span to turn things around that re on. i would say that to be more creative to while we make sure that the celebrities don't go crazy on us. but we find the ways in which we can draw energy and help them amplify the messages of justice. that because you need to do a large audience, much will then be able to reach at the moment. would be great if you have a celebrity that came into the room and actually could use their career to actually hold the audience where visionary leaders, who actually, you know, as you talk about you who are involved as accurate as those,
2:45 am
as both of you are then could actually talk about what your own agenda would be for change as opposed to particularly launching certain kinds of products and supporting the agenda, which are based to these kind of leverage disease at partnership. which is to try to bring certain items onto the customer. or because they're more attractive folks who are a big when it comes to that act to the show, right? because one of the things this as active is constantly fighting against multi 1000000000 dollar corporation. and then here you are putting activist against one another to fight for money. when we know in the movie we need to do is show us all the barrett eat and to collaborate. so when it becomes that kind of education back more entertainment, you know, entertainment, become dangerous, you know, and i'm glad i show even when to go online because it would really do more harm than good much. and you know, it wasn't that bad product. it's not going to help,
2:46 am
but it wasn't that competitive element, however, like that. the one true thing about the activists, the fact that today isn't active or organizations have to compete for a little something. yeah, we're in the past, there used to be much more regular funding from donors and now activists have to be able to have extremely photogenic beneficiaries. they have to have, you know, all sorts of reports and strategic outcomes. you know, at the level of a harvard trained economist and then they also have to have celebrity to actually get the media space. it attention. sounds like a terrible world to have to compete in. so guess i also have, well, i have one more ask of you and that is in this equation, not only do we have the important crises that we have to face as a global community. we also have people who want to do good, who want to help, and then not too sure what to do. what should they look out for? what are the warning signs? where should they? why should they volunteer? where should they contribute? what should they do?
2:47 am
lisa, you have a lot of on says he does like briefly thought. yeah, yeah. if somebody's selling you something, you should be suspicious of that because we don't need more things. and 2nd of all, there are lots of things people can do to be involved. i mean, i would never say there's not such a thing as a need for an activist ball met. you can also celebrate basic things like paying your taxes. voting in politicians that are willing to support pen and you raise decision as a global hell is there? oh, absolutely. you know i, i live in the social democrats state, but you know, it does work. i should agree making a rehear, katrina generation of change makers that you're not going to buy a way to sustainable fashion future. you know, it's about buying less, buying better and really coming into activism. so we're having to retrain young people to call policy makers as we did for this bill to light up their phones. and so there are plenty of ways in our organization really tries to make it inclusive
2:48 am
and accessible, using your voice. your so much more than people realize. and carol, i just sort of say what i was doing in a work hasn't been inspirational to me. i hope many people listening to this will supported lisa. i endorse what she said. it needs last come in fear. i think that we need to create the context way. dizzy enough space for everybody to participate . but we, we participate as equals and each of us might bring different skills to it. i might things, so these are planning some disobedience, sudden communication skills and thought somebody else who's connected to the media because of the team might be able to open up space. now, yes, maybe the 1st interview, they go and do it and on the own. but what stops to celebrity from thing to a media outlet. i'm not going to do any interviews with you unless the 2 or 3 key people in this movement for this cause i would mean those interviews. so strategies
2:49 am
can use it. they can use their voice to lift up the voices that need to be at the truth is we don't need to yet more and more voices of celebrities. but celebrities can you voice to help pick up other people's voices. and of course they're going to have to use their own voice as well. i'm not saying they don't. but at the end of the day, i think today i would appeal to celebrities as human beings. but mostly as parents that to those celebrities, parents, you need to recognize that your children's lives and your grandchildren slaves as much as risk as our children's lives and, and so on, right. and therefore, use your power of public presence in a responsible way, in a humble way, in a strategic way. and don't ever use that power in a way that breeds more consumption, that we don't need,
2:50 am
or which actually elevates your own status and undermine the status of activists or people makes thousands of people in northeastern india have been evicted in a controversial move by the government and it led to a conversation that our guests so are ready to have and here is what that say after our broadcast. it was a dentist or it was in visit this dog. and they had been doing what they promise. there is no gray area in between. the disney has said, whatever they have said, it's in black and white and they are green. what they have said, i'm actually visit me is not. and if you met one, they went all. what did he is? i mean, what they, what the see i with my blog. it might, it might look broad hasn't become the other end. if you look a, please, please, this is joy. it looks problematic. let's see why he thinks it looks problematic. a bill collector point was us. yes. you see,
2:51 am
when the largest number of people are getting displeased because of the illusion, it is the government responsibility to have lived. then he had the 3 headed to getting data. they are, you know, taking, taking over bliss lane and they then they can bear that they have not re eval david evidence yet. it is not, yes. did you see i'm not clear, but if you're just not really okay, i don't. okay. you know that we're gonna, we're gonna, we're getting, we're going to get another perspective, maybe a voice of reason. i mean, she's, you know, jury may be rightfully questioning about the evidence and you know, because i'm says he has the evidence down step. what is the motivation in your mind behind these evictions? and what is abdul column right when he says that there is evidence that they have not been properly rehabilitating families that have been made homeless? yeah, i mean, i would say that eviction has always been politically charged subject,
2:52 am
and it's been in fact one of the main driver politics in a sub and not only be guarding the muslims, but the tribe is versus one pri bills. you know, the 1st eviction started with the tribals of us. i'm from the forest so that we don't, we should not, we should not just begin with the present distributors, but she does a kind of a continuation of an attitude. so that means, i mean, the floor plan will go back again and again to that there is that there is the policy. we don't have enough record. there's a lot of, you know, complexity involved in that because of which it is because of the rehabilitation runs into trouble because of this. i think i would, you know, i really agree that the, that the government has started on mission level will just agree to that, that this government has a patient, ah, you know, reforming the landlords. and they have coming to enforcement admission called us. and that would be very difficult a
2:53 am
i missed, i'm why he's on his dog getting the word. well, mostly the and the action has been done in the event during her jury. who has a one second do, are you out there is jury you asked cows to have a question, a constant, please respond to one. so then yeah, no, i do agree that the yes, they don't do it at them. at the recall mission, you can say or change of land laws, and this is the act and all that. but by convention is that they know it. that is where i should, we should focus again, is that you do. so what we've done nature of political, economic just to do with the nature of, quote unquote development that the state is embarking on. right. and it did not necessarily be something very was it was something very welcoming, but this is the only real estate in the land. disposition rate is very high and it
2:54 am
is basically all belonging to sit. she drives or she will or otherwise amenities. and this is something that is we are, we're missing all over lock yourself into where this new development, this is where, you know, is it a cast up? is it fair to at least accused that b, j. p of focusing or targeting? muslims have been golly, origin or do you disagree that that's not fair, dory. one second, please see, i mean regarding this particular issue we feed just reduce it to see about getting off of walden. mostly, it will be a lopsided, i think, of course, but i it, but of course i agree that it, what happens if you see it all, it can be as part of the larger agenda, right. that said the fund debate, that's a different way and, and obviously that's an amazing for another time. but during, that's what i was referring to about about trying to maybe maintain a majority. that is not muslim. ah, you know, in, in, in,
2:55 am
not only the last election but also the previous elections and future elections. see these if he has not targeted doubles teams. as i have been telling that for the very beginning, it is a busy who has been actually in favor of the interest in years on this people. when we call him in his office, people we have to look at the history of a saw was goes well back from to 1200, you know, do i didn't 6, b c, because we lead the us. i miss people might have forgotten about ducking, vicky, i mean, people who have actually for the battle of killing i didn't know that since then. there has been lot of immigration. and if you look at the origin of a sub, the most of culture has developed a within a sub we don't any boundaries. and that did it been never like if you got a son is as a society, we can not do you know, or differentiate. i will,
2:56 am
so from the mostly because, i mean, yeah, i'm a also and then also i get thank you. mm hm. okay. i a, yeah, i don't call them name immigrant bengalis. they have been trying to get a sympathy over the international adena, and you probably called an extra follow when like, well what? well, my daughter during during i want to give them a chance to tell us what he thinks so unfortunate. he said, unfortunately, but you know, for as much as they may, you know, i would just share on a human level. if i was being made homeless in a panic. i don't know that i would have to try very hard to gain sympathy. i think people would empathize with me because it's an unfortunate situation for anyone to find them. so i'm not, i'm not talking about the addiction right now during defended. ok. ok. i'm talking
2:57 am
about the with alarm has been talking about these it be been targeting the right, which i actually did that great. okay. so she disagrees of though column. i'll give you the last word. what do you, what, what were you saying when you said it's unfortunate because she would have to disagree and ostend, but unfortunate is debt number one, even in the debt, particularly the or we had asked miss lydia reported. busy that even the muslim of indies in east odyssey they are also facing eviction now. but tool, what a was still has mentioned that he, he was actually, you know, he was trying to be very careful of not making controversial comment. that is what i understand. but that what we see on ground is dead. it, it, it sion, yes, dad, every chance. well, non muslims are also also a getting evicted. but if you see that difference, please,
2:58 am
please allow me to make this point and into the debt. if you see that difference, that difference is debt in case of muslims. you find dead this. when eviction against muslims you will find it is, is quite medial. he thought it was c dehumanization. that's our show for today. thanks for watching and see you next. ah, ah and compelling journalism we keeping our distance because it's actually what dangerous ambulances consider arrive at the scene of the explosion inspire program making. i still don't feel like i actually know enough about living under fascism was light.
2:59 am
how much money did you make for your rural and deliverance? i made that ribbon al jazeera english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 5th year. running global food production is wasteful and straining our planet. but pioneers are adapting with new food sources. jelly fish is delicious with a very light sea food taste and texture similar to calamari and innovative production techniques. i've seen a vertical farm before, but never in a restaurant half to say this is great. earth rise feeding the billions on a jazzy in india's sugar growing wheaton, the 3rd athena workers have had their winds removed. 11 east investigates why so many women are having invasive surgery on out is there.
3:00 am
ah, knowledge is here. with every oh more if you be in government hair strike. so li trouble t grey region as it's new offensive answers a 2nd week. ah, i'm hello, marchese, this is al jazeera mind from dough hall, also coming up the be an official say their own course to register candidates for
3:01 am
december's elections. but many herbal hurtles remain before the votes. big breakthrough in columbia is more.

16 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on