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tv   [untitled]    November 1, 2021 6:30pm-7:01pm AST

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please sure the policy reform to create quality jobs investment. let it be part when the lease is broke and progress. invest in the new here now. ah ah, this is alta 0 kind of the top stories for, you know, the u. k. prime minister has worn fellow leaders, that humanity has run down the clock long enough on climate change. force. johnson is hosting the cop 26 un summit in glasgow. it's hot solar commitments will be made to reduce carbon emissions. you and chief antonio, guitar, esh, also spoke at the open end of the summit,
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warning that the world is taking its own grave. he said, promises made by government so far, lacks credibility, and he rest president joe biden told worldly does his country is committed to action. and to being a global leader in the fight against climate change said the us will meet its targets of having greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and reach net 0. i 2050. well, joining us now from caught $26.00 and glasgow is johann rock, strong director of the puts them institutes for climate impact research kids. i have a withers on the user. are you hopeful of a breakthrough at this conference? who is right? no, i'm, i'm really concerned i'm really concerned in terms of the science is showing that we need to transform so rapidly. the global carbon budget is coming to an end. we need to cut global emissions by half until 2030. and we have all the science to
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show that 1.5 degrees celsius is not an arbitrary number is a real planetary boundary. we need to hold that line. so this is a really decisive moment for humanity. it is a decisive moment from humanity and, and, and like you say, the science a really couldn't be clearer on this. giving this why, why do you think some countries are still dragging their heels when it comes to taking real and tangible action? well, we should know that this is a climate crisis, but it's not an environmental crisis. this is a crisis of the whole world economy. we've built up our modern industrialization on cheap energy sources from fossil fuel, oil, coal, a natural gas. so this is a very painful transition for many of the vested interest than countries that are stuck in the old fossil fuel based economies. so of course, in that sense, it's a fundamental transition of the entire logic of the basis of the modern
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industrialized world. so in that sense, it's turbulent and there will be some turbulence, and it's an uphill battle of the next decade to really come over the humps. so we can start really surfing along the innovation pathways to scale renewable energy systems, clean production assistant, all types of consumption and production that gives us a clean, safe, and more attractive future free manatee. but there will be some loses along the way . and those losers are putting their heels in right now, and we need to show that there is a transition for the world economy that benefits the majority of the people in the world. the year as president joe biden describes, and tackling climate change is an increase bull or perched unit c. a. he was really trying to sell the idea that by tackling climate change, it meant new jobs, sustainable jobs, and there was economic opportunity there. do you think that message will resonates
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with, with some of those who you describe as taking their heels in or do you think they'll be some hill struggle to, to buy that arguments or to begin with. i would like to give her, you know, president biden, the, the support from the scientific community. he is right. i mean, not only do we have scientific evidence that we're facing a crisis, we have scientific evidence that a transition outcomes give better benefits and more equity. and more prosperity and the other end. so in that sense, his right, it's not only a crisis, it's also an opportunity. however, what he or perhaps underestimate is the cost it will take in the transition phase. that's why we need to have finance to help developing countries to be able to, to cope with this transition fast enough for me. again, remember, it's an emergency point. we need to cut global emissions by half in all the 10 years time. so, so that, so it's not as easy as to say that it's only an opportunity space. we need some,
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some really soft landing mechanisms which has to be financed to be able to handle this. this soft landing of a transition from oil colon natural gas to renewable energy. this was particularly in countries like like the african nations, but also southeast asia and latin american countries that needs support to be able to, to keep the pace in this transition. so he finance, is it, he finances this difficult transition. what personally, this is not an academic state, but i think it's quite simple. it has to be the always city countries of the world has to be the rich minority of industrialized countries that have been surfing along for 150 years in the benefit from a climate destroying fossil fuel based economy. that's where the fundamental responsibility for the finance lies. so that has to be an evening process between the north and south to help this transition for all world nations. now,
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how can this be done? well, it can be done 1st of all, as discussed soon, glasgow on filling up the green climate fund, but has to go beyond that. and i think that a global price on carbon can even out also summer that are inequity in terms of the burden of this transition. so if you have a price on carbon states, get more revenue and can plow that back in dividend system to help. soft landing for low income households and help the transition away from fossil fuel, both, you know, mobility, transport, energy supply. so that has to be, you know, a fundamental rise now to be able to get the financial mechanism socially. or, you know, adapted for, for the more vulnerable. ok, johan rogue, strong. great to get your thoughts. thank you so much for joining us on the al jazeera news are
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5000000 people have no died from cove at 19. at number comes from johns hopkins university, but the world health organization estimates the actual figure could be almost 3 times higher than the health authorities suggest. virus was 1st identified in the chinese city of wil hand. in december 2019, almost 250000000 infections have since in report a globally will in a statement un secretary j will antonio good terror said this devastating milestone reminds us that we are failing much of the world. while wealthy countries are rolling out a 3rd, the doses of the coven, 19 vaccine, only about 5 percent of people in africa are fully vaccinated. this is a global shame. we're joining us know from robert is as the dean zebra. he, me the director of med biotech cancer medical by
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a technology laboratory. and it's great to have you withers on the news or as we heard there from the secretary general of the un, this is a to track recovery from the pandemic, isn't it? we're seeing optimism and richard nations, but country without vaccines are still very much in the grip of the current virus. well, i think the word was read your rights when he said, we are a shame and i'm an african and him feel free to shit. and thus, the word is failing, us actually, or 2 words are coming out from your guess or your guess we're saying 2 things, the equity and creativity. i think we are losing both of them. actually, the numbers are here. when you look at the, in the word a vaccination, we are or more such 50 percent of the we're has at least 2 angles and that's very interesting. but when you go to africa, just 8.7 of the population is vaccinated with one door. so i think the
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equity is not there, the credibility is not there. and i think it's a really shame for that. we are not thinking about that. i think what will be really interesting to, to have and maybe will how feel like it would be a disaster because leaving the house africa without a vaccine. what's gonna happen? it just will get a virus that will be circulation between 1300000000 person in the word and by circulating variance will be coming out. and with this variance, maybe we'll get one for him that will be escaping immunity and will come back to square one and who will be playing catch $22.00 i, which is a frightening prospect. i say that is a very frightening prospect given what everyone has lived through this past almost 2 years. now. in terms of the dangers of this continued vaccine inequality, what worries you most is at the fact that this variance could emerge and,
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and could di, rail all the progress made thus far? or is it simply a case of prolonging a pandemic that really shouldn't be brought under control by 9 exact. i think both of them are really worried the because the 1st for it's actually a variance and was so lately, actually in south africa that is a new or in this game holds actually to see 112. and this one is there really a really far cousin of the variance a or b of the virus? so it's something that's food or is me. and i think if we are even worse and with a immunocompromised person, most likely we have the virus developing, mutating and the by the end gets into foreign. the other thing is, if we haven't been demick that will be lost in for period of time, everybody is using in even a rich country. and that have to say that, i mean, when you see that the numbers, it's already striking. we have
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a $7700000000.00 that were injected the wrong word. and in africa we have just 11 hand and 92 millions. that's where a rainy given to africans. it's not even 2.5 percent of the doors is given everywhere. so i think that thing that you said it's really clear if you have a new variance that will be keeping the immunity and the vaccine. that would be a big problem. and we don't want to do it to have that. the other thing, the last thing of the pandemic would be impacted economics around the world. and they have just to give you these 2 numbers. for example, in africa, the objective of w show was to get most of the country is to 40 percent. we are not even a 10 percent and just 3 countries get to 40 percent. we are planning actually the w a choice plan and actually to get to 70 percent by the marsh to june next year. and in africa we are having most of the country not to get into 10 percent. so i think
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it's a very scary situation and they had the anguish and that's a lot of people that are seen from scotland. and i'm just telling you from, from africa. we feel the same pain and think something should be done. indeed say it is quite striking that says we haven't moved on this. pandemic is still very much a threat. so thank you so much. as the dean ebara, he me for laying it out for us. we really appreciate it. thank you. and let's bring you some braking years out of nigeria. we're a 21 story building in lagos has collapsed. it's believed 50 people are trapped in the building that's reported to have been under construction officials in the 2nd most popular city in africa. i've been trying to demolish a retrofit unsafe unsafe buildings of an 80 buildings have been demolished this
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year. so far, we're going to keep an eye on that. bring you more as it comes in, a yamini government sources say, who's the missile strikes of killed at least 3 people and entered 28 others in the murdered province. the attacks targeted algebra districts, south of the city of morrow, who fees began their push to take control of the oil rich province 2 months ago. married as the last stronghold of the internationally recognized governments strikes on sunday, follow, and announcements from the satellite coalition that had killed more than 200. her thes in maribel this week. and the u. s. supreme court has hearing arguments about an abortion law in texas regulation effectively bands terminations. once a fetal heart beads has been detected, it's been an effect since september, but hundreds of faces. people protested against it across the country. the justice department says it violates a landmark ruling from 1973. let's get more,
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i from pass eco hain, who joins us from outside. the u. s. supreme court. patsy. will this case the site if abortion is ultimately abolished in the united states? not necessarily, but there is a case coming up that might do that. first. i wanna just sort of paint a picture for what we're seeing here outside the court. i've been to a lot of supreme court hearing days and something like this when it comes to abortion, which is so controversial. so he did on both sides. you would expect that there would be pretty big protest in looks by the, by the immense police presence security presence here the day expected that as well . but really we're just seen maybe a 100 protesters from both sides of the issue listening to the arguments that are ongoing right now. so as you mentioned, this is all about the texas law. and the way this law tries to go around roe v wade is it allows individuals who have no relation to anything involving an abortion.
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they can sue anyone who helps a woman get an abortion, and they can be given up to $10000.00. and so the state of texas is arguing that the courts shouldn't get involved in this. they're saying that basically somebody should get sued, lose work its way through the process. well, what we're seeing is 2 different cases. now the one right now is from the biden administration, they're arguing that they can in fact sue the out. and in the last hour it was from providers. and they're saying, look, we can't go through that whole process. we need inductive relief, right now. you need to, to basically stop this and the court has said they'd let the bought the, the logo and effect. but what the court is said is they're not going to decide the constitution constitutionality of this case. they're going to decide who if anyone can sue now that will have ramifications because if they say the federal courts can't get involved, we expect we'll see a lot of republican lud states follow similar suit, basically making abortion impossible to get. ah,
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but really it's been interesting the more the newer and the more conservative justices because this is a court that leads conservatives in their questioning. they seem to be citing with the providers against the state of texas. of course, you never can tell exactly how the court is going to rule. the bigger case is going to in december. that's when the state of mississippi is, in essence, asking the court to really change abortion on this country. instead of having it be, when a fetus would be viable outside the body, they would have an abortion after 15 weeks. at this again, i said is a very conservative work. they have testified that they believe roe v. wade is settled law. some people are going to be really, really into this decision, more than it might actually have an impact, but people are really watching the freshly close. ok practical hitting their life or is that the supreme court? thank he, patty. let's take he to nepal, ny, which is struggling after several days of flooding and devastating landslides. more than 100 people have been killed in homes and crops have been destroyed. experts
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say, landslides are more common in the himalayan region, as rains become more intense and glaciers mount on to sierra, is celebrating its 25th anniversary, jamal, and shall take a look back at the history of the media network. and the obstacles and dangers is faced ah, of the time of its launch in 1996 or 0 was seen by many is merely a drop in a media ocean dominated by mostly western news channels and outlets. 25 years later, that drop has caused ripples the world over forcing a soon army of change across the globe. before al jazeera launched, the arab world enjoyed little if any media freedom, citizens from iraq to mauritania were told what to think and say, through state on channels that focused on glorifying their leaders. whilst ignoring the concerns of ordinary people. but when the channel began broadcasting under the
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slogans of the opinion and the other opinion and the voice of the voiceless, it's earned the respect and recognition of millions and it's viewership rocketed. while most media outlets were embedded with american and british forces during the occupation of iraq odyssey were reported, the otherwise untold story of the human cost of the war as it had done before and got to stand. but this came at a heavy price, odyssey or journalists were injured, arrested, and even killed. among them thought a you who was killed by us strike on the capital. baghdad in illegally occupied palestine, al jazeera, has always been present. it's cameras, broad costing the daily struggles of palestinians living under is radio occupation correcting a narrative that's a previous you fail to tell that side of the story killed by the israeli army. from the 2nd intifada to the attack on an 8 flotilla headed to the besieged, gaza strip. and until the recent war in 2021,
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the network has reported the story from all sites and angle. again, this resulted in its officers and gaza being bombed this time by the israeli army, live on t v in early 2011. then that's where the motto, being the voice of a voiceless, crystallized, arab capital of the arab capital, erupted with anger. and millions of people took to the streets, demanding freedom, justice and a better life. these are the people i'll do. 0 was on the ground reporting life while local, regional, and even some international channels failed to acknowledge the historic process that became known as the arab spring. all the while the network remained loyal to its other motto, giving error time to everyone, including the regimes that were cracking down on their own people. in 2017, and a testament to how influential al jazeera had become a blockade cutter was imposed by egypt, saudi arabia and the united arab emirates,
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they insisted the channel must be shut down for the blockade to be lifted. a demand rejected by cutters leader whose country hosts the network. so you're not gonna shut down. i'll just know when i the country's ruler sticking to the commitments made by his father on the day the channel was launched back in 1996. the rest assured the channels freedom will not be restricted politically, it will be a platform for every opinion of what started off as an arabic language channel. 25 years ago is now a global media networks that includes 5 different channels. several websites and a plethora of digital platforms, all have cemented themselves as leaders in their field. all of them seeking the human story and striving to speak truth to power. a quarter of a century has passed and what was once described by 4 major option dictates office, knew about it as a tiny much box is now a global media empire who's flame continues to burn as a beacon of free press in
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a region that has never needed it's more dramatic. sure. yeah, i just gotta doha, stay with us here. and i'll just say we got the sports coming up for you after the break and told them take a vase of action after a disappointing thought to the season. stay with us. ah. with
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lou, the time for the sport. here's flora. holla, thanks so much. premier league sighed tottenham have factor manager nuno as burrito santo, after hiring im, just 4 months ago before jeez has paid the price for
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a disappointing start to the season. spurs are languishing down in 8th in the premier league. they moved to dismiss nuno fall, spurs, getting thrash 3 now by match. united. antonio contrary has emerged as favorite to be the next spring manager. it's been reported that the italian will be in london shortly to have talks whispers county most recently managed to internalize and guided them to the area title or the law. as far as sergio guerra has reportedly been diagnosed with an irregular heartbeat for what was experiencing chest pains and breathing problems during barcelona match. on saturday, the 33 year old fell to the ground and was treated by medical staff on the field before going to hospital for a cardiac exam. a guerra will have further test in the coming days to determine the full extent of the problem. and we've been speaking to her yusef, a professor in cardiology at the university hospital of wales. it's great players for a number of professional clubs and the welsh national team. see for you
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a friend will the major for both parties to mandate of that lead footballers undergo regular screening assessments and by and large, these are very good, very useful. and we do identify certain wager abnormalities. but it's important to, to do to, to mention that no screening program will ever be able to identify and exclude all problems. will always be a small fraction of patients who the screening programs haven't identified. because, you know, some of these problems can be sub clinical. i'm an only get manifested when players are in on the big screen on the big arenas them are to start the d hydrated adrenalin levels may be a little bit high and lat triggers. assumption grabbed amenities good by and large . the are the screening programs that we have in place at the moment. are she quite robust? the houston astros have kept the world series alive with a thrilling come back when against the atlanta braves in game 5. the answers got
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off to russ start in georgia, falling for nothing behind. in the 1st inning, they rallied after that and eventually managed to get ahead in the 5th. and they are, they went on to seal at $95.00 bo have to do it all over again. in game 6 in used it on tuesday with it last is still leading the best of 7 series 3 tail. no, we're pre called, the pitching that was executed very well to lay bats came alive. so hopefully, ah, is a star for ha street. going to houston, i'll take it anywhere, i mean, i don't care where we're at. i mean, if we win world series, it a matter me where it is. i mean, i'd love to done up front our fans. hopefully we can do it the next couple days at the t 20 world cup one of the tournament favorites, india on the verge of missing out on the semi finals. he's dealing revive their tournament hopes, leaving india when lives after 2 matches. because we chose the field 1st and they restricted india to just 111 from their 20 overs. elan had no trouble reaching the
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target, losing just 2 wickets with 33 bowls. despair. we've got a tremendous amount of experience in this group trained bones himself with the nubile. they've been doing a great job for us for a number of years and, and for them to see the turn all they did today and, and a lot of old dollars to come back that up. and in the evenings that we played to, to school, those runs, i think was a great job. you know, obviously staying in a bubble and staying away from your family for such a long period of time does play a role on, on the players mind as well. so we tried to adapt, but sometimes, you know, but the bubbles, acting mental fatigue or to creeps in, that you are doing the same thing again and again and again. so yeah, it is the way it is and you can control a lot. and alexander of rab has won his 5th atp title of the season in vienna, the german beach, american qualifier. frances cfo, in straight sets and sundays funnel the whole number 4 is winning, run this year, includes titles of the tokyo olympics and cincinnati masters. it's the 24 year old
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18th title overall especially, you know, i didn't start the week off very well. i didn't feel like i was playing all but last matches were great and to be honest, friends has been playing with tenants and i hope you can keep it out because it's ranking. all right, very quickly. okay, and that is all your support for now. back to you. hello. thank you very much for. well, we are going to leave, you know, with a message of hope from the 26 climate summit chairs, of course, being held in glasgow environmentalist. david ethan bra issued a rallying cry. mind and leaders for could be achieved if they work together. if working a part we are forced powerful enough to destabilize our planet, surely working together. we are powerful enough to save it. in my life time, i've witnessed a tenable decline in yours. you could and should witness
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a wonderful recovery. that desperate hope. ladies and gentlemen, delicate actions is why the world is looking to you and why you are here. thank you. dawn on the couch because villiad said losses, bankruptcy and bailouts. when will the airline industry recovery begin? washington's diminished influence in latin america. tesla becomes the 1st one trillion dollar automaker where other disruptors in the truck industry counting the
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cost on al jazeera. ah, well, he'll move to a world of comfort and sunny sex without you business class, which way your privacy is paramount and your experience can sit back, relax in your own private space and let us take care of everything. catera always the air line you can rely on ah 25 years ago and a new era in television news in the middle east begin a 2 part documentary series. mocking the 25th anniversary of al jazeera, telling the story of the channels launched. and now it became a recognized global brand. ah,
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the story of al jazeera, a unique path. in affluence, australia, some neighborhoods are wrecked by social and economic despair. why now an 8th make the bed of local heroes? every one of us have got a responsibility to change our person. like fighting for that. ah, ah. okay, we're bringing you back chest or before that. so for the errors, very, your significant milestone for al jazeera, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary, or what we're showing, you know, are live pictures of the ceremony just taking place at our headquarters right here in doha. what began as an arabic language satellite use channel in 1996 is now a global multi media network, with outlets on air and online in multiple languages, al jazeera has also been an advocates of press. freedom will joining us now,
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right next to me. in fact is our correspondence mohammed.

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