tv [untitled] November 8, 2021 5:00pm-5:31pm AST
5:00 pm
challenge to do this job, to bear witness to history as it's made to make sure what is recorded is accurate and truthful. i'm then other oh, i mean civilians. army chief promises a democratic transition in an exclusive interview with al jazeera general, but home says he will be part of the future government. ah, milton 0 life from headquarters in ohio, getting and obligated also coming up controversial, spyware development. israel is reportedly found on the phones of palestinian activists. we are looking at 5000000 children, one step away from starving to death. a dire warning from agencies have gone to
5:01 pm
some struggles with its worst food crisis. polen vellerilla has tried to spark a confrontation by allowing migrants to walk towards the border ah, hello the army general related military takeover into don last month says he will not be part of the future government. after the transitional period. speaking exclusively to al jazeera for the 100 hon says he's committed to a smooth democratic transition. once elections are held in 2023, the military of power last month to solving the civilian arm of the government and declaring a state of emergency. remodel. i seated on numerous occasions if things go as planned, i will continue to function until the reins of power handed over to an elected government. i simply wished to serve my people truly and faithfully. after that,
5:02 pm
i will have no political role. i have no hopes to run any election race. i hope i would be able to deliver this promise and work together a sudanese until the stay if he is a handed over to an elected government. i think we've exhausted nearly 3 years, wasting much time and effort. if there were directed to productivity, our situation would have definitely been different by now. 3 years of blocking roads creeping protests and political fallacies. we failed to deliver on the promise change of the desired transition. we failed to fulfill the people's wishes or dreams for justice and alter their address or farther. who interviewed? i've been for the halliburton has this update from hard to when i asked him about the elections of 2023. why not now, but wait him 2 years more. he said that we do not have enough funds and we need a consensus or it is not the right time to go that with that decision. so here of
5:03 pm
a said there are 2 prominent factors that are going to be determined and how the future of susanna is going to be, particularly mister will hands on carrier. so the streets and the international community without after law, me to the also prime minister after hambrick. it seems very difficult for mr. albert hand to get the support from the fleet or to is them down and to get the, the, to restore the international relations. and get the support of the international community, because a so far the you and the u. s. c and european union have been quite firm on the, on the on demand asking mr. han to immediate return back to the civilian government . had by mister after le hum to well, you can watch the full interview with sedans, general at the federal hon on talk to al jazeera in about 25 minutes time. right. at the end of this bulletin on earlier we got reaction from my head and about who's
5:04 pm
from the sudanese professionals association. and she says that the military cannot be trusted to facilitate a smooth transition to a civilian. let government. well, if he says he will not be part of the future government, he might well step out of the picture right now. what's keeping him from stepping out of the picture. we've heard such promises from previous dictators with such promises in different contexts around the world. for us, these promises are dieting. we were asking for a complete civilian government. this is what we were asking for democratic transition since december 2018 since he stepped in the fixture in april 2019. there has been a matter that has been numerous that there has been complete address throughout with the military in the picture. so what types of added value is he added to the picture, but in fact, he's complicating the seem even more the presence of the army in the political life
5:05 pm
. incidence throughout independence has been complicating the picture. the president of the army right now in the police is complicating the picture. this is not the 1st time that who is attempt that we can. so there's a 3rd, the do not to get another attempt that they're trying to take over the, the entire power into the military time. they are not to be thrusted anymore. what we are looking for now is, is this is now high time. this for a partnership is over, it has collapsed totally. and it's time for us now to move on to a full civilian 6 palestinian rights groups recently designated as terrorist organizations by israel say at least 3 of their activists had their phone tags. they say the spyware to pegasus was used on their phones for more than a year. 3 other activists also say they were hacked. the rights groups are demanding and international investigation into the hacking. i have as targeted
5:06 pm
groups, we read about a potential lender between discovery of to spyware in asia, those definition of, in joe's as terrorist groups because of the closeness of the timing. harry faucet was following that news briefing, and i'm on the for weeks they've been rejecting these accusations that they have been acting as some kind of a front or a funnelling money or another way supporting the terry designated group the popular front of the brace of palestine designated that way by israel and western countries, but they say that this is not the case. and despite that, and despite international pushback against this move by israel, israel is continued on that path. and on sunday, these really military also designated these groups in the same way, may meaning that they could enact various measures in the occupied westbank arrests, confiscation of money shutting down offices and the like. now what they're saying is it, it around the same time as they discovered that they were being monitored and hacked
5:07 pm
in this way, or at least some of them that was when this designation was out of the blue made against them. so they're questioning the link in the timing of all this, and they're also pointing out the huge that of privacy concerns around it. the pegasus software, spyware, invades a phone in an undetected way, can download. all sorts of apps can give chapter and verse on exactly how that phone is being used and indeed operate the camera and microphone of that phone. so one of the 3 people who allow themselves to be named was talking about this the news conference earlier and saying this was a huge invasion of the personal privacy and security of his family, his friends, and the people who deals with on a day to day basis, the un is warning, the number of people on the edge of famine has risen to 45000000 around the world. and the jump is largely down to food security and i've gone on more than half the
5:08 pm
population. that's about 22000000. people don't know where their next meal is coming from. charlotte balance reports from couple were 8 agencies say without immediate medical intervention that millions of children may starve to death. cody sunday is one of the busiest food markets in western cobble. the produce comes fresh from farms outside. the city prices cheap for 3 years resort has been here with his wheel bearer. he's a karate one men who for a small fee transport shot his groceries. yet for the last few months, his wheelbarrow has been mostly empty. he says shelters can't afford his services. that a lovely, so 1st thing, let him out. there is no business. he tells his men, we just roam around. he approaches women. hopefully they may need help center. but if auntie do you need a wheelbarrow? he asks, but they walk away or ignore him. said i generally,
5:09 pm
if i said i say he's 5 hours into his work day and his earned only $0.20. he used to earn about $3.00 a day enough to pay his rent and feed his family. frustrated. he hits home, he spends his day surrounded by food, but even more frequently returns to his family empty handed. afghanistan's economy is collapsing under the last government 75 percent of public expenditure came from foreign grants. us and un sanctions maint bed of apparatus. upon the telephone's takeover taliban officials say they need sanctions lifted an aid agencies to return to tackle the problem with little money to go around. banks limit with rules, employers comp pay this stuff and result in his family a paying the price. to day they had green tea for breakfast. lunch is darlin bread . they will rush in the leftovers for dinner. must on sienna fall as well. i'm so glad our little girl left the hotel lana's garden. mr. i used to bring
5:10 pm
a lot of food to the house before the taliban. but now there is no work. and it is pushing me into even more of a crisis and that i'm due to pay $22.00 for rent. but i still owe for last month. and a children's health is getting recruit day by day. they are not alone. 95 percent of people and afghanistan and not consuming enough food, and more than half about 22000000 people a malnourished some so severely, they may not make it through the winter. this is what realized trying to avoid al jazeera has visited multiple hospitals in recent months. the ward swelling with more children being treated for malnutrition. agency say it's the worse food crisis in afghanistan since records began. they say children are already starving to death . we are looking at 5000000 children who are one step away from starving to death. so that serious 5000000 children are going hungry. they do not have food. the us
5:11 pm
arriving on bread. and to the day that really the i'm getting is not is not enough to sustain them. re is all a doesn't know what to do. he says the pressure is a means the days are getting shorter and he wonders if he and his wheelbarrow bring home just enough for his young family to last the winter. charlotte belo soldiers, irrevocable therapy is the is the executive director of the u. n. world food program, earlier, he told us that the situation in afghanistan is going to become even more dire in the coming months. we're looking at a country of 40000000 people, whereby now you have 23000000 marching toward starvation. and out of that, almost 9000000 or it famines door knocking away. and as i talked with mothers and fathers who lost the jobs have no more money, they're showing everything they have. and now the winter months are coming. they
5:12 pm
don't have heating fuel, they're running out of food. it's not just years of conflict, but also you've had drought economic deterioration along with coven compounding all of that. and now you get the international community because the taliban is taken over freezing all international resources. and that's billions of dollars that normally would be going to teachers and health care workers in that trickles down, trickles down to the, to many women who may be cleaning homes are out in the streets and, and i talked to doesn't as dozens of the men and women who just heartbroken, they don't know what they're going to do. i mean, you are already hearing stories of, of a women mother's cell and one child to feed the other children in hopes that, that child can be taken care of by another family in it hasn't gotten as bad as this going to yet yet. and the next 6 months are going to be heretic unless see international community truly unfreezes those assets so they can pay the teachers. because now students really aren't in school. it's not a girl boy thing as
5:13 pm
a money thing. and so we're going to need and this is just what's remarkable for us to reach to $23000000.00 people at 50 percent rations now is going to cost $230000000.00 a month. still ahead on al jazeera. well, tell you why people in mexico are excited to be back in queues like the i think we'll be here. i just don't think we'll look the same and taking action on raising sea levels, we look at the city is battling to keep the water bay. ah, it is the rainy season throughout malaysia and indonesia, there are inevitable floods have been some in jakarta elsewhere in java and the forecasts would indicate it just as light yet more of the same in java,
5:14 pm
sumatra from its la malaysia, in southern thailand and seller work there's also a likelihood with this increased ne monsoon to see more raid in viet down further south and in cambodia lesser in design the philippines. and that ne monsoon is what is really winter tucked in. he is given snow in beijing stows falling in the forecast in the northeast of china. temperatures are a bit below where they should be in that cold is going to be felt throughout the korean peninsula that in japan, or i think you'll see rain for quite a few bobbies snow on the top of mount fuji, maybe later on tuesday, maybe wednesday the northeast one, so which represents the asian wind to really in many places. this one here also gives you the wet season for tom. a modern style anchor. it's doing that now has been flooding in china and there'll be more funding in july with the rest of, if tics in the north, very settlement court was suppressed. a massive movement in the air, air quality drops, is very poor, new day. moment is a chance a shout at the everett sometime on tuesday or wednesday,
5:15 pm
and it could be really quite pocky. ah, with talk to al jazeera, we always ask, how would you describe why tony bugs relationship with the us? we listen copied one tedious, multiple, copied 19 nesbit, terrible demonstration of the failure of human soley that we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on al jazeera, unprompted, and uninterrupted discussions from a london broadcast santa, on al jazeera, ah ah, the me
5:16 pm
gallery on the top of the solid sedans and military leaders say he will not be part of a future government general hospital, georgia 0. he's committed to transfer power to civilian leadership. once elections are held in 20236 palestinian rights groups recently designated as terrorist organizations by israel say at least 3 of their activists had their phone. they say the spyware to pegasus was used on their phone for more than a year. the u. n. is warning the number of people on the edge of famine has risen to 45000000 around the world. about half of those at risk are enough, don don, which is tracing its worth truth crisis since records began. the us special envoy for the balkans, gabriel escobar has been holding talks in bosnia and herzegovina with the members of the tripartite presidency. and this comes off to the bosnian serb leader
5:17 pm
announced plans to establish a separate army within the country that violates the 1995, dayton peace agreement, which had ended the conflict, jamal se y'all isn't very evil with war while the crow us both in the president both came out insisting that there should be more discussions that there will not be any conflict on that. there was respect to the data and agreements essentially is the constitution of bosnia and lays out how the country is governed . when miller does take the serb number of the president, he gave his statements. he said, yes, there won't be any war. they don't want that conflict. however, he said that he would still push ahead with plans to withdraw from state institutions. not necessarily specifically specifying the military, but on the military. he said that he would do whatever is needed to prevent the bosnian army from transforming into what you described as a muslim army. obviously this is a multiethnic,
5:18 pm
multi religious multicultural country wiles. that has been a source for the war or conflict. that's a place in the ninety's. the way in which it is governed now will be, it's problematic in the sense that it is a kin, maybe 4 of us who might be a bit more acquainted with how lebanon is in the secretary and setup there. it is similar to that. that being said, there are specific rights and guarantees that are in training within those agreements for representation of each of those different sex. poland has accused bella ruth, of trying to spark and major confrontation and says it's mobilizing additional troops at the border. this is after footage on social media sort of migrants walking towards the polish fellow russian border. the polish border guard says several people have attempted to force their way through barbed wire on the crossing use as president position because administration is encouraging people to
5:19 pm
cross into the region in retaliation to sanctions. dominic cane has a latest from the german poland border. the significance of this particular story right now is to hold because representing the 2 border issues with which the e u has to wrestle. the 1st one is in borders within member states. the 2nd one out of borders between member states and non e u countries where i am right now. hang foot and order on the other side of the bridge. here is the polish town of sloop. it's the odor river forms the natural frontier. and if you can say traffic coming and going across the border as it pleases, there is a very discrete police presence here. and they've told us that they stop only people whose behavior is such that warrant them being stopped for control to be performed. but generally speaking, here, this is example of an inner porter which is wide open, which the e. u wants to keep that way, but that's totally different juxtaposed that as it were with the outside board or
5:20 pm
the one between poland and yellow ross. the one between the baltic states and, and countries such as yellow russell, those are the ones where the e. u. while certainly in the shape of poland has tried to close as much of that border as possible or at least put a fence that certainly lithuanians have done that with a b l, a russian border. so that's a significant fear. the e you wants to keep these borders within its member state wide open, but some of its borders, particularly with piano. so i want to keep that very much more firmly under control . leaders will use the 2nd and final week of the cop 26 climate. some to see consensus on financial help for developing and vulnerable countries, previous commitments by richer nations, on the long standing issue remain unfulfilled. the 1st weeks all pledges to curb
5:21 pm
methane emissions phase out. coal fired power, stop overseas fossil fuel financing, and say for as active as gretchen berg has labeled to talk a failure and then exercise in green washing. and simmons has the latest from the summit in glasgow week one of cop 26 may have shown some key agreements. but week 2 is all about settlement and consensus, which is a difficult area in this summit because everyone has to agree at the end of it. with me right now is the executive director of greenpeace international. jennifer morgan. what is the key issue here and what's happening? so the key issue here is whether or not all of the countries are going to come together and keep a safe future in insight. keep this 1.5 degrees celsius goal with in site so that there's not more warming than that. and in order to do that key key decisions that
5:22 pm
they're going to keep coming back to the table until that's done. and that they're going to phase out fossil fuels, which is a main part of causing climate change. but what about the lobbyists on this? because with the small islands of the places on earth that are really up against it, they need masses of money to actually adapt and change change the way they they fuel life. yeah, absolutely. i mean the most vulnerable countries here, the islands, africa, least developed countries. they need support because it's a life and death issue for them. so they need both more ambition. countries to say we're going to have our emissions by 2030. we're going to phase out fossil fuels with just transition and they need the finance in order that they can adapt their very existence. is that at risk right now and what we're seeing as these fossil fuel lobbyists who are here are holding us back on that this was to be more of these lobbyists than, than one country alone, but more than $500.00 of them. there are multiple lobbyists here and they are
5:23 pm
trying to hold the world back because they're seeing that there are some rays of sunshine of moving forward from coal a, but there aren't there are there, hold it, trying to hold back along with countries like saudi arabia who is also vulnerable from supporting tax to say we've got to close this gap to $1.00, and we're going to do everything that we can. but what about what's already being agreed? now we have the same cut, black coal power promises for it to be phased out. and also the issue financing, which is pretty huge. but these are all pledges. these are all voluntary pledges by a mixture of countries and companies, the details matter. so the coal pledge said, well, we'll do it in the 20 thirty's in the or the 20 forty's, or as soon as possible. that is a huge loophole there. key one though, was governments 20 government saying they're going to phase out financing for fossil fuels around the world. that one, the fine print is solid. the others you have to look at the fine print,
5:24 pm
no matter what boris johnson fez. we're not there where we are even without the fine print. you're not there. all the whole thing is not there in swims of successes. no, we are at a critical moment. we are at a critical moment. we have to have countries come together, listen to the vulnerable countries, listen to their children, and decide they're going to raise ambition. thank you much indeed for that assessment there. so as you hear a critical situation here, the days ahead will offer you one climate summit enters it final days in scotland. many activists say they're disappointed it's commitments haven't gone far enough. and as climate change accelerates, people in some coastal cities are taking action themselves. i think gallagher reports from miami, miami set to become the most vulnerable coastal city in the world, according to the economic organization, resources for the future. and it's not hard to see why the city faces
5:25 pm
a constant barrage of storm surges, coastal flooding and rising sea levels that if not addressed, threaten it's huge. it if we get a coastal surge from a storm or even a high tide, they can flood this area. the challenges that miami's chief resilience officer works on every day. dozens of projects have already been completed, but the challenge is a huge volition. in the way we occupy this land and how we deal with the water making room for water that we didn't think was going to be up on the land. i think we'll be here. i just don't think we'll look the same. that's a hard pill to swallow. in the city that's expanding and known as the gateway to the americas, but they're all limits of hope. for decades, miami is being considered the city at the forefront of tackling rising sea levels. and there's no question it is vulnerable. but many people point to this building the present museum of miami as a picture of what the future might look like, sitting over 3 meters higher than current storm surge requirements,
5:26 pm
the museum incorporates the latest in poorest materials, water management techniques and drainage. okay, well this is fine. let's do more of it despite the cost of construction of well over a $100000000.00. it's an example of what can be done. we knew exactly where this building was going to be. we wanted to make sure it was here forever. and it starts right there, what are the needs of an art museum, but what are the needs when you are on the water in miami, florida, like many coastal cities, miami city planners of finally taking action. some architects envisioning a very different relationship with the rising sees designs like this may be revolutionary, but experts say the alternative is unthinkable. we have an opportunity, hopefully to innovate and to think of ways that we can live with water and, and still not have to pack and go right cuz you know, displacing 6000000 people, you know, in an urban area is no easy task. but challenges in the costs involved the monumental
5:27 pm
sea levels continue to rise. the city could soon run out of options for the gallic rogers era. miami, florida. the united states is expecting a surge of international visitors. it's the 1st time since march 2020, that direct entry via land or air has impossible for foreigners undertaking non essential travel. there was excitement at london heathrow airport as us found flights, took off well more than 15000000 people cross into the united states through its land border with mexico in 2019. but that came to a stop in march 2020. now, after nearly 2 years, businesses are hoping for a chance to recover john home and reports from she wanna in mexico. the monday sunday, see that the biggest lam border crossing in the western hemisphere went back to something like normal. the pandemic restrictions of us placed on its southern
5:28 pm
border with mexico were finally aged for international trade that were me much met because mighty board of factories. the macula daughters had already been allowed to cross their goods in the us for the past year. but it's the so called non essential travelers can locals and tourists. we've now been clear to visit, as long as they are fully vaccinated. in is, is one of many and one we've been counting down the days. the 1st thing that i'm going to do is cross credit with my kids and they continue to to, to take the back commission for them in medical. we don't have that opportunity. there are many people in your family as well. the old friends that have been waiting for the opportunity to cross the border. whatever reason, as well, seeking glad. yes, of course. all of my friends want to go shopping and many people who have family. they want to see them again and have the life we had before. it's really exciting.
5:29 pm
a california board of businesses will be excited to see them again to without limits. can customers hundreds close down during the pandemic. but in tiquana, it's been quite the opposite. restaurants have benefited from americans heading across the dine in the country where restrictions are not strict people. i think we're tired of eating home and they start coming over here to the one because there are free to see over here what all now. so you and the restaurant twos are hoping the us visitors will keep coming, and the locals won't abandon them. now they're free to head to the state. there will be a 50 percent increase in traffic heading across the border. tiquana authorities believe the many waiting on the streets or intent for their chance to cross won't be able to join the rush. is the camp of asylum seekers who want to get in the
5:30 pm
united states to be easing of the pandemic restriction. i'm going to make any difference for them. and it's a reminder, the cove it isn't. the only issue is that there's also migration and it will continue to be so even when the pandemic is long gone, these people are stuck at the only crossing points, the u. s. in p one which remains closed while the rest of the border gets moving again, john, home and algebra, p f one ah, tell them again, the headlines on al jazeera sedans, military leaders says he will not be part of a future government general or different softly, but harm told al jazeera, he's committed to transferring power to civilian leadership. once elections are held in 2023 a corporate remodel. i seated on numerous occasions as things go was play.
17 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on