tv [untitled] November 10, 2021 2:30am-3:01am AST
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in chile, that will mean negotiating, a multi national accord between the public and private sectors, costing about $50000000000.00. but it could be a small price to pay to transition to what may be one of the was best options for dramatically reducing greenhouse gases and global warming. without limiting the consumption of the sea and human al jazeera colleena, kitty. ah, the headlines for you at half past the hour, the u. n. is calling for the release of 16 of its local staff is detained in ethiopia as capital addis ababa. it comes at a time of escalating conflict between ethiopia, central government, and rebel forces in the countries north. as far as i know, no explanation given to us by why these are the staff members are,
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are detained. ah, the, there are 16 remaining in detention. and 6 have been released so that that's the, the, the breakdown are they come from various or you and agencies. there are all national staff it is imperative that they are, that they be released. an african union envoy has traveled to ethiopia as i'm horror. and are far regions in a diplomatic pushed to in the conflict. there rebels from ethiopia, ticket i region of advanced closer towards the capital. the u. s. wanting the conflict risks spiraling into a wider civil war. poland prime minister matthew is motivated. he has accused at rusher of being behind the wave of migrants trying to enter the country through bella, bruce, he says moscow's actions threatened european union stability. the top caught in the you a set of oklahoma has overturned a $465000000.00 opioid ruling against drug make
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a johnson and johnson. the pharmaceutical jain was accused of fueling the opioid epidemic which has killed more than half a 1000000 americans through deceptive marketing ravaged the state of a pregnant germany journalist and her child had been killed in a car bomb explosion in the southern port city of aidan, russia de la darzy worked for a united arab emirates based network. the prime minister my in abdul malik side, called it a terrorist attack. but no group has claimed responsibility. and in his taj mahal has been shrouded in smoke with air pollution hitting dangerous levels across new delhi and other parts of the north. the severe deterioration in air quality has been blamed on farmers violating a ban on crop burning. and people also ignoring a ban on fireworks to celebrate the recent devali festival. and with that, you are up to date with the headlines on al jazeera, one or one east, is next compelling journalism we keeping our distance because it's actually quite dangerous ambulances about the explosion inspire program making. i still don't
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feel like i actually know enough about what living under fascism was light. how much money did you make for your rural and deliverance? i made that horrible. al jazeera english crowd recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 5th year running. oh, since the 19 big see, he said spread there population growth by building new suburb the capital of western australia, nearly 90 percent of australian families leaving this role of neighborhood. and by not finance is cheap and well, renting just isn't the side. the dream of owning a home on
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a quarter i could block is edged in the country thought, how important is it to a woman to have a home of her own? ah, very important for wonderful family. have your hand for you . oh sure dysfunction and economic despair. i turning some suburbs into troubled communities. ah, a lead states challenges local heroes to planning their pass to improve their community. each and every one of us have got a responsibility to change our personal space for the better. ah, why no one aisd explores how modern australia can achieve the suburban drain are in with the psych, patrick. what's up him?
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oh, okay, this, what a miss. i think guy. louis. i don't even see how much is bad, isn't it? can calling it is what a disgusting mis. absolutely disgusting bro. give the larva types of work getting that off. oh, ah, the bus is a rag tag, team of volunteers are and are facing assets worst nightmare. every weekend they bluff away vandalism across armidale, a suburb on the outskirts of western australian capital laid rocky 11 st. info off. i must be in tariff about 3 months in the 10 years or more. i've been doing this. must have cleaned thousands walls
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payments from post people's fences windows. in fact peter yes and and colon campbell left grim english winters for astray us a few decades. oh for one more up to having personally. that's it. all the people who wake up in the morning and they find somebody scrawled of their garage door and they feel really off. but what they've done to insult and is the ssl on there being as well. and then we come wrong latch, shining angels only clearer for them. you don't know much like an angel. i know. oh,
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down by the train tracks. a regular weekend was another buffer patio walk tells me clean ups a quite the social event. we'll enjoy each other's company and we'll give each other bit a bit of stick every so often. yeah. but sunny sold and fun plates. old infant who is not your will at some time always in need of you blood. it's not long before they showed this rank amateur, the ropes back in high school. i think i got a day for art actually i could maybe place that this is fine. yeah, but i still think it requires a bit of, you know, brush technique. a bit of pride in your where you live, your life live in rubbish, ape of like living in plain areas. oh,
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but not all. graffiti is easily arrived as the buffers are up against younger ad job adversaries. with what is going to go down there. don't lay on think you came here this whole, this will allow you down a rope, brandy and nick. all the slide he can't get through. there is no shortage of action in one of western australia, most troubled neighbourhood. sorry about the delay. and he is this one on the other side too. so i don't, i don't collide there are some residents, a cold drama doubt in the seventy's i'll he did have a bad 9 because of the vandalism that the crime, the crime was very high. it's kept that tag. glad to say we're cleaning it up. not
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mike, not the bronx. kim part is the tech we of the operation. my role apart from the cleaning, of course, is using the ip head because now and house knows how to use it. and i don't want an hour. so that's way to make. i take a photo after cleanup and that that's insane on to counsel and the place a oh right, doesn't sleep in ahmed out. there's always time the paces home night tide for 83 year old kim fletcher. t breaks are a chance to rest the we're relaxed. kaiser bit like koala. what motivates you to kind of still get out there and do this? i think it all came from the fact that my parents were very community line. i came here in 1959 when dad was posted as a placement that my have some info. all the to ahmed out shopping strip is another
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graffiti gold mine. and a lovely, it says non main night evasion coming on. that she's nearby remind residents of ahmed aisles passed as a quiet hamlet with today busy as it is with modern shopping center. on one side, this old corporate video from the ice sold the suburban drain of moving to ahmed. our morning here is like the 1st more this is where the air is crisp and filled with the st. of gum trees. but people here are relaxed. finally, but kindly smile of this old lady is merit and a happy grain of this most modern. miss kim remembers the good old days with a rural area of poultry, farming daring, thine growling. a blizzard,
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a sleepy little country town. many of us wish it was bit lot that today prices that i used to run, which was bush ran now is covered in houses. and i find that i think it's tracy. so to strains, be concerned about the scroll of suburbia. i think so. it's not a good feeling at now because we've said, spray nose in the area, we get that feeling of isolation, which is not good. a land sale, boom has creation. one of his strategy is largest urban sprawls which encompasses our model. so all of our is in australia is one of the fastest growing regions in the whole country. now we've doubled our population in a very short period of time, and it's still growing with blocks of land here, shape for 1st home buyers and young families were trying to rein in this role
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was white. there's no quartering to block. now they're all quartered out me. i've lived in a number of towns in the u. k. that haven't changed for 1500 years. i mean, they've got plumbing now, but fundamentally the town has been the same since that some of the romans, australia has a lot of tools. so everybody's been turning to a melting pot in the same very short period of time. and it's, i think it's about finding out dense things. it's easy sometimes for people to lose a sense of community with in suburbia. but i think my community exists. people could reach em, fonda ah, david both runs cafe crossway a dinah and op shop which builds community connections for those who made chicken
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bag are small chips. i'd, i think the people that are doing it tough in this area have the suburban dream. they are struggling to pay their rent. they are living without hot water. is people coming through here? they don't know where to get linux me a from that i have a law skills to cook something up the haven't had anybody teach them to cook. i. he's volunteers prepaid sheet, meals for them in a busy kitchen house the food said i he was a mock out of 10. the give me a good i. i got the route because the room for improvement. we don't charge more than $10.00 for any meal. sorry. there's a lot of people that can come to a 3 times a week here. ah, david strikes up conversation with patrons. he senses of struggling. daniel,
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what we've got here is he's got a whole bunch of different meals, come and take whatever you need. and yeah, there's no limit and you just take what you need by what you can afford. so yeah, for you to write down that for the not. so it really raises no go. i love being our to love people and they part of the fix. you know, the idea of community is so broken. we do community really badly. we've got people that are isolated, they're struggling in their mental health and who the heck is walking alongside of them. david knows this from personal experience. he has struggled with bipolar disorder since he was a young adult. at the age of 20, i suffered am massey's psychosis. i was in deep depression. i ended up in hospital for 3 months in the secure ward, and that was awful in itself. ah,
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now married with 3 children. david is on the road to recovery, balancing, fatherhood, and his condition is raising away. but he's determined to be their role model. david says many social problem in our model occur due to absent fathers was a lot of people just living for themselves. it just seems to me that dads just don't stay with morning christiane, i wanting to see a good job. you know that table. he loved it in a. yeah, i know you did a really, really good sport. that's good. uniform looks lovely kimball, good girl at one of our models. local primary schools. leslie barrows is
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a principal with strong principal. you have a wonderful dynasty at recess time and good every morning students, a given a free breakfast, one of many assistance programs on offer to children at marriage in brook primary school. it's unique in that it's, it helps to build a sense of belonging and for some of our children they haven't had time to get breakfast or they haven't had the option of having some food at home prepared. good morning everyone. oh, how i did? i there are 300 students you and some went introduced to learning at a light age. yesterday we did enroll children, one who is 7, so going into year 2 and one's going to you one. and i've never been in school. it is shocking. it's amazing to think that that can actually happen, but i think part of that is because we have become disconnected from what's
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happening around us. some students you struggle academically due to poverty. we have very low literacy and numeracy levels across the board. many of the children don't have any reading books at high. ah, every day lesley announces the total school attendance for it to not say as a form of positive reinforcement. today we have 296 students, so everybody give me silsbee clap. please. well done, everybody. let's infill 300 to morrow. good job. i'll see you out at races. thank you. when leslie began working here in 2016 students would miss days, weeks, or even months of cloth to combat high truancy writes. she introduced a program which waldron with good attendants, could into a raffle to get a bicycle. well, john, good job this month for you. oh, tom, standing here,
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we can only clap place to die. the lucky winners get to peddle their pride. fine. ah, otherwise turn it around. fidel. that's exciting. raleigh. well don, wondering if that's on the hearing the children's ideas and that was something that would help them to get to school. so i needed that his center to come and i come and i put the hard working, and i get a reward for that. and that's lot. he put the hard working. you can get rewards. ha . leslie says to engage students. she has to be hands on and embraced new ideas. the things i do and my team, i guess for some a very it's not traditional, but otherwise i will just be stuck in doing the same thing that everyone else is done. and nothing will change in real terms and nothing which i, and for the students that, that i have in the families. and that's the polling. we can accept that
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in the past 3 years, she's turned her attention to engaging with parents a not the profit organization cold. the fathering project has run a successful pilot program with leslie school about their regular breakfast barbecues. try to attract dad's drink, drop off out leslie's cry cuz she's very relational to. that's the catered. she's never seen so many dads in the school. now. she's dead coming in out of classrooms and dads wanting to be part of the school culture. oh, nice ron. jump, david walker works as a local facilitator for the project, and helps dads in distress. married with 5 children. he says his role is very different to a social worker psychologist or life coach. it's a sharing of knowledge rather than me being in the position,
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telling them how to father. you're a grand 0 satisfaction. you may do them in their, in their environment, in their spice, where you can hopefully i in pop some fathering facts, some wisdom, some support focusing on the things that doing well. rather than halting the things that are still falling short on and just validating them in their rawlins dad's law may for the long whole to try and build relationship with dads and to understand them. and to know that on there, in the community, i lived close to the community that are, that are working. so it's not so much of as a job for me. it is part of my life. to day he's going to make him, hey, can i go? i dive could say it's amy, i really good. i just coming to catch up to chicken onion and say, hey, getting on. seed separating from his wife, kim has struggled with being a single dad, managing a house, plus dealing with your new kids emotions. yeah,
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that's a hard game. i hi, children and playing at the best a toys and all of a sudden it's all on mate. he's finding it difficult to communicate with his son and his dies ale inside things to me. and i that a really hurtful wall that he says, my dad's lazy to sits in high. ah, i hear what i put, i just dropped to the floor right near me. and i just couldn't stab demand more in the house with a no of you know, yard. i'm not lazy. my boy, you know, just can't get way the battle for us. his dad's is not to take that personally. some of the frustration born from just not knowing what to do. yeah. ill, i made some notes just trying with the message and i yeah. handle it handle we might tomorrow we're funded by private companies and philanthropy. the fathering project also provides online resources for dads. they
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now want to use our models pilot program in low socio economic areas across australia. ah, for it to be a success nationwide, the father project will have to find more community leaders like lest hello, her team is also doing more outreach in poor neighborhoods. around her primary school. she personally delivered food, hampers and mates at risk parents whose children the students they've been keeping to ban thing getting ready for just that way gets hopefully we haven't yet. gracie gilligan, loving so excited. it's being such a good job as a family and you which is terrific. so thank you. hello. just was definitely a barrier that we we had to only come on. we had to build if you don't have the
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families on board and he don't connect to with the community, you're only doing really a 3rd of the job because it's so important to have the input from families and the team. what from families? because for a lot of our families, an adult school was not a positive experience for them. leslie gets them on the side because she understands their struggle. i grew up in the, in the seventy's and eighty's on a very similar summer to our model. i lived in state housing and youngest of 4 children and i watch my parents work. my mother worked and my father, you know, i had some health issues which i restricted that. but both still made sure that we had access all the children had access to opportunities when they came and my child that we didn't go to school, i can relate to our parents wanting wanting to brett, you want the best for you children, and you just really want to make sure that they can get that,
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but somehow sometimes you don't know how to get it with. leslie says the lessons being learned here are relevant across the world. how do we ensure that we foster better connections and ensure that people on the margins are included in mainstream australian society? he need someone to advocate for them in a somebody who is looking out for those opportunities for everybody and keep it fair so that you're not excluded by race. so gender, or, or any of those things that should he, she may be 9 that spanner, that's been a barrier. one such advocate gavin, to a tar. he great left his mark on the student in 2019 the local artist worked with the kids to create these benches to inspire abuse require the
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school. just as he does a crawford model. it's bright, it's colorful, but the messages are the messages are important, yet she spent time getting to know our students and why that piece of our school was important to them. it connects with the children he brings the energy, and he just my she smiled that afternoon we find he working on his latest camp. a wall in downtown arbor, filling it, not with graffiti, but off. see, this is all happening on the fly. i am involved with known locally as gracie, he was ahmed els community citizen of the year in 2018 for fostering community resilience through these art projects. i think it's important for now city that we're able to use creativity to transform tao,
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who are the boring spaces the now city. a former soldier in new zealand. gracie came here with the family to chase wealth in western australia, mining sector. soon after arriving, he was retrenched from work and fell into deep depression with little an address at festivals, i personally had no tools to understand how i could reach out or how i could exist any help that was it the. i mean, the lowest point for me personally would probably to the point where a lot of the ability to communicate with my wife my 3 sons. after getting treatments, he set up a self funded community program called our vs depression to help others navigate dark times through creativity. i need an opposition. i whether it's in the competitive space over sport. as a boxer, i, you know,
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i had to find an opponent and left when i, i challenged myself to rise. it's an ex military person, the same thing. the only difference that i've chosen, instead of picking up a rifle or weapon, chosen the paint brush. i once i'm done, while i'm doing now blocking elaine, then go back and assess whether i need to add a towel or where i need to add an extra day time. yeah, yeah, she's great away break to day. gracie is providing assistance to now you have a local artist struggling to realize his creative vision, honor roll the door at all models, central marcus. get rid of a what i called noise brief. simplify that image. get a real strong framework of the image that you're working off and then go back in later in, start detailing it out as, as you need to you. racy, also operates a coffee, dan with his wife sharon,
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it's not about keeping this community caffeinated. this is how he meets troubled thoughts on the streets of our model. if we don't take care of yourself, then everything else moved past. this isn't about coffee. we're just using copy as a vehicle to build a relationship. so this is about relationship building. gracie has set up a community cafe to help others name those in on, but i'll say he's a role model for trouble. man. you know, what about me? you got me. what message do you have for them? responsibility in ownership, locate ourselves in them or take a step back and in just take taunt is really st. men as us who i want to be or is us who everyone else wants me to be. ah, you know ahmed out. plenty of people live on struggles while the suburb lacks material, wealth are fluid. this place is rich in leon,
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foster community. ah, some python ball. others remove. but they're all determined to night ahmed out a better plan. ah . and i care about the pacific island nation, rapidly falling victim to rise in sea levels. and the president skilfully commanding the stage of climate change. diplomacy. oh, do we appeal to corolla, people's right to survive and the challenge of climate change?
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but can he secure a feature that he seemed to be stateless people? what he's going to happen to us is going to be the fate of paris, winful, witness, and fun out is in ah. ready the u. n. z working to release 16 of its staff, detained by the ethiopian government, accused of participation in terror. ah, 11 doha brown. i'm come out. santa maria with the world news from al jazeera, poland. i'm sorry, poland is pointing the finger at russia over a desperate surge of thousands of migrants camped out on the bell roost. poland border also a u. s. judge over turns of major rolling for drug maker.
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