tv [untitled] October 30, 2021 5:30am-6:01am AST
5:30 am
numbers of volcanic pump, stones are causing trouble on japan southern coast. the pebbles which came from an undersea volcano, have plugged 30 poults damaged dozens of boats and disrupted the fishing industry. the government has declared a natural disaster, and the stones are still on the leave. officials warn they likely to affect the countries coastline for the north ah, is out there, and these are the top stories. the u. s. and french presidents have held the 1st in person meeting since that countries by serious diplomatic dispute in years. joe biden acknowledged the handing of recent security agreement with the australia and the u. k. was clumsy. the presence is also met with the head of the roman catholic church at the vatican. the white house is biden commended the pope's efforts to fight the climate crisis. and his efforts towards ending the global crone of ours pandemic. i've got a son's economy is on the brink of collapse in the un. humanitarian chief,
5:31 am
bought in. griffith is calling on the world's most powerful countries to do something about it during this weekend's g. 20 summit. but in cash into the economy is not putting cash into the hands of the taliban. as be very clear about that. putting cash and the economy means that nurses can be paid. it means that traitors can operate. it means that women running small businesses can do that. the us food and drug administration has authorized the pfizer bail, take coven 19 vaccine for children as young as 5. charles for the age group began in july, the dr to vaccinate. children was spurred by rise in infections of the delta variance and the reopening of schools. you case writing greater checks on all e vessels fishing in its waters. if france goes ahead with a series of proposed sanctions, the escalating dispute is linked to a post briggs at fishing agreement. paris is threatening sanctions if the u. k. doesn't grow more licenses to french fishermen. the british governments,
5:32 am
as if those actions are implemented, it would put the e u in breach of a trade agreement. lebanon's prime minister in president urging the countries information minister to take the appropriate decision to ease tension with saudi arabia after he described the war in yemen as saudi aggression, the kingdom of bar and the kingdom amberin avoided the lebanese ambassadors to leave. when the next 48 hours, saudi arabia is also banned, imports from lebanon, and recall this ambassador britons, queen elizabeth, has been advised by doctors to rest, for at least the next 2 weeks. it follows an overnight hospital stay. last week. she'll avoid official visits. the 95 year old is the world oldest and longest reigning monarch. and those are the headlines and use continues. hey, on out there off the stream. and don't forget you can keep up with our dessert dot com facing longer hours and shorter deadlines. south korean delivery drivers are literally being worried to death. one
5:33 am
0 one east explorer, the dark side of consumer convenience and south korea on ouch as hera. ah, i have family ok, welcome to the final bonus edition of the stream for 2021. next week mark lamont here will be in this time slot with a new series of upfront. it's going to be good. be sure to watch. first, i'm going to share one last time with you some of the best behind the scenes. conversations that i have with stream guess off to the live show as coming out nigerians who are determined to reform a police force that he's so violent. sometimes you can't tell the difference between police and criminals. as we challenge a guest to answer your wide ranging questions on me, emma. we began with a singer songwriter refresh you memorably sang on the stream
5:34 am
a few years ago. hotel it stretched away be performing. we caught up on instagram recently to talk about the work she does when she's not saying i've done workshops throughout prisons in the, in the west coast. we've done maximum security prisoners. but women, i've done workshops just or less than women who are artists. who are, you know, trying to find their voice, especially and, and some of the circles that are a little more anti music. so you know that, but it's really important because you, because such a therapy to divide, it absolutely can be hello. it doesn't have to be, you know, and so i think it's really important that we find our voice in a way that is very spiritual and is it does of list got it does up live, right. so i think that's important to keep in mind. i just recently did one for the methadone clinic that was really, really powerful,
5:35 am
especially because nobody in there. they weren't writers previously. you know, but they still came up with really amazing pieces. so like music and writing is not, doesn't have to be the people who consider themselves artist or living. you know, it's really about happened in to. ringback your narrative inside and getting acquainted with, you know, we are, well, we have a storyteller, is that right? so your subconscious is always telling you those getting in contact with that person. and it kind of aligning both subconscious and conscious story to make sure that it's the story. ringback that we want to tell to make sure it's true about ourselves and to make sure like we are projecting into the future, what we really want and not just what we possibly we can head. one of the things that you mentioned to me was about mothers and creators as well. yeah. tell us about that more personal side of your life. what?
5:36 am
well i am a mother and i've, i've had my son on poor with me almost all his life. so i definitely, i know that that journey it's. ringback been a beautiful one, it's been a difficult. ringback one and a lot of mother reach out to me all the time. how did you do it? how you know, because i had home to my son because we're on poor. i know just because we all are awfully because i feel that i could give him a better education. did the term we use now call i'm schooling. when i was a kid, my mom who we could, we didn't do that sir. but unfolding and basically at variance learning. so if i have a war day in a big city, and i know there are famous or other landmark that i wanted to know about how kind of basis curriculum around the places that were going to go and things that he can learn while we're there. and it's very different from classroom learning, but i think it's actually really, really effective. and, and i don't care,
5:37 am
i think it draws you closer to your child. i think when i was 1st taken my phone, people kind of feel like this is neglect. why their child here? and for me, i feel like why music, not a family experience why, why can not be like, i don't do the type of music that i have to high for my kids. so, you know, it was important to me that he be a part of my journey that he know what i do for live and then he's a part of it. he helped me with my merchandise or like, no, i didn't give him all the stuff you know, you know, you got to quite, you know, but he handles all of that and i think it's been a really great experience. you know, i love, hear your thoughts, other people like, what does your mom do for you know, if you want more weight really and you've been all over the world, you know, we've been on cruise ships working together. and so i guess i have a very special place in my heart, especially for our mothers. my mothers also aren't as mother my grandmother, the r's mother, and how difficult it can be times have changed a lot. i think in
5:38 am
a created more space for artist mothers to exist, but i think there was definitely a time when the lease had people say to me like, you're still doing music even after being a mother. you don't think that they are possible. and i say no, i think if your thought will for me, so hide my light and snuff out my gift when that guy called me to do, you know, how can you tell your kid to follow their dream if we're afraid to fall ours. so know where i'm going to fall much market by moonlight. this f also known as mean refresh on the streams instagram life series. i'm una, will be back to perform at the end of the show. as the most anticipated climate conference, the years is about to get on the way in glasgow activists on the lookout, the meaningful climate action, and not greenwashing. in a recent conversation on the stream made several being at his gas unpack some of the most egregious examples of its outweigh got the conversation started with jenny
5:39 am
condit, from extension rebellion. as far as advertising concerned, they spend a lot of their ill gotten cash on misleading ads, and they also spend money on greenwashing. i think we shouldn't allow them to be doing either. here's a new green washing story. by the way, just yesterday the science museum in london announced that they are going to be sponsors in their next climate exhibition by a company called a donnie. so that's a donnie's shiny object. what else are they doing at the same time? they're trying to open the largest ever coal mine in australia. that's green washing and we should not allow it. jeffrey, i know you are pretty outraged by that or of a surprise that it's so blatant. what do you make of a, her comments there about what's, what's actually happening with done here? why would these things be happening? why is the science museum doing this? yeah, it's green washing one, a one. and yes, to be honest,
5:40 am
i wasn't surprised. i actually, i actually cool this that in the, you know, the run up to the climate talks in the u. k. this, that, this month next month. so we would see, you know, fossil fuel companies trying to position themselves, especially in the u. k or europe as you know, more green than they really are. so, for context dani that there are massive coal company in india. they have a renewables offshoot that is technically the sponsor of this environments for coming environments exhibit. but they joined shovel, which is currently sponsoring also a climate exhibit at the same museum. and so to be really honest and it saddens me as she someone from the u. k. i grew up on the science museum. the museum is really lost. his way has frankly become captured and is now a vehicle for fossil fuel industry. greenwashing. i know that earlier this year, amsterdam, sylvia sylvia started imposed abandon the city's metro network on add link to what
5:41 am
they call fossil products. they said that, you know, gas powered cars, also cheap airline tickets. and this is, you know, the municipality thing just a 1st step in the series of steps. what would you like to see and what do you believe will need to happen in order to gain the kind of momentum to not only hold these companies to account and call them out on the green washing, but to actually, you know, address the climate crisis. well, and momentum is exactly what say, well, we can, we see iran across europe, you mentioned to them, this is something similar just happen in the, in the hague. and then there's more and more conversations in the french, you repeat cities around this, it as the new french climate law that also has the 1st steps towards a band of, of this kind. even if it doesn't go as far as services lighting fans would have wanted. and we were just talking about measures that are radical. but considering
5:42 am
the, the sage of the planet does measures adjust appropriate. and why i'm, you know, we're just discussing how, for how long does companies have know, one of the effects of their business and how effectively inconsistently to have been delaying effected the climate action, meaningful climate. and i don't think that a bond of this kind ease is radical at all. it's just appropriate to these companies have not demonstrated that they have the interest of people on the planet . right. or, and, and on that point jeffrey, i know we touched on it earlier in the live show, but is it realistic that we will see that in your mind is this is their momentum around what's happening here in the u. s. in congress. these other initiatives in the hague, in amsterdam and elsewhere. do you, do you think we're at a turning point? do you think that there will be more pressure put on their ability to keep spending the story for sure the, the entire decade that i've been working on climate change. we have seen this
5:43 am
building momentum, and unfortunately the change usually comes slowly. but you know, my, my research and others illustrates really close parallels between the propaganda techniques of big tobacco and big oil. pico is frankly the new big tobacco. and so learning from that history it seems almost inevitable. there is such overwhelming historical evidence now documented and piling up of the malfeasance of this gas industry. and so to me it will seem there is an inevitable lety that accountability will come. the only question is, does it come soon enough to, to matter the most? because unfortunately, unlike most problems, global warming is essentially irreversible on an in meaningful timing scale timescale. so it's not will never and hopefully it's now that's the reason why initiative like such a european wide band would be really important in terms specially of time we
5:44 am
because of the state. because we're in at the moment. of course we don't at the time is a luxury that we cannot afford anymore. and all these initiatives happening not individual level in different seats, are all very good. or also i in the v joel actions against the companies that advertisement by different to see, besides organizations. there have been a few who have been a few organizations. i've taken companies to court over throughout retirement. but these things are very lengthy processes. they require a lot of resources and time, and we simply don't have that time anymore. you know, research, others assuring that the force of the industry has been on notice for more than half a century and almost twice my life time about the fact that its products could cause dangerous global warming. and yet instead of warning, the public will taking action, they stayed silent for as long as they could. and when that was no longer an option, they came out swinging with a decades multi $1000000.00 disinformation and denial campaign. and what we're
5:45 am
talking about today with the green washing is the 21st century evolution of that tactic. literally what one excellent manager called an effort by the company to reset its profile in a way that basically would be more defensible, you know, as the public and policymakers work up to the climate crisis. so it's very much a continued continuation from denial to delay the same and goal, which is always to stop action on climate change. scientists and activists, jeffrey few bran. thanks jeffrey. last year, mass protest, the nigeria force the government to shut down and the tourist li, violent police unit. one years later, when nigerian citizens are still terrified of the police in a post discussion, the gas explain why. in a junior, the lease we have is one who do not have any understanding or any monthly. and i think when people use for money and i say this because
5:46 am
i'm a direct survival of please with the of the highest order in 22 all my but i was arrested by this number s b, but o c charge. james awful told my parents that he had killed my brother and there was nothing they could do about it. and up to knowing nothing has been done about it at the height of incense with those. he was a to the number it goes know on security and he was talking about a number. i mean i'm, we are sure that he will be proved and prosecuted. right. it's been one year he's working freely and rested. would be nice. i caught nothing has been done about it. i assure you the manger, emily system is designed to be horrible. the un, no way i reality, there is no way to say, well, these are some people are bad know,
5:47 am
in the may dram polices them what we have is the designed close to a show that people i explored cute, says you live or anything at all times and i was here because to deny someone access to the child and then darlene to use faith. but you have killed the child and that was not thing we can do about it. is the highest or is the last one? i don't know what degree dish on my that was the humiliated thing. that is my best you now down i'm bang for. he saw his life and utilities fish. and that was not and bang can do that. you have cure this fun and you get that way. we seeds under my junk. got me even. i've got all my cam, maureen, even i got a division during the incense with martinez tease, not in has happened. it tells you speak to you that the main general maintenance of what is happening. but more importantly, the main champ really needs to be poorly totally overhauled. because you,
5:48 am
how people lost their sense of humanity. that system, that is no, we didn't redemption for them. i call non for cya. okay. so i think examples. one was that again i close. um. i will say to good afternoon. i saw it back in one for my for fun to back and that's usually a long down in lot of that, i 3 of the put these off sat. you see star just use you think have been done. i'd be wrong about that. now i'd be stuck with it just about 4 months this year. i look for walk around, one in, i run into 20 and the dog. i know i should them. i, i, i mean this is the guys that he said is impeaching. talk to me. he said,
5:49 am
i do run you through all if he does give us 20000 on there. he's not too much. actually just like i'm the robot uniforms. just like, oh yeah, this is nice guys. mid. nothing happened is because the guy should make the from also benefitted from the system. also skeleton. got that. i'm not a bad guy because it did be, yeah, it was probably going to, it would be in the hope and that's why we have to renew so. and i said, i think the 20 years and i come from a country where davis needs to be glad when people are dying due to close is the can be presented by the accountability and what governments from our political leaders. big thing, you know, was shot sunday evening of the 26th of me by
5:50 am
a drunk sauce officer. she died short supposed to write a few days after she was cute. a parents were left in a position with access to justice. it took the push on the collective action of justice before up to to get anything that happened it with a child. the child, one of our patients with the lights that come on in the sofa just because they come on. we got it as nobody. and the only people in my country within that are becoming a victim for the fuel system with this jobs. oh, good up. good. you know, i mean, you have to live with. i think it's really important right to die. right. because the government was supposed to protect unless some purposes i'm missing in action. yeah. basis. benefits in from the ups which and i didn't,
5:51 am
we organized just be movement movement. what i mean? so if you mind events and it felt like the food was shifted, if feel like i would respect it never became proud to be nigeria. and again, in the face of many young people across put a camera life whenever i put the south side of assembly in the middle of the night on the able to run this. but what, but with this across the country on beyond, i didn't remember the place with the niger and government decided to improvement. trust me to shoot office what, what just as far as people because this is the future. like i said, it's a bus driver. it's becoming a victim. and the biggest thing for me to go should be political to take with us this member units are subject to a concept. what i mean is that because i think because we expect that she
5:52 am
will join in abuse in from the mental human doing citizens and people have invoice and i'd like to do them and then not just for the children of my work for you, but i think you can watch a full episode looking at nigeria a year after the end south protests at stream dot algae 0 dot com. finally, we had to be a mom now and a 9th month of being ruled by a military hunter. waning is from the burma campaign u. k. she joined the stream with an update and then state also shell to answer us questions. call marston france since wanted to know if me a mom is a failed. states have a legitimate government that people have voted for and they are still people still want them to be back in power and also all these resistant movements and all these
5:53 am
ethnic armed organizations and ethnic groups on the ground. they are very organized . they have very strategic, more than the nice military. they are, the military is the one who is bringing in stability to the country that the one committing human rights abuses and atrocities for many decades. and of course, situation get worse and worse since they stayed the crew on february. so i would like to say that, but i mean, there is no sales state yet, but, and also it's the international community. it's their duty to stop them from becoming a sales state. and you know, they are so many things they can do, and sometimes it's so frustrating that they're not doing enough to help people on the ground. this one is from andrew ryan, and you wanted to know was me a mod ever successful? yes. best one of the country question i get a lot. they always comment or say, oh,
5:54 am
how sad to see but my falling down from democracy but so i have to correct them and say they never had democracy even in the past 10 years during the reform process. yes. in the city areas, there was some relative reforms and some high profile, political prisoners being released, but in ethnic area that there was a civil war going on, military continue attacking ethnic civilian. and so many people are still living in internally displaced, come from 10 years ago. and genocide of the we're going to happen in 2017 and civilians and actually was being arrested, speaking out against the military or even the civilian government in the past 5 years. so i would always correct people and say, boom and never had through to mock with me. genuine democracy, military always has control of the whole country. they are the one with the true power in the country, even during the reform you. when i've heard you an activist pro democracy activists really off the international community to do more. so the question i have it fits
5:55 am
right into that area. do any foreign powers, have an interest in maintaining the current military rule? is anyone doing business working with collaborating with me and me, all right, now that you know about that or companies, flooring companies working with the bernice military. so we are trying to identify them and stop them. and we are encouraging governments like the british government and the u. s. government to approach these companies and tell them to stop working with them each military for the u. s. one of the main company is chevron, and they go back to sanctions own oil and gas and revenues for bernice military. because this is the biggest source of income and chevron and to tell in france there the 2 main companies are investing in the country. so we need to stop those revenues flow because it will have the military a lot because they care about money, they care about their financial and security. so this is very important
5:56 am
strategy to hit them hot. one last question, this one comes from semi washington dc. what is the biggest misconception when you talk to people, you talk about your what they understand what you do, what do they know understand about me, mom and it's current circumstances. i think the situation in the country, we don't really need the law in, in national media anymore. so when i see people, when i meet new friends, they say, oh, maybe military, still a military has the power now and military warn, but i have to tell them no military still hasn't warn. despite the fact that they've been arresting people, they think killing people and attacking ethnic to billions. but they haven't one yet because the resistance in the country is growing every day. people are protesting in different bones, in flesh, mobile,
5:57 am
very creative way. people because we are very determined that this is our last fight. we don't want to live under the military dictatorship and we are ready to do whatever it takes to uproot the military. and people from inside and outside the country are working tirelessly to make this happen to we get democracy and freedom in the country and we need international support. and that's i show for today. we end the bonus edition series as we began with the gorgeous voice of the refresh, performing on the stream of watching a a. busy 6 c
5:58 am
with lisa blanton is approaching a tipping point in the lead up to the cop $26.00 climate summits. al jazeera showcase is program dedicated to one veiling the reality of the climate emergency whitney screen film documenting the human experience on the front line planet at the west report from green and on how the rapid rate of melting ice is having a profound effect on the population people empower us why politicians happens so in affected in fighting climate change. both lines investigates how rising temperatures using a water war in the u. s. l, just they were well shows how a community in synagogue is dependent on the preservation of natural resources. the screen takes the fight, the climate justice to our digital community,
5:59 am
and up front. it's hard, demanding environmental accountability, that language emergency a season of special coverage on al jazeera. if america held up a mirror to itself, what would it see in the sense race is the story of america what's working? and what's not? a lot of people were only talking about that. it wasn't at the top of the agenda. if america can handle multiple challenges on multiple frauds, we need to go back to school. the bottom line when i was just there, i'm on the counter because really good losses. bankruptcy bailouts when allied industry recovery began. washington's diminished influence in the last america. tesla becomes the 1st one trillion dollar automaker where the disrupt, this is the truck industry, countering the cost on al jazeera ah
6:00 am
alger 0 rate, with no issues franz than the us seek to ease tensions and rebuild. trust staffed a full out of a u. s. security deal with the u. k. analyst rayleigh, we deal with a lot of grace. ah, hello, my name's i e. this is out there live from doha. also coming up. the u. s. approved the coven. 19 vaccination for children age 5 to $11.00. it's a move.
32 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on