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tv   [untitled]    November 4, 2021 7:30am-8:01am AST

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she's the world, most of his budget comes from foreign 8 jobs are hard to find the only real option out here responding and there isn't enough work for every one. some young people would try to get to south africa to find work they. for those the con, do that getting married seems to be the only option. the law in my life would be the marriage for both boys and girls under 18, but without proper enforcement, it still happens. how to put us out there, man, glitchy, malawi. ah, huff puff the r, and these are the headlines off to 5 months of uncertainty, talks to revive the 2015 iran nuclear deal, os scheduled to resume for the end of november indirect negotiations between all signet trees stoled law strewn in vienna after the hotline to abraham, or you see one the presidential election. the united states is welcome the announcement by its european allies, reiterating the possibility of reaching
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a deal. we believe it remains possible ought to quickly reach and implement an understanding on a mutual return to compliance with the j. c. p, away by closing the relatively small number of issues that remained outstanding at the end of june. when the 6 round concluded. we believe that if the iranians are serious, ah, we can manage to do that ah, in relatively short order. but we've also been clear, including as this pause has dragged on for some time, that this window of opportunity will not be opened forever. the announcement of more talks there happened just hours after iran reported a naval incident in the gulf of a man. it's accused the us of trying to capture a tanker carrying its oil. us denies the claim with the pentagon saying it's bogus and ridiculous. in other news,
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the u. n. is accusing all sides of atrocities in ethiopia. and investigation says the government and rebels and the ticket conflict of violated human rights laws and in some cases may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity. new jersey governor phil murphy's narrowly won reelection. he is the sites 1st democratic governor to win a 2nd term in 4 decades. his republican challenger, though one more votes and expected the victory seen as a bright spot in another, was concerning night for the u. s. president's party, the u. k. governments, as dozens of nations of agreed to end the use of coal at the cop $26.00 climate summit in glasgow. signatories include poland, vietnam, and chilly. but some of the world's major uses are reported to be missing from the deal. talks on wednesday, had focused on financing a transition to green energy. and with that, you're up to date with the headline san al jazeera, the stream with family okay, is coming up next. the climate has changed every year for millions of years, decades of talk, but little action is all about distract,
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create confusion to crate, smoke and mirrors. the shocking truth about how the climate debate has been systematically voted. the oral industry was a main bank roller or opposition accommodate the campaign against the climate. do you think that's a bad thing? more shoot you a did was years. absolutely. on of 0. i hi, anthony. ok to day on the stream we check in on afghans. he said afghanistan back in august when western forces left and the taliban took over. how are they doing? this is now he'd some midi van. she gave testimony to congress just last month. it was an emotional experience. have a look, have a listen. knowing people do not have something to heat,
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having a simple then at on my dining table has been very difficult. sorry. when people do not have access to the bank account. and i being able to get my paycheck, husband, but it so i think it's, it's a time for us to understand the importance of humanitarian aid score of honest on and annoying that we should not let the people suffer any more. joining us today, we have a rash hum into a new lot. they're going to explain why they are so relevant to today's conversation. a rash, welcome to the stream. please introduce yourself to audi ants. hi everyone. my name is alex as zillow. i may african american community organizer and based in los
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angeles, california, and i would say i'm a product of this placement. my parents were evacuated much like the other guests were except they were evacuated and came wrap their refutes back. the 1980s. thank adel, hummel's tele, international audience, who you are, what you do, of what you're bringing to the shell today. thank you for having me and show. my name is monday, i'm a blogger, and freelance journalist. i got evacuated on august 23rd and i arrived in the us on august 27 as part of the american air list mission. and so i wasn't in town for $45.00 days and i've worked less and it's been 20 days that i am out is out of the camp and i'm currently based silverspring, maryland. all right,
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so thank you. welcome to the scene. we're going to have more about your experiences over the last couple of weeks. very seen me lab. welcome to the stream. please introduce yourself to audience. thank you so much for having me on the show. my name is neela and i was back in august. i arrived here in the united states on the 27th of august, and i'm based in fairfax, virginia right now. thank you. me laugh. all right, so if you're watching right now and you're on youtube, what would you like to either ask or share with the afghans who are on i show today, they have resettled in the us. what would you like to austin? the comment section is here. i will do my best to put your comments into today's show hubbard, if you were going to be truly, truly honest, sorry, candid how is resettlement going for you? well, i mean, i mean it's definitely better after
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a very long time of this thing and that comes around 45 days. i mean, finally i sold, i started to feel relief. a little bit knowing that i'm, i'm, i'm getting resell and one of the american cities. so that, that was a big relief actually. but the thing as the research men has its own challenges, it's not easy. we need to go through a very long and sometimes slow going process of resettlement. there are some problems because i think it's the nature of any kind of resettlement, any, any part of the world because it's not easy to to feel like home where you go go to a foreign country to get settled. i think part of the problem is natural. we need to go through the experience, but also i think, due to
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a large number of got to be back, paid it recently and the low number of agency i, i kind of you but there are some problems. i think the there are some problems in terms of housing. i can see, i mean i'm in touch with other africans who got out of the camp recently. they also have some issues with the housing and other issues. so i think like in my case, i still, i still don't have my own apartment yet because you know, you need to face some problems if you don't have credit history with the rent thing and leaving and stuff. so you, you kind of face these kind of because how thing is the, one of the most important, when i would say is the 1st thing that we need to guess in
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order to get to resettle. so there are some problems in terms of solving. there are some problems in terms of we don't know yet when we're going to get there. we're social security number. we don't know yet when we're going to get our work permit. so these are some issues that i think we all africans share africans who got out of a rush this, these are all every day entry points for life in america. but when you start to break it down, what you can't do, if you don't have the information or the document, can you explain that for international audience? well, i think, you know, these are obviously challenges that anybody faces, regardless of whether the refugees here marginalized personally united states. these are things we deal with. but also if you're somebody who's attempting to find a living wage earner,
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affordable housing somewhere in the united states that's going to be in it's, you know, obviously you have the obstacles. they get in the way of them in regards to having to be displaced. having the science, human dignity, and faced the records here in the united states. and then they come here where there is just, there was a level of unpreparedness. the evacuation that happened in august was ad hoc. it was not prepared. and that's why the other guests on this show and others, so many other thousands of africans had to sit at military base and have a very uncomfortable stay where they had to know where to close that they fled with what they did not have access. for example, one of the issues that we're dealing with this access to, to when they're clothing, because they are essentially sleeping and ad hoc and tense across military bases in
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places like wisconsin that we understand it can get very old and new winters. and so these are just, some of the folks are facing and that's just the short term view. that's the issues we're dealing with in november and december of 2021. and then some of the issues that, that were trying to assist as a community organization. as community members is getting folks from settled making the mrs. success story in the united states. there are many obstacles. many of them are a governmental because the united states government on a basis, federal and state level has mad enough to accommodate. i am going to show our audience on my laptop, the states receiving afghan refugees, some of the biggest states here in california over 5000 afghans in california right now in texas over 4000 in florida over
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a 1000 and look at the northern states. it's already getting a little chilly around the dc area, which is here, which is red. ne love is, but up in the northern states, if you, if you fled from of garrison in august, can you imagine what, what do you have? what do you have with you if you're up in these northern states here? i would love you new lab, you sent us some pictures of your journey from afghanistan to the united states. i'm going to start with one at the airport. will you talk us through what happened? let's start with that 1st picture. what are we seeing here? any lab? well, it was one of the traumatic experience of my life. when we arrived to this point, and i took this picture, i was so exhausted and tired. my kids for this is my oldest daughter, santa and you can tell from her face, out for years and now tired. she look because we see some really green
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condition, a sense we decided to leave afghan while it was been fancied while it was on the way to the airport on board. all i mean throughout the evacuation process it was like really hard. it was extremely hard. but i, as one of our friends, it was an ad hoc, the response to the very particular emergency situation. but however, i mean, i was competing. what's happening in this picture here? well, this picture has a good story because that's my son, omar. the other one is malala. yeah. my oldest one. 0 my told me that. look at a mom me. you said that the us soldiers are leaving and there will be
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a war in the country. look, there are here all ready and they have all the immune nation and everything. so why they just don't go out of the 4th? oh yeah, it was the for me it was the i didn't know parents would like to. i would like for their children to experience such a thing. but unfortunately, my children went through this experience and hopefully it will have some positive things for them in the coming future. more shots i want to show this is on a military across tell me more about that part of the journey. yes, this was the aircraft that we came by. it was basically packed. it was a cargo airplane. so we were pack just of materials and the good thing was when the, when we just moved into the plane,
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the officers officers and the people there would say move forward, move forward because your sisters and brothers are waiting outside and we have to evacuate them as well, so that sentence would gave us more strength and we would just even shrink ourself and make more places renewed. what, what's happening outside. and we had to deal with it and we had to accommodate. i want to bring in a new voice into our conversation. this is jennifer's voice. jennifer is basically calling out the united states, the not being prepared, not being ready to help the afghans that had to flee the country. this is what she told us earlier. how may i would love you to comment of the back of jennifer's video. although the united states has long been preparing to withdraw from afghanistan, united states was not prepared at all to deal with
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a massive influx of ask in that we're going to come as part of the resettlement process. it's very difficult for ask and still to apply for asylum. it's very expensive for them to do so they have to go to the 3rd country. people are stuck in a bureaucratic math. it is so hard and this is so i'm going to undo so many of these regulations with the signature of his pan and he chooses not to do so. and we don't understand why how they, when you arrive at your camp, they were still building it. i think that was, that was really true because of the influx of afghans who got evacuated from afghanistan. i was, i mean, immense. and does of is that the american government was not really prepared for such a mound. of african refugees served. pouring into the u. s. and the other,
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you know, processing centers and middle east, the euro. i think the influx of africa is actually out, i think out pays the, the, the, the screening process and other, other process. and because every africans they need to go through go through a different layers off screening, my waiting process and medical chair. so you know the process in terms of logistical problem. i think that was a big challenge for the american government. would you mind at all? what i would you might excuse me, would you mind if i bring up one point? thank you. shad online on twitter. that was a logistical issue. and and, and you help solve a problem for the camp and just coming in to my laptop. not complaining. this is how met, but this is what i caught last night for dinner. and the next meal is 12 hours
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later refugee life might be safe, but never easy and favourable for bliss el paso, texas. and that was your dinner. yeah ma'am. so they need to give a little bit context of these, this need the exact meal as the, from the 1st few days that i, i was, i just arrived at the camp and i was one of the 1st, you know, flies that i came into the cam so this situation was not really good and that's, that's not, that's not me. that's not just me saying it. that's what i think that's what the camp officials are with also say that you're not really prepared. i could see as we came at the camp, the tents were being made, the more of the facilities are being improved. so all the things that
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we see here when like when they came out of the cam, it was a totally different camp. you know, when i, when i compared to when i entered the cam so. so this is a very long process of installing the facilities and all of the mixture. hands on all the sibling order. and everything was a, has a gradual improvement which is good. we actually, it was part of our contribution was the fact that a lot of africans included our, including our team. we actually formed a group of wine shooters to kind of have a contribution. and so forward to the offshore, to the camp officials because they need they needed feedback on how to get the, how they can improve the condition in the camp and how they can connect to the
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afghans and get those feedback. i think we, we serve as a bridge between the africans and when the camp offshore. and i think this is mean a mean of communication between africans, officials. i think that it helped a lot to bring some improvements and the condition of the cam. i rush, i'm going to move on to you. i'm going to share this video comment with he'll come from. she refer apache, she's an immigration attorney, and she talks about the challenge of finding. let me say status, what is your status and the stress of not knowing what your status is as an afghan refugee in the united states. his unless we have legislation pass that will grant the afghans permanent residency status. the biggest, biggest challenge that the africans associates will be in the coming months in the coming year as they start to leave the u. s. government facilities. because they
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are all for all on girls that as a temporary status, which grant them unauthorized period of stay only 2 years. and they will need to seek alternative routes to a green card either through the program, through their family members or in the alternative through asylum. youngins will also be subject to the same rules, the same laws as everyone else here, either some kind of temporary status or permanent residency. or just wondering how many afghans are in the united states who slides in the past few months? do we know, do we have an estimate? i think the rough estimate that we've been hearing, whether that's, you know, more informal, informal conversations. we're having lever refugee reset them, and organizations department of homeland security. we're looking at roughly a $100000.00 and folks. and 3rd, the united states and some capacity and sharif actually makes it really great point . and this is one of the advocacy points that we're focused on,
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especially in these weeks. and then coming next week, we're spending some days virtually on capitol hill. the advocates for afghans who have entered a country where you manage their role, which is just the way to enter the country to seek asylum. it's not a pathway to legal status, it's not an ability to get a green card. it's not an ability to have a pathway towards eventually citizenship and you know, you know, jennifer and me the point earlier to divide administration can do a lot. administrative. congress has an obligation, a moral one and a political one as well. to pass legislation pass benefits for parolees to enter the country up until 2022. anyway. what they can do is take this even further and create a pathway to legal status, to citizenship, to green card holder for asking for lisa country so that they can become part of the america fabric. they are here any way you know there,
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whether they are sitting on military basis or whether they are in virginia and silver spring, maryland or somewhere here in california somewhere and over america. well, they'll be entering and being and be part of new community. this past weekend, i saw a video of 3 young children. all teens are younger who obviously do not really have the ability to speak english, but they were true. the trick or treating are already and so every part of them there, you know, they're, they're about to go through what i entered, which is this like complex will identity. and there's, there's that to be navigated as well. but why can the, like the policy makers in congress in the white house make this so much easier by allowing them become part of the american fabric i, rash neil up 100. we have so many questions for you. this is going to be the speed
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round instant questions, instant says, alright, this one is on twitter in the lab, you take this one very simple on twitter. she's on my laptop here, adapt and integrate. just that phrase, adapt and integrate. can you relate to that or do you want to get some pushback? yes, actually, it's to a great word about an integrated we are that what we are already doing. but i'm so fortunate because i and my family have were able to come to the united states in 2017 and we got our especially migrant weezer status in 2017. and that's how we got our green card. so we were coming and going back and forth. so pretty much we adopted many things that we had to do and my children the same way. and my children were very lucky, unfortunate to go to an international cooling cobble where they got to learn the
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language. and now they're adopting pretty well. but i'm so worried for the kids. and for the children who came from rural areas of afghan, a son the might to face a lot of challenges and to go to adapt and to integrate in this new culture a new everything is completely new for them. yeah, yeah. i think it's very important point to adapt to and integrate, but it's not a single rents. you know, it's a very long process for especially for those. and i know that i don't know the exact statistics, but i would say i would, i was saying that the majority of africans will lead on are now, here are those africans to be 0 english. i mean, this is the, this, this, that the 1st step to, you know,
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sort of adapt and integrated. and they really need to go through a layers of, you know, challenges 1st. and they have language barriers they, they would face pose for shock and american communities. and i think this a very long term process it's, it's not that it's not the against wooden light to adapt and into bit, but i think we need to be patient, at least for a majority of africans to so sort of what they need infrastructure is they need education, they need her trainings, danny, they need to be need to have, you know, other services until they, and they kind of feel themselves into them the american communities and start to adopt an interview. so for part of a school already worked with the americans are either american government or
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american age years. it could be much easier to adapt and it's great, but the still is a very long term pass. say i want to show something to you and guests and also audience. there was a pole that was done quite recently about american public opinion. what they felt about afghans who had worked with the u. s. forces who are in the united states and what they felt about afghans who had not what with the u. s. forces and as a very big difference there in public opinion and where the support lies. i'm sure that you will actually see that in the lab. and how made an irrational work and in your, your daily life. i have a look here on my laptop. this is the international rescue committee. and they ask something that you actually ask every time we do a show like this, how can i welcome afghans to my community? you can donate, you can volunteer. you can translate, you can house a refugee family. you can hire a refugee if you're a business owner,
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so many ways to help a rash. hum at knee lab. thank you so much for being part of the string today. appreciate you. thanks for watching phoenix. ah. ah, life is never scripted. never foretold. it's never. no matter what happiness never stole open. you read between the lines. listen, always listen, never stop asking, never stop questioning. wanting to know more discovery among the human story. b and punctual. be courageous.
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