tv [untitled] October 27, 2021 6:00am-6:31am AST
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explosion inspire and i still don't feel like i actually know enough about what living under fascism was like. unequal to broadcasting some nelson have been august night news for happy al jazeera english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year reward for the 5th year running. ah brazil. senate inquiry on the government's handling of the pandemic recommends bringing criminal charges against president jebel scenario. ah, hello, i'm darn jordan. this is alta 0, live from doha. also coming up, i more demonstrations on arrest since the down while the cooley da says
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the military owls to the interim government to avoid a civil war. i so fight us, kill 11 people in a gun, them grenade attack on me, rocky village, indiana products and going up in smoke the you and warns countries away behind their emission targets, just days for the cop 26th climate summit. ah, a committee of brazilian senators has just voted to recommend criminal charges against the country's president for his handling of the pandemic. the attorney general will now have 30 days to decide if j bowles and arrows should face charges, including crimes against humanity. senators say many of the countries, 600000 corona virus, deaths could have been avoided. monica unite, cab is monitoring developments from neighboring argentina. this damning report was approved, ah, a sent out and they will be sending it now to the attorney general. and the
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attorney general who was appointed by president abel sonata and may be biased towards him, has 30 days to give a response. he has to say whether he accepts the charges or not. there 9 charges in total. the most serious of them is long for the present being accused of crimes against humanity. now, this specific charge of crimes against humanity, the senators will also take to the international court in the hague. so they are also, if in case the, the attorney general does not address that the charges that they, that the this committee has recommended. there's thinking also of going directly to the supreme court. now will anything happen on the short term? no. the most likely not. um, this is a process that takes
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a long time for president shay, annabelle, so now to would have enough to be impeached just with these results. but the impeachment is the political process and elections will be presidential elections will be held in exactly one years. so there isn't time for that was on board potash as the leader of the workers party in brazil senate he says bolts and are ignored her responsibilities as president a we have a great result today. it's the end of several months of work with the all of the hearings being very democratic. the neutral here we have a president that went to the street without wearing a mask. vito delete the legal establishment of the use of mass by the people, the fight, every time social distance he defended fail false medications too for people to feel free to go to the street in. he didn't give the example. on the
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contrary, he gave the negative example as much as possible. he delayed the economic support throughout the emergency lead. he created artificial difficulties for the procurement of vaccine. this was very, very large. by the commission, it was prudent, the very sort. so many suppliers came across the brazilian government, the were ignored, even delayed on purpose. so this was a a politic policy that was adopted by the government towards the people they expected. somehow, some, some stupid intelligence was there, that brazil we'll go ahead and cross the pandemic and go after economic recovery before other nations. somehow, they imagined that doing something so completely different from the rest of the world. they will get more successful than the rest of the nation. this is not
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a normal situation and this is not to be they can, they can profit off. this is not something that we are proud of doing. so what we will have to do is to decide if you want to have a government that not only was not able to administer the pandemic as other nations, and have a record that is almost 5 times more lethal than other nations than the average of the world like that, but also on other aspects on the, the economy on the, the unemployment that is hitting the country, the, the rise back of the inflation, the spelling of the competence that should not be sold at this time of the, of the season with the but them is still going out so many things that are wrong. they will be put forward to be judged by the population as you said. and right now, the polls indicate the bottle not is not popular at all. for them, military genta has made more arrests as part of its crackdown,
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falling mondays to protest against the ousting of the interim government continue. but the military leader says he had to seize power to avoid a civil war. meanwhile, us secretary of state antony blink and has spoken to prime minister the lam dock. he was detained on monday, but has not been moved back to his residence and is under tight security even more than reports from the capital concert. oh, zillow, is your clinical use? it was not a cool. that's the message from sedans, military leader who overthrew the interim government on monday, general abdel for the hon says he took power to help dance transition to democracy and avoid a civil war. but that is what we have experienced a bottleneck of occasions where we had to stand up to the prime minister. and the factions who had signed are constitutional documents. on these occasions, we had witnessed a great deal of disagreements. it was a struggle for power sharing, distribution of legislative council seats and offices of the executive branch. as a result, we have witness political fragmentation and it prompted the armed forces to step in
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the hundreds of people continued to protest against the power grab despite of violent response by security forces on mondays, tuesdays use conference, general hon, that the detained prime minister of the lamb dog was being held at his house. hours later, hamburg was taken back to his residence. as more political figures were arrested. to dance into government was created in 2019 after mass protests led to the overthrow of long time liter. i'm a little machine. it was a combination of civil and military leaders as part of a power sharing agreement in response to the demands of protesters. analysts say it's not clear how general hon incense to address the many problems now facing for them. with 3 huge challenges at post one was the economy, the 2nd was actually putting in place all the institutions for democracy in the 3rd was consolidating peace with armed groups. and it is entirely unclear what
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proposals general alper hunt house, protecting these problems. in fact, it would appear because he's just digging himself deeper into the whole dance economy has been struggling after years of conflict and unpleasant. but this would make sense even worse. us is evaluating its relationship and has suspended a $700000000.00 assistance package for the now depos, transitional government. we firmly reject the assertions that this is within the authority of the military leadership and sudan. from our perspective, these actions are utterly unacceptable. they contravene the constitutional declaration, but more importantly they contravene the aspiration of the sudanese people general hon as many government institutions will be found in the coming days to steer the country until elections in 2023. the military stake over has sent the damn back to 2019 when the army was in charge and the internet was shut down and processed as
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they're out in the streets. again, despite violence by security forces, promising that their demands for an enter, the military rule will be heard. here morgan al, jazeera hudson mineral, the you and security council held an emergency meeting on sedan before the meetings sector. general antonio good tatters, condemned what he called an epidemic of today. tarzan urge council members to take action the sudanese people as shown very clearly their intense desire for reform and democracy are now. we are seeing a multiplication of could it thus? and the my appeal obviously is for. so especially the big ball worse her to come together for the unity of the security council her in order or to make sure that there is effective the terms in relation to this
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her epidemic of could it thus, kristen salumi was at the un headquarters monitoring that meeting while secretary general, antonio gutierrez, was very quick to condemn the coo and call for the release of prime minister hom dog. the high commissioner for human rights was also very critical of what's been happening on the ground. but when it comes to countries in the security council, generally, we've been hearing expressions of concern, a call for an end to violence, a returned to dialogue. and the process that was established after omar, i was sheer left office in 2019 of working towards a 2023 election. there seems to be a universal call to get back to that. but there's some differences and nuance in the way a council members are talking about the situation. reactions range from expressions of concern on the parts of countries like china and russia, to more forceful condemnations by the united states in the united kingdom. take
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o of listen to the difference in tone that was set by the ambassador to the united kingdom and the deputy ambassador to russia outside of the council chambers. the u . k condemns the coo outright and we are condemning and very concerned by the violence. in particular, the recent reports about beatings of women and girls, there was a violent sir before enough to leave the carnage for. so this is more delicate than this. i don't think as i was asked to label, such as asians who are not cool and that difference in language will have to be overcome if the council is going to take any form of unified action going forward. and in fact, secretary general gutierrez was very critical of the counsel for not being more unified. he called sudan. the latest in a string of coup d'etat is an epidemic of qu datas. and he blamed the counsel for lack of unity and many cases for emboldening countries and,
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and players and countries to, to take action like this. he called on the council to make a unified statement. those discussions are ongoing, but they're not there yet. so break here now to 0. when we come back, we'll tell you why. indigenous communities in ecuador have been blocking major rows and raising a stink on the u. k. beach is a public outcry. force to you turn the dumping of thousands of tons of so it's more in that stable. ah hello there we got some other nasty weather across the northeast in parts of the u . s. senate eastern parts of canada. a big area of stormy weather. just making its way through here and this nor'easter bringing some violent winds, damaging whence and the potential for some flooding range as we go through the next
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24 hours or so, at least out of the way. and we'll see this next system sharing it's had, we'll see some very heavy rain coming in across the great plains all the way down towards the deep south. there we go with some dry skies as we go on 3 wedding stay, but still quite gusty, to quite breezy there just along the eastern seaboard for a time. i would toss west, it's generally fine and trial or the pacific northwest sees him showers, longest spells of rain, telling wintry there as we go through thursday, across cute part. so for b. c. bright and dry for central air is by this stage. but you can see for the southeast and corner east in areas of the u. s. we are going to see some rather heavy rain at times. and there is the possibility of some localized flooding his system makes his way further. eastwards we come down into the kara bamlett, sloshy sunshine and showers. not too bad now. or we can record tropical storm ricks now in the process of filtering out dry skies coming back in behind. but for much across the region, the carabiner is fine and sunny. ah
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ah, confronted with some of the worlds was dead quality, mongolia government has begun shutting the nation's polluted capital, cities, coal mines. but as the struggle rages to save the environment above ground, what does the future hold for the men who earn their living beneath it? ah, witness. at the coal face on al jazeera blue . ah,
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we'll come back. i took him out about top stories here on al jazeera, a committee of brazilian senators as voted to recommend criminal charges against the country president, for his handling of the pandemic. the attorney general now 30 days to decide if j both scenarios should face charges. sedans, millage agenda has made more arrests following mondays. who protest against the 2 of continued late into the night. literally to says he had to seize paula to avoid a civil war. and you, effective state, down to me, blinkin has welcomed the release of sedans, deposed prime minister the la hm. dog's office as his back home, but it's under cliffs surveys to rock now or at least 11 people have been killed in an ice liptak, indiana province. police say the attackers, use hand grenades and machine guns during their assault on the village of allah. hoshal. the government declared victory against the group in 2017. but attacks have continued a you and report published early this year, estimated that around $10000.00 deisel fight has remain active across iraq and
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syria. when it's been kenneth katz money. he's a gulf expert and he joins us live from washington, dc. kenneth, good to have you with us look. so we've seen a number of isolate tax in iraq recently. how significant is this latest one and what's it telling us about the resurgence of the group insider? rob? thank you very much. and of course, as years europe speaking are purely personal capacity as an outside expert. ah, not official capacity. oh it's, it's very hard to tell from one incident tortue insurance. ah, whether there's a pattern. we don't know that there's a research. and so we, we know that the, i so doesn't control any real big amount, large amount of territory any more. however, you know, we've always known since the defeat was declared 2017 that i saw was defeated. we've always known that have sleeper cells. they have cells, they've been conducting attacks that mosul area, the western desert area. ah,
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they've, they've had a presence. okay. t all provinces, a mixed province. but we don't know if there's really a resurgence as you were asking that. so so, so let's just stay with darla kenneth because we know that della, as you say, as a multi ethnic border region with iran, which has long been a hot bed for extreme. as im unset terran is in is this something i so is taking advantage of do you think well they have tend to take advantage of sectarian tensions. yes. certainly. you know the islamic state are obviously the sunni group. there's obviously tensions with the shia. there are many she a and d l a province parker barrier. certainly, you know, isis. i so feeds on sunni resentment of the shia domination. let's say of the political system. and what i think is perhaps,
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could happen is that the she of malicious now will say, there were i sal attacks. and we need to be empowered to push back to fight back against i slip and has been made use these attacks to have their own empowerment again. yeah. can if you touch on the politics them and how is the broader political situation playing in to this valise? i mean, the chair clinic knocked out soda has claimed victory in the recent parliamentary election and he's repeatedly criticized weston and iranian influence in the country . well, we don't know that this attack was the so linked to the overall sectarian 10 shoots that mean there has lately been actually a reduction of the you know, the sunny and the shia politicians at least have been getting along. busy somewhat better than they were out previously. so there's not that much for i so to really take advantage of necessarily. but there are villages,
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there are communities where there are 6 air intentions. but d ala is a perfect example because both so me and she, a one, a control let's maybe so they read, there are tensions, and i so feeds on those tensions kind of katherine could get your thoughts. thank you very much. indeed for talking to al jazeera, i think now you and climate reports as recent promises to cut emissions full fall short of averting dangerous climate change. the reports, as current pledges will put the world on track for temperature rise of 2.7 degrees celsius by the end of a century to keep the increased below the 1.5 degrees agree to the powers climate conference. global emissions will need to be cut down by half and the next 8 is currently emissions on course to full by only 7.5 percent. well, the u and warns that many g 20 nations, including brazil, china and india, are likely to release mole woman gases in 2030 than they did. 11 years ago. when
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anger anderson is executive director of the u. n. and varman program, she told out a 0 they will hold nations to their promises to cut emissions when at this point right, countries have given in what are referred to us in dcs. these promissory note, national did turman contributions where they said this is what we're stretching our ambition to do. and when we add it all up, it shaves off 7.5 percent of our emissions. if we want to land at $1.00, we need to be much more ambitious. we need to be 7 times more vicious and reduced by 55 percent. if we want to land at 2 degrees at the end of the century, and honestly we don't. then we need to increase on vision by 4 times and reduce 530 percent our radar, our, our emissions. so there is a to do item here. and the g 20 countries east 20 large economies are responsible for 78 percent of all emissions. so the to do item lies with them. and within the g
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20, obviously the developed countries have a special responsibility to really step up. but actually everyone does all 193 member states of the united nations must step up as best they can. we obviously are going to hold every one to their words. these, these net 0 pledges have not yet been formalized in the submission to the convention for climate change. but when we take these net 0 pledges into account, instead of hitting 2.7 degrees at the end of the century, we had 2.2 degrees. that's still too much, but it shows what is possible. indigenous communities across ecuador are protesting against the government's economic policies. they're demanding the president reverse arise, and fuel prices. and else last week to visible as merchant got a policy in all across a while or indigenous movement, labor unions and others are protesting against the government of the jetta. more
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last a we're in the province of got a policy where dozens and dozens of people have taken to the streets to protest against the government plans to increase the price of gasoline to increase oil and mining exploitation in the country to make some labor reforms among other things, indigenous communities in a quote or extremely sensitive with government plans to enter in their territory. they say that they have seen what has happened in many areas in the amazon. for example, with oil spills. there are several of this case is on trial right now, and they say that they're always being damaged, that the communities end up being poor and contaminated and that's why they ended on the streets protesting against the administration of desire more last a just until a few minutes ago this people were blocking the road where we are right now. the police came and right now they're negotiating. this is not just happening here. it's happening all across the country. equality. indigenous communities are amongst
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the most powerful groups, back in 2019 they already took the capitol of kito for about 11 days. i dozens of people were injured. many died again because they were protesting against attempts to increase the price of gas that they say affects the way or the other way of life . we have spoken to many of the people that have been protesting here. they're extremely concerned about the economic situation in the country. they're saying that they're being damaged by the government plan. so what they're going to do, and that's why they've been on the streets, are this day. now the urine is wanting that half of afghan stones population could face acute hunger if they don't receive urgent humanitarian aid. according to you and report a combination of coke 19 on conflict. and the economic crisis left more than half of the country's population. that's about 22800000 people in acute hunger report says this is the highest number of people in
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a honda ever recorded by the u. n. during the past 10 years in point 7000000 people are in was here. i p for just one step away from starvation. there is no any of destitution. incredible suffering on home. fire out of control across afghanistan, pushing millions and millions of people is children and families in every corner of the country to the brain. also like the country towards the well, the crisis and afghanistan and the conflict in ethiopia currently has the world's attention. but the urgency of those crises as overshadowed other long running humanitarian emergencies and syria. yemen, somalia conditions remains dire and funding is scarce. on diplomatic editor james bay's reports any, the humanitarian situation in afghanistan is already
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a crisis. but the un fears that if there is a total economic collapse in the country, it will become a catastrophe. conditions of worse and 2 in ethiopia where the effects of conflict now spread well beyond t gray. the 2 crises now threatened to overload the whole humanitarian system. other conflicts from syria to yemen to somalia continue to cause immense suffering . these wars have not ended, but they're no longer at the center of the world's attention. and international donors seem to have forgotten them. for example, the current un humanitarian appeal for syria is funded at just 36 percent. the figure for molly stands at 32 percent. it's clear that not all humanitarian crises are created equal, some get more attention from the media than others. but the bottom line is that they all need to be funded. those countries that can afford it need to show global solidarity. i found one of the biggest global humanitarian organizations
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is the international committee of the red cross. the t c o t y is the i c r, c's representative at the un. we definitely have a crisis that go on for many, many years and as a certain donor fatigue that, that also poses to us and challenges. at the same time. we also come to the point where quick a quick fix center and humanitarian bandaid solutions are not the response that needs to have her to be brought in. because it is really the capacity to tackle broader issues that we actually bring more. we live to the people in a matter of weeks at the beginning of december, the u. n. will finalize its humanitarian appeal for 2022. last year they asked for record amount $35000000000.00, and it's already clear that this time the figure will be considerably higher. james
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bays al jazeera at the united nations. the u. k. government says it will reduce the amount of sewage dumped into british rivers, falling an uproar on social media last week, a change the environment bill was proposed in an attempt to cut water pollution, but it wasn't bad by enough lawmakers or we challenge reports from london. the 21st of october 2021 and an outflow pipe on the south coast of england pumps, hour after hour of untreated sewage into a picturesque harbor. just one of many similar instances that ever polled swimmers, water, sports enthusiasts, fishes and environmentalists. and that last week impedes voted could keep on happening by rejecting an amendments to the new environment. bill public want to see actually this, the public is seeing a hugely profitable industry continually and systematically polluting the environment. it seems that the fines not putting them off. it seems that the
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current legislation in portsmouth isn't deterring them for polluting to the extent they are. so they need change. and this amendment is the last step in making sure the water ends up being truly legally accountable for the food pollution that they're putting into these blue environment. britton's largely victorian sewage system can't cope when there's too much rain in the circumstances. water companies are allowed to release rain water and sewage into rivers in the sea to stop the system backing up. last year. there were 400000 such overflows. this sewage storm overflow on the beverly brook is just one example among thousands. in 2020 this spilled $141.00 times for a total of 2528 hours. that's 105 days worth of sewage contaminated water pouring into this stream and just a few kilometers that way. it runs into the thames and on through london to justify
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rejecting the environment bill amendment that would make this illegal. the government said it wasn't needed to curb sewage discharges by water companies. it's m p. 's also said updating an antiquated sewage system overnight would cost billions, a burden that would ultimately be passed on to customers and utility bills. but on the thames river path, some means were harder. i don't think it's excuse, little i'm in this day and age when the sort of level of technology we have. i mean it's, it's such a primitive thing to do. sure. yeah, i feel it into the water. i mean it's, it's of case mine, isn't it really? and no, i wouldn't swim the 10 colon fishes here whenever he can, though he puts the fish back and can't quite believe that anyone would getting themselves have you ever gone swimming? would you have an old old o notes were enough, but now can't remember the white glove i would go with but they did upset, but more lawyer, the heal the most i've ever seen. they have voted contents 213. not contents
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60. on tuesday evening, the upper chamber of the british parliament, the house of lords voted to return the amendment to mpi in the communist. not the government has also indicated equal strength of the environment bill with its own amendments targeting sewage leaks. it means the issue will keep on causing a stink in british politics for a while to come, will reach helen's how to 0 london. ah, i've a quick check of the headlines here on al jazeera. a committee of brazilian senators is recommend, in criminal charges against president jebel, sorrow for his handling of the pandemic. the panel approved a report ending a 6 month investigation. it calls a bolton arlin, $77.00, others to face indictments, ranging from corruption to crimes against humanity. the attorney general will now have 30 days to decide whether to file charges out to zeros, monica you makeovers,
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