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tv   [untitled]    November 2, 2021 2:00pm-2:31pm AST

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re thing in between ah, join me as i take on the lars. dismantle the misconceptions and debate the contradictions up. fuck with me. mark lamb on hill on al jazeera. ah, the 1st deal is done at the club. $26.00 climate talks as more than $100.00 beat is pledged to end deforestation. my 2030 ah. other kimbell bases al jazeera live from doha, also coming up, panicking, cobble half to 2 large explosions and gone far near a military hospital. if europe is to grind rabble save, i've taken cities or highway leading to the capitol, prompting a new call to arms by the prime minister. and
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a bid to get aid into me enough. washington welcomes a private mission by one of its former ambassadors. ah, to begin with the un climate summit and glasgow where it well, lead is a calling for a radical shift in investments to protect forests and carbon sinks. u. k prime minister. the u. k. prime minister, other has praised a deal struck between 28 countries to prevent the loss of forests world wide. or as johnson has called for private sector investment, to develop clean technologies. if we want to keep the parish goal of 1.5 degrees in sight and support communities in the front line of climate change, we must protect and restore the world's forests. and i believe we can do it as we saw in this declaration today. let's also galvanized
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a radical shift in public and private finance. let's channel funds towards securing the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities and shift trillions towards supporting sustainable jobs. when you, as president is also announcing sweeping policies to cut emissions and preserve forests turbine and wants to limit methane emissions from oil and gas drilling in a significant move to fight climate change. while the 100 lead is representing of 85 percent of the world's forests have also pledged to halt deforestation by 2030 environment. edison. net clock is in glasgow heading up our coverage. nick came. yeah, thanks very much said keeping that 1.5 degrees celsius target inside is just not possible without radical action on for us. and now it seems we have it's $19000000000.00 the, the problem the challenge is going to be the implementation, how it's monitored and how it's actually put into practice more than a 100. well,
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latest, as you saying, i have agreed to and, and reversed deforestation by 2030, which is extraordinary. think about it's only 9 years time, less than 9 years time. and they include brazil which some may find surprising giving, given the president j. bolton, ours passed record on deforestation, and cutting down huge sways of the arms. and now this announcement is outside of the negotiations here at comp $26.00. but it kind of reflects the efforts of the u . k. presidency to try and gone to action to, to reach that $1.00 degrees, go and net 0 indeed. by 2050. all right, let's bring in guest it. take me flemming from the w. w. f. interesting getting this announcement quite surprisingly, it's a big amount of money. what's your thought? well, so one of our sort of main asks for some hearing trans guy was that nature would play more of the prominent role. we know that nature solutions can provide around
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30 percent of the climate solutions needed to reach the goal of the powers agreement. so as you said, without protect action, to protect the forest and other ecosystems, there is no chance of keeping 1.5 degrees. so in that sense, i think it's a, it's a really positive development this morning. yeah. and a big amount of money, $900000000000.00. but as i say, implementation is a thing of how, how will it be put into practice? how do you ensure that money goes to the right people and it's not just carved off by corrupt companies and individual? absolutely, so i implementation and action is k. we've been here before. we've seen previous agreements to help deforestation haven't yielded result. this one is encouraging and in the sense that, you know, it's more comprehensive and bigger than ever before. but 2030 is a long way away. it was encouraging the president to kind of columbia talked around the need not to wait 2034 for instant action. and we've seen that countries like columbia and costa rica that have really invested in positive approaches. i've also
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seen benefits for. busy for the economy, emphasis, i'd say, so we really need to see these commitments. now turn these words turned into sort of concrete actions, finding policies, right? well, that's the thing is because there's a lot of people here who are saying to observe is that this is disingenuous. because he's very well coming out, there's a big amount of money, it sounds great and it looks good on the u. k. presidency, but actually, you know, how do we know it's going to be put into practice? yeah. that, so that's a really, really important question. i think it's encouraging that isn't just words that we all saying, some finance put behind it. it's encouraging that we're also saying commitments from the private sector from finance institutions just to provide finance, but also to eliminate deforestation from from our supply chains. but we'll be watching very, very closely to make sure that these, these commitments are turned into policies. i'm not sure that this financing these commitments reach the people on the ground that most need this much, much more on the, on the front lines of deforestation, conversion and funny. what is the importance of financial institutions and business
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in the management? of course, ensuring that deforestation doesn't happen on the scale that it has. indeed, those companies that use timber that they don't know is illegally source. well, you know, as an example around about 40 percent of the, for a station and conversion is caused by agriculture, commodities. and, and ultimately that financed by big financial institutions by the private sector. so they have a hugely important multiply in suckling issue and also supporting, you know, indigenous peoples, local communities, small holders on the front line, and being able to transition to more sustainable practices. all right, well that's the view from the risks that let me, thanks very much. thank you. thank you, kevin. let me just flesh out that you mentioned sane emissions and they'll be announcement a little bit later. joe biden unveiling class to control me thing at the single most potent greenhouse gas there isn't. it stays in the atmosphere for hundreds of years as well as c a to dispute more quickly. so it's essential that that is a cut down and an alliance of 90 countries,
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including again brazil. i have set out new regulations and measures to limit methane by 30 percent by 2030. so some positive events happening here in glasgow plant for now. thanks for that snick clark there for us in glasgow too large explosions have gone off there a military hospital in cobble before rounds of gunfire. at least 19 people are concerned that there's been no claim of responsibility for the attack. so false fire land is a professor political science at cobble university. he explains why these attacks are difficult to anticipate and to stop. controlling such kind of events will seem more difficult than a situation where the things are not good much in order since the fall of the couple into the hands of taliban. a few things missing. the important thing is that
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the committee cognition, regional cooperation, international communities, corporation and consider, and it's over the target, killing the activation in big cities, but taliban should control otherwise. the main the main thing that people really much need and one from tally about was the grip over the security. and the last, if they lose that grip, if the insecurity increases, i think it will somehow a discrete tyler by his presence in the power in ethiopia. state media is reporting that all visit and solve solvable have been asked to register their weapons in the next 2 days. this comes off rebels into gr, i say baron, control of 2 towns when a major highway leading to the capital, 5 minutes to be met. his asked all ethiopians to mobilize and fight the rebels,
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frank, up to. there's a new frontier. and if you pierce war rebels in peak, i say they advancing for the south, inching closer to the capital, addis ababa in just a few days. the rebels from the northern t grey state said they have seized the towns of the se, uncombed culture, which i and in the bring um horace state. the 2 are on a major highway leading to the capital, addis ababa. the federal government has disputed the claims. we have with this siege on to is broken well to make sure that our children are not dying from anger . and that we should, we have to make sure that that will access for me to access the layout, even though we'll do what it takes to make sure that the seat is broken. if looking flat is marketing plan, it is what it takes to, but the thing we will prime minister arby amad has asked all this europeans to organize and fight back enough. a 1000 all. there are many challenges,
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but i can tell you with certainty, without a doubt we will score a comprehensive victory in the last 15 days when keep your left was crying about being attacked, i was overwhelmed with pressure from the world phone calls. now that they are advancing, it is seen as normal and no one is calling us to go was in the u. s. has been calling for a ceasefire. secretary of state antony blinking. tweeted saying the u. s. is alarmed over the t p. a less takeover of the towns to say and culture. and his urged both sides to stop fighting. but there are concerns that violence could escalate with the grain rebels joining forces with the oral more liberation army, an armed group in the region surrounding the capital. others. there is a new marriage of convenience alliance between at least the fashion of the or on the liberation front. and the tv allowed her because the abbey has managed to alienate the oral mo,
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the food including some harass. so he is really increasing the isolated and that you feel like he's trying to take advantage of that situation as well as olay. and his found lease like these were paying the highest price for the shifting bat lines of if he'll be us war. that's dr. dawn for nearly a year, more than 2 and a half 1000000 people have been forced to leave their homes and around 400000 or on the brink of famine, bianca gupta altogether. and the news ahead were in the hall where people are trying to pick up the thesis of the catastrophic floods. also, i'm sharla bellis on the outskirts of cobble. what are you in a distribution point where cues are growing as afghan seek help with winter approaching? ah, ah,
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look forward to brighter skies the weather sponsored by cattle at ways. hello, welcome to have a look at the international forecast. the weather slot he set fare across a good part of china. now central and northern parts, in particular because we have high pressure in charge here. so that will keep it settle. there will be some overnight, mr. folk to watch out for having said that, but by day temperature is getting up to around 16 celsius in beijing. weather east, we'll see highs of room. 17 celsius in soap pieces of rain just coming in here. a little bit of wet weather. some sherry rails in northern parts of japan as we go through out wednesday and on into thursday, try weather comes back him behind more in the way of sunshine, fine and dry for good parts of bird northern china. central air is lottie dryly could just catch a shower to, to war shanghai. so the marys of china, on the other hand, i think a greater chance of seeing some showers penny a showers. meanwhile, across southern parts of india was some very wet weather coming in from the bourbon
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. gall we'll see some heavy showers there into tumble, nodded and under the dash up towards a dish, but the wet is weather will be around carola, we have orange warnings in force here over the next couple of days. the showers never really too far away as we go on through the next day or so shall was to coming into school anchor was further north is largely dry and edge, some snow there for northern parts of pakistan. ah, the weather sponsored by catera always in the country with an abundance of results . rate. warren won indonesia, his friends for me, we move to grow and frog we balance for green economy, blue economy, and the digital economy with the new job creation law, indonesia is progressively ensuring the policy reform to create quality jobs, investment. let it be part when denise is growth and progress in indonesia now.
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ah ah no. watching al jazeera reminder of our top stories this off. well ladies have agreed to end deforestation by 2030, handing the un climate summit in glasgow. it's 1st major deal. it's part of a greater push to limit the rise and global temperatures to $1.00 degrees celsius in the coming decades. if european state media is reporting that all residents of anti sava have been asked to register their weapons in the next 2 days. this comes as rebel forces from the to grey region capture several key towns near the capital and a suburb of 2 large explosions have gone off near
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a military hospital in kabul before rounds of gunfire. at least 19 people are confirmed that there's been no claim of responsibility for the attack so far was saying in afghanistan, and so 8 agencies, a warning that the spaced afghans are unprepared for the approaching winter. many others who do have homes can't afford to heat them. shallow bell, i spoke to people in kabul, who had taken the chances. sheltering in the capitol strapped above is everything they need in sight. every one they love. winter is coming in for 1000 people on the outskirts of cobble. it's time to go home. near bergen. cormac taylor most moved here 3 months ago to avoid fighting as to tell, yvonne took control. arithmetic in his family came from the st to a province of di condie, but the found they can't survive and cobble, there's no work. so the you in refugee agency is giving them cash to return home to struggle with their core wilsonville fibers from new york. we had
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a lot of problems, plus it's getting colder and we don't have warm clothes and no income to buy anything out. arraf is one of more than 550000 people who flayed their homes this year. mostly because of fighting. a head lies a minimum, 16 hour drive, and a harsh winter go hon a, go, ha, ha, ha. a day later, the united nations turns to those who don't want to leave cobble it surveyed the cities poorest neighborhoods and found these people to be the least likely to survive the winter taliban special forces. man, the entrances providing protection as the un, hence up blankets, food and cash, to cover peoples rent for a few months. these people looking for help, i displace from far away provinces, but they don't want to go home. they're scared of what no returned to and believe they have a better chance of surviving the winter hearing. cobble although piccolo,
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mo displacement is a priority for the you win, but its resources are stretched every day. it's running 8 handouts like this across afghanistan, responding to record levels of hunger, a severe drought, and a stalling economy. that's why the appeal to the international community to appeal to the world is understand. a bit of law miss van is inching towards a total breakdown of of, of, of services or this is a countdown to catastrophe, ramsey, it feels the crisis acutely. she is disabled, unable to stand after a reaction to vaccine. as a baby, she fled here from condos in august with his stepson. i'm at wiley. she was 8 months pregnant soon there were 3 my they had learned that i don't have the courage to be any more pain. i am only 26 years old, and i've seen
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a lot. i've seen so much, and yet i don't even have 6 good memories of my life. 11 year old ahmed wiley has stopped his education to sell rubbish bags, earning $1.00 a day to help feed ramsey and the baby. hi to whom service he tells us. i love her lot. i love her so much. he adds, he is thankful to the people who brought the 8 like many here. he doesn't follow you in warnings of humanitarian crisis and reports of food and security. but he knows life is harder than it's ever been. and without this kind of help, he and millions of others will not survive the winter. charlotte bellis al jazeera, cobble, and attack, and burkina faso has killed at least 10 people. that happen near the border with nice year for the people may have been kidnapped. troops have been deployed to the area and the search is underway. nicholas hark is following the story from liberia's capital monrovia. the attack took place early on monday morning when
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villagers were on their way to a regional market, attracting people from neighboring countries. when armed men in on motorcycles attack them, killing most of the villagers and robbing them of their cattle and the cyril's that they were going to sell. so much of the attacks that we've seen that in the last few months is fuel by food. almost a 1000000 people are displaced in this a hell and are suffering from acute malnutrition. no one has claimed responsibility for this attack, but it has the hallmark of the isolate affiliate dislike state in the greater sahara that has increased attacks, particularly in burkina faso. ever since the government has been arming civilians to defend themselves, they have become legitimate target for arm groups. and most of this fighting is less about gaining territory more about trying to gain access to food. and the month of the rainy season has been particularly bad in burkina faso,
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and that has seemed the displacements of people and attacks coming closer and closer to the capital. now the government of re kennesaw, so has responded with an operation that is underway using helicopters. they say they've killed several of several assailants, and they've said they've lost several. our men, they had announced just weeks ago in operation in the north of the country to try to regain control of the northern borders. the white house as welcome to private mission to me and not by a former us ambassador to the un. washington isn't sponsoring bill richardson tread, but says it hopes his efforts will help get aid supplies and to me in law. the un says about 3000000 people are need of assistance. funds to lee is fine story from calling employ. so the richardson center has said this is a humanitarian mission, and the focus focus of this is pandemic support. now a press release by the richardson center for global engagement says the purpose of
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this trip is to hold discussions to facilitate the delivery of covert 900 supplies, medical needs, and other public health needs. now, earlier this year, me on my experienced a search in current of virus cases and authorities really struggled to cope. patients were being turned away from public hospitals. family members ended up queueing for hours just to get enough oxygen for that for their loved ones. now it's also possible that richardson will be seeking the release of an american journalist, danny fenster, who was arrested earlier this year. a lead for allegedly spreading false information. he's in charge with in site to me. and now the spokesperson for richardson declined to comment on this. it is quite telling, however, that the press release from the richardson side did not make any mention of the qu, who richardson, roby meeting while he's in me or not. and i think it's also possible that the fact that he's been granted access to the country, he may have had to make some promises that this is going to be a purely humanitarian mission. now if you remember,
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the june test position is that it stepped in because that been electro fraud and it also takes the position that political opponents to the qu, ot terrorists who are intent on stoking violence in the country. so i think on the political front we shouldn't expect much from this mission. it is a purely humanitarian mission. today's the deadline for palestinian residence of shaped draw, facing, forced eviction to present their positions on a compromise. it was offered by the supreme court and their long battle against being removed from their homes. forfeit reports from occupied east jerusalem. for several weeks in april in may, this year it felt as though the small neighborhood of shakes euro and occupied east . jerusalem was the epicenter of the israeli, palestinian conflict, the threat of the force displacement for palestinian families and become a focal point. one of the triggers for the round of hamas rocket fire, but not the start of this year's brief but bloody garza war 6 months on ship. juror
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is quieter, but the fate of its palestinian residents awarded their homes by the jordanian government in the 1950s, is reaching an acute, potentially defining moment. right now we still don't know where we are to go in. israel supreme court has given the families until the 2nd of november to decide whether to accept a compromise deal with a jewish settler organization that claims ownership of the land. the deal would give them protected tenancy status, meaning they would have the right to stay for up to 3 generations from now. and crucially without giving up their own fight to be recognised as owners of the land berlin in orlando. so we have to study this proposal that is totally because it will determine our feet on existence in the neighborhood. and we can give any answers before we have discussed and studied. and this will be done by all the residents of the naval. the families campaign lent on the success of social media moments like this mona l could confronting
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a settler who admitted frankly to wanting to steal her land. when his brother mohammed recently tweeted the families were deliberating, but would never at set. the settlers own their homes, legal experts say that within the confines of the israeli law, if the supreme court had to make a final ruling, that ruling would almost certainly be against the palestinian families on this street. they say that's one reason why it's pushing this compromise deal so hard. so it doesn't have to make that decision. lawyer and activist daniel sighed them and says, even if the families do accept the deal, nothing is entirely guaranteed. you have rights, but those rights are not inalienable, right? there are alien up, all right. and they can be taken from you and the palestinians, even if the best case scenario goes through. and there is an acceptable settlement . will live a life of perpetual vulnerability. but there is of course, another factor whether the settler organization will accept
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a deal that isn't as definitive as previous court judgements in their favor. it may prefer to force the judges into delivering a verdict, one that could all to easily spark another round of violence. ari faucet al jazeera, occupied east, jerusalem. the fiance of demarcus shock g will testify before the people's tribunal on the murder of journalists in the hague. how did a gen goes, says she wants to make sure that the world does not forget to shock. gee, he was killed inside the saudi arabian consolation if stumble in 2018. the tribunal has no legal standing, but it's hope to put pressure on government who are accused of turning a blind eye to the murders of prominent gentlemen. more than 1400 have died and almost 30 years, and most of their killers have never face justice. rural communities in depaul, struggling after a fairies of major floods left with not left them was nothing off of the water and
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mud receded. the government's disaster management team says these kinds of natural disasters make it even worse in the future than the trough reports from one of the worst hit districts. it may have been a hole where children once played or perhaps a roadside business had helped parents put food on the table. maybe a guest house for passing tourists, whatever it was, it is now and forever part of a massive debris field that runs the length of the beloved she river. instead to pulse our district in valleys, across nepal, homes and businesses have been swallowed up by major floods 3 times this year, weeks on from the latest illusion. october, the number of dead and missing is still rising. and the list of damaged and destroyed buildings is getting longer. many nepalese have been living in limbo for months now, which is, i know nadia is a mother and a grandmother. she and her husband invested everything they had in trout farms that
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sat at the river's edge a trade they had hoped to pass on to the next generation. what they spent years building was gone in a day for i bought my son and husband were trying to save the farm. but then we had to run as we were watching the flood waters came and swept away all the trees. and we took the kids and escaped the next morning. we came back to have a look and everything was gone. her daughter beemer ran the family cafe, which also became a casualty of unseasonably extreme weather. she says she now feels lost here though, miss like me. oh dear, i could not have even imagined what happened. we sacrificed a lot to build that place and it didn't even last 2 years. i'm very sad about that . thousands of people across nepal, just like bema, have lost everything, and they're trying to rebuild their lives from scratch. families displaced by the
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floods are living in these make shift camps for now, but they're waiting for more semi permanent housing to be built further up hill. now that's going to be made out of corrugated metal sheets, not necessarily the best protection against the coming winter cold. but even though the river has receded, the idea right now is to get as far away from the water line as possible and onto more solid ground. but even uphills, that may not be so easy to come by. disaster management experts are warning that areas in the himalayan region that saw heavy rains are now at greater risk from landslides. zane basra, the old jazeera cindy, paul chug district nepal. australia's prime minister pushed back at a manual calm master. the french president accused him of lie. it is all to say that submarine deal, australia scraps, the multi 1000000000 bill, the agreement in september. it formed a security aligns with the u. s. in person under which strategy will acquire
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a fleet of american nuclear power summaries. scott morrison. describe cons, accusations, as an insult. i don't wish to personalize if there's no element of that from my perspective. my, my site that i think the statements that when my questioning, astride is integrity and the fluids that have been placed on a stride, you're not me. i've got broad shoulders. i can deal with that, but dice lose. i'm not going to cut fledging at a strider. i'm not going to cough that on behalf of the strident i can do with whatever people throughout with me. but it's friday. it has a proud record when it comes to our defense capability. that's why we, we building these mobile building. i was and it's friday service record, i think, needs make nights, not elaboration. after more than a year of political turmoil that delay elections, somalia has begun voting for politicians and its low house of parliament. the 1st 2 politicians for the 275 member la house were elected in mogadishu on monday,
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having chosen by tens of thousands of clan delegates, a fit for the voting process. the upper house was selected. 2 houses will choose the next president and vote counting is underway for south africa. the local elections turn out was low. some predictions suggest that the governing african national congress will get less than half of the vote ah. watching al jazeera reminds now of the top stories, while natives have agreed to end the fall stations by 2032, handing the un climate promise in glasgow. its 1st major deal, part of a greater push to limit the rise and global temperatures to 1.5 degrees celsius in the coming decades. if we want to keep the parents go to one, play 5 degrees in sight and support communities in the front line of climate change .

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