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tv   [untitled]    November 10, 2021 10:00am-10:31am AST

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ah frank assessment is okay likely to change making behavior. no, it's not going to change their behavior. they're going to continue to do what they do and in depth analysis of the days global headlines inside story on out jesse era . ah, the un works the release of 16 ethiopian staff who have been detained by the government in addis ababa. ah, hello, and welcome on peace adobe. you're watching l 0. live from our headquarters here in dough. also coming up. having accused bella, ruth's, of creating a refugee and migrant crisis on its border, poland now points the finger at russia. donald trump has lost a legal battle to keep some of his records away from the investigation to january
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his capitol hill, riots. plus, i'm the plot reporting from me. i live in northern scotland, where the power of the sea is driving the green revolution. the united nations is pushing for the release of ethiopian staff who've been detained by the government in addis ababa un, and humanitarian. saucy say they were arrested during government raids, targeting to g. ryan's advances by tick ryan rebels had been fighting against the government for more than a year. prompted the declaration of a nation wide state of emergency last week. as far as i know, no explanation given to us by why these, these staff members are, are detained. ah, the, there are 16 remaining in detention, and 6 have been released. so that,
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that's the, the, the breakdown of they come from various are you and agencies. they're all national staff, it is imperative that the of that they be released. my kind of has more now from the united nations. well, the a spokesman for the secretary general briefing journalist there he had just spoken at that particular time to you and security personnel in addis ababa trying to get out exactly what had happened. now, what the u. n. does know at this point is that initially it would appear 22 people were arrested along with it. he said there dependence. now how many people that is, that is not clear either. now, subsequently, 6 of the you and workers were released either you and says that is engaging with ethiopian government, 1st of all, to get the rest released and also to find out exactly why these arrests took place . now there had been some reporting that these arrest took place in
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a wider roundup of people supporting the at t grey, a group of fighting against the ethiopian government. however, no confirmation of that. and that question was put directly to the un, which also could not confirm. so it is struggling. it says as well, with communications issues, very difficult to communicate with you in personnel on the ground in at us about about so detail stole sketchy hours after that initial announcement. but un insists it's going to continue to press the ethiopian government for the release of its workers. well, meanwhile, the diplomatic pushes, gathering pace to prevent ethiopia is conflict escalating into a full blown civil war? the african union envoy on a shaken obasanjo traveled to the am, hara and afar regions trying to mediate. and the a you is discussing humanitarian access into to cry, where there is a severe shortage of food and fuel. the un says nearly 400000 people are living in
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famine like conditions. madeau has more now from addis ababa. all these peace efforts, the 1st priority they want to achieve is to get aid to those who need it most. more than 400000 people in the to gray region who are living in famine like situations according to the you and no aid has entered the to grey ridge and says mid last month. and many people are trying very much to get this aide as quickly as possible. osa going about san jose. the african unions, m boy to the horn of africa, said that he will have a plan by the end of the week for negotiations. and the 1st thing he wants to see is a humanitarian corridor opened towards a to grey. and also for an armed emily's, she is under defense, false as thick and as far away as possible from the main roads leading to to grey.
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so it is still a walk in progress. amnesty international says it's documented 16 cases of women being raped by a took. ryan rebel fights as during their recent advances in the ethiopian conflict . the organization says it happens or in the groups takeover of a turn in m. r. in august, part of a statement from amnesty secretary general says the testimonies we heard from survivors described despicable acts by t p l. a fighters that a man to war crimes and potentially crimes against humanity. they defy morality or any iota of humanity. helen's prime minister has turned his focus to russia, accusing the russian president vladimir putin of masterminding, a migrants and refugee crisis, and poland border with bella roofs. mateusz more of ascii, had previously accused bella roost of orchestrating the crisis, but not without the support from moscow. a long time ally of the bella, russian leader, is rory challenge. yes,
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go in the middle of every humanitarian crisis. there are always human faces. and these are the children, women and men stuck in a deadly stand off on the poland. better roost, border thousands and now in makeshift camps along the razor. wire humanitarian group say they're lacking food and medicine. social media footage from recent days shows several 100 refugees and migrants escorted by masked bell russian security. heading towards poland. the large numbers of escalated a crisis has been boiling for many weeks. this family says it's kurdish. the grandmother isn't well, they're lucky enough to have found their way into poland after 2 weeks in the forest. but what's next for them isn't clear. according to the refugee charity, watching them be escorted away by puerto gods. we can never be certain what happens to the people that lead the that we offer help in the for us because the polish authorities are breaking the law and
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a convention they offend. send them back villareal, even though they apply for international protection here. for months, thousands of been entering the e. u vibe salaries at 1st through lithuania and latvia. now may me 3 poland. the e you accuse is better. russian leader, alexander lucas shanker. of orchestrating ways of migrants and refugees in retaliation of the sanctions imposed on his governments for violent crackdowns on the opposition of he accuses poland of military intimidation, brought the subordinate brought to me ground the earlier part of them. women is so fighting migrants with tanks today. well, excuse me, why we both have the military background, we understand that being in a war with these poor people on the polish bella, russian border and moving in tank columns would it's obvious that it has some sort of drill a hole, intimidation, africa. of course we said without anxiety,
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what kind of stuff spoke with them, put it to mister you. on monday, pohden said it had withstood attempts by migrants to force their way across the border prime minister mateusz. moreover, etzky has been visiting troops. nations versions of them. summations with amazon, who would think 23 months ago, that we will be dealing with actions that are characterized by the use of human shields. as lucas shank has regime uses civilians, weapons in a hybrid war. what we can see to day a new methods. and you are a passing against the nova medical explorer. germany is urging e u. member states to do more so far. there's been little coordinated action from you, though that might be change. a president coined on member states to approve extended sanctions against the russian authorities. and she also announced the exploration of measures against that country. airlines that are active in human trafficking,
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several people along the border have already died from exposure. there could be many more to come, rory, talents out a 0. a pregnant yamini journalist has been killed in a car bombing in the southern port city of aiden valley, say an explosive device was planted on a vehicle carrying russia. abdullah al harassing and her husband, who was wounded. both of work for a gulf based tv channel. the prime minister. my in abdul malik say you called it a terrorist attack. there was no claim of responsibility. the u. s. as it strongly opposes the international community's re engagement with the syrian president basher alice art. it follows a visit to damascus by the united arab emirates. foreign minister, shake abdullah bins. i ead is the 1st immorality official to go there since 2011. when the civil war began, the u. e. previously supported syrian opposition forces. the form of you as president, donald trump has lost a legal battle to block the release of documents to the congressional committee. investigating january's rights on capitol hill. the house committee wants to see
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them to determine how much mr. trump or his inner circle may have been involved in the attack. trump's lawyers argued that telephone records, visitor logs and other white house documents were protected by executive privilege, but the judge disagreed in her ruling. tonya should come, said the former president quotes position that he may override the express will of the executive branch appears to be premised on the notion that his executive powers exist in perpetuity. but precedents are not kings and the plaintive is not president. bill schneider is a political analyst and public policy professor at george mason explains now what this really means about the scope and the limits of any former precedent. it was as you're very explicit ruling by the judge. and she pointed out, and this was the key sentence. presidents are not kings, and the plaintiff in this case, donald trump, is not the president. he was trying to executive privilege retroactively over over
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documents that pertain to his own presidency. joe biden, des des said that he would not exert executive privilege over those. he's the president, and what the judge said is we have a unitary executive, only one person con, at the time can be president. and as president biden, who has refused to exert executive privilege over these documents, why is he trying to hide this information? because the suspicion is that he was very much involved in an attempt to subvert the constitution. and to overturn the electoral process in the united states, namely to namely congress his role in confirming the electoral vote. that's a very serious in grave affair. what president biden has said is that this is an issue of grave public importance equivalent. the judge said to watergate and to 911 to iran, contra, and therefore it's great public importance means that that's more important than executive privilege, especially retros retroactive executive privilege for
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a former president still to come here on this program. a u. s. court overturns the historic opioid ruling against the drug, make. johnson and johnson and without malkovich lane seen supports the number of jobless in the philippines looks set to keep on rising. ah hello there. let's have a look at the weather across europe over the next few days. and it remains very stormy in the south. it's wintery up in the north, but we are still seeing a lot of fine and dry weather across those central areas. but for wednesday we got strong winds and snow pulling into western parts of norway, pushing across sweden. and onwards the baltic states and western russia, that's going to be snow in moscow through the weekend. for the south of this,
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it is looking a lot finer and dryer temperatures on the up across ukraine and romania and remains relatively mild. so much of greece and turkey as that winter weather pushes off for the east. now it's a similar story for the north west. we've got mild but mixed conditions with britain and ireland, a mixture of showers, showering spells and sunshine, here. but for the really wet and windy weather we have to head to the south west. we've got storm black that's plaguing the western mediterranean, bringing some very windy conditions as well as heavy rain to places like the belly, eric islands, as well as some parts of italy, sicily on sardinia as well as corsica. but it's not only here, it's also the north of africa. we are going to see those showers, affecting coastal areas of algeria, that she, whether update ah, in the country with an abundance of resource rate. all in one
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moment. i'm from rena, call me lou economy and the digital economy with the new job creation law, indonesia progressively ensure the policy reform to create quality jobs. invest paul with no, ah ah, welcome back here watching al jazeera, your top story. so far this half hour the united nations is pushing for the release of ethiopian staff, detained by the government in at a sub about the conflict between the central government and the northern to grind.
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rebels has escalated, over recent weeks. poland prime minister has turned his focus on russia for what he says is an orchestrated attack using refugees and migrants. mateusz manifest ski had previously blamed bela roost for worse than crisis on the border. the former us president donald trump, us up with a loss in court. his lawyers tried unsuccessfully to block the release of documents to the investigation into january's capitol hill riots. the british prime minister boris johnson has urged climate negotiates is to pull out all the stops to secure a deal at cop $26.00. he is due to return to the summit in glasgow later on weapons day analysts are wanting emissions. pledges made by countries so far it will lead to an average global temperature rise of $2.00 degrees celsius the century. that's well above the 1.5 degree target. we are making progress
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at cop $26.00, but we still have a mountain to climb over the next few days. and what has been collectively committed to go some way, but certainly not all the way to keeping 1.5 within reach. the gap in ambition has narrowed. now the world needs confidence that we will shift immediately into implementation that the pledge is made here will be delivered, and that the policies and investment will swiftly follow up corresponding under simmons as in glasgow where he spoke to iceland, environment minister more intense negotiations, taking place in this building and they're getting longer, more involved, more tense has to be said, that's what we're hearing from all sources. there's so much to pay for here as a lot of things to do and not
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a lot of time to do them in with me right now is one of the representatives of a small, the smallest states iceland, the environment minister goodman, the good branson. thank you very much for joining i was 0. welcome. thank you and tell me this, how is it going? how does it look? i would say i'm more positive towards a better results and i was a week ago and i based on the fact there have been some improvements when it comes to the mtc and when it comes to contributions of country and trying to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions and also that we, we here know that we might be likely to close the financing cost to the developing countries. the 100000000 promise that was made here on the president of the united states of america bomber referred only on monday to the disciplining action of russia and china and not being here and saying that that was
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crucial. they were there was, it was dangerous. it was dangerous, dangerously lacking that response. what do you say to that? what do you say to that, coupled with the that the pressure that the lobby groups, the fossil fuel nations are putting on the whole effect? and 1st of all, obama also president obama also said that has been made progress in 2015. and i agree with him because a lot of businesses, a lot of countries have stepped up their game. there are countries that still need to do better. there are countries that are responsible for lots emissions and you mentioned china and russia, we could say australia and all this as well. and i'm really hoping that they will like we all need to, to step out of the game when, when it comes to climate issues. and you report says human rights abuses, including killings and torture by me. mars military could amount to war crimes since the coo and february, hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced and 3000000 are in need of aid
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. the group fortify rights. so soldiers of you civilians as human shields and used, forced labor in the state of karin. the philippines response to the pandemic has taken a great a toll on the economy. there them was expected growth almost half between the 2nd and 3rd quarters of this year. and as jamila adding doggone reports now from manila, some believe it could be the last asian country to bounce back. i love money. mud boonie is taking a call from a prospective employer at a shipping company. greg red, toyota, but when is a i've been interviewing 120 under the offer that been another couple of came to meet us today. i can learn the company, which is i upload 1st and then they will the 9 months. matt says he sends his resume to at least 20 companies each week, but he hasn't found any work. the story of not boonie is the story that is repeated
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a 1000 times over. people here tell us, there are more and more job applicants here. desperate to find a job overseas, they tell us their situation has been worsened by the corona, virus pandemic hormone. but on the mission of keith blanca floor and darwin, evangelist, to work for agencies that recruit seafarers and be keep a waiting list. they say with so few jobs around, it's getting longer. the philippines imposed one of the world's longest locked downs when the pandemic broke out. but it led to one of the country, his worst economic recessions. in decades, unemployment is now at 8.9 percent. it's highest so far this year. thousands of small and medium businesses have also shut down and communities dependent on to read them are facing the greatest difficulties. m as miranda diligently bush, m a global gas. no, there will be an eating operates fixtures. and with that,
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we hope that means an upstart on our economy. again, we understand the people are not going to agree, will have to be locked down again. so with this reopening, we hope it will be a better christmas for everyone. but some analysts say it's not that simple with would be more money in purchasing, barring or am it nice without more support for max $1.00 we have to price. yes. i think it'll be a long snow nick already, at least until the end of next year. there will be early, perhaps event. plenty, plenty, many filipinos see they've always faced hardship. but the pandemic, coupled with the lack of government assistance, is making it worse. jim l, as in dog and al jazeera manila alike of fertilizer, israel anchor has prompted warnings of food shortages from farmers. their thousands been protesting against the government's decision to burn all imports of circle
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agro chemicals. it's part of a government clamp done what it calls non essential import during a foreign currency crisis, and an effort by the president mc farming, 100 percent organic. the top court in the state of oklahoma has overturned a $465000000.00 opioid ruling against the drug, make a johnson and johnson the pharmaceutical giant was found to her fuel the opioid epidemic through perceptive marketing, the oklahoma supreme court decided the lower court ruling was based on a misinterpretation of state law and kalika has more on the story from miami state . there are 2700 other pending legal cases, but what makes this one so significant is it was seen as the template. it was the 1st time big pharmaceutical companies were in court and were held responsible for the opioid epidemic. so if that is the template, i think all the other states that are taking legal action against johnson and
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johnson and other big pharmaceutical companies will take know basically what the oklahoma high court said was that the public nuisance law they were trying to use in this case was far too broad, they say that doesn't take away from the tragedy of the o. p. o crisis that really plagues this nation. so i wouldn't say that johnson and johnson know many of the big pharmaceutical companies are off the hook. and in, and in fact, big pharmaceutical companies are offering about $4000000000.00 to settle, always cases at once. but i remember i was there the day this judgment came down in oklahoma and i met a doctor who run clinics of people who are hooked on these kinds of painkillers. and he said this kind of cash, even the 500 or so 1000000, was not enough to even keep those clinics running for a year. so they've certainly got away with it in this case in oklahoma. but as i said, there are almost 3000 other cases pending in other states, and they are now bound to take a different legal direction. chilly is one of the countries seen as leading the
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world and producing sustainable energy. it is particularly focused on the use of hydrogen. many believe it could be a solution to replace fossil fuels at a competitive price or latin america. edison lucio newman reports now from colina. it's colorless, odorless, and tasteless and its everywhere. hydrogen is one of the world's most abundant elements. a plentiful source of energy, lighter and more powerful than lithium and oil. can be used to fuel large vehicles like airplanes, and ships or to power heavy industry like mining. but the challenge is to replace conventional fossil fuels with hydrogen without using contaminating energy sources to make it. this is no ordinary forklift. it's the was 1st to be run on green hydrogen produced right here at the last thought. the last copper plant in your chillies capital, if the movers deal with us in the city,
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so this is very similar to a petrol station. and the time it takes to fill the vehicles very similar as well. green hydrogen is produced by separating hydrogen molecules from h 2. 0, in other words, water through a process of electrolysis. it only emits water vapor, no c o 2. and this is the 2nd part of the equation, the ability to generate enough sustainable energy as they're doing here to make the production of green hydrogen really worth while. and that to a country like chilly because of its geographic conditions has an enormous advantage. at least 50 percent of the cost of producing green hydrogen is renewable energy. but for chile, that's not a problem. we have the highest solar radius in the planet in the other comma, the sit in the no, i'm the best winds on the world of the world in the south, and by that is in part owner. so capacity factors in for solar p v in the north,
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our 3rd to 7 percent. that compares we 25 percent in saudi arabia or that and spain and in the south. maryland has capacity factors for wind are over 60 even 70 percent versus 55 percent in the north sea. for example, for all the energy miniature calls, green hydrogen, the missing link to carbon neutrality liquid. but if this is so special, why aren't other countries already doing it? so it's a technical issue any longer is a mac financial, economic issue of a former environment minister, mozilla mina, is adamant that it's up to chillies government to produce the incentive. as it did a decade ago, to dramatically reduce the cost of solar energy. you either put a price on carbon, or you subsidize the investment, but without neither of these working you will simply not have the large scale projects that we anticipate. in chili's patagonia porch seamans and intel green power have joint forces to build the world's 1st fully integrated facility to
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produce carbon neutral fuels with wind power to make hydrogen. but it's not expected to produce more than 55000000 liters by 2024. to make an export green hydrogen as cheaply as conventional fuel by the year 2050, which is the government goal will require not just small plants like this one, but gigawatt size facilities. 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 world's best options for dramatically reducing greenhouse gases and global warming. without limiting the consumption of energy. the sea and human al jazeera colina, kitty well on the other side of the world, scotlands orkney islands are at the forefront of the renewable energy revolutionist,
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nit clark now reports the islands, have a heritage of innovation, dating back thousands of years. the story of invention on these remote islands is coming full circle. cultural and architectural innovation flourished hair way back in neolithic times, even before the pyramids were built. 5000 years on orkney is again at the vanguard of the future. we all know i didn't fit on the range in castro through the north sea and the north atlantic, where the tides career back and forth between the islands and the u. k. mainland and in the title raises, does power power that can drive all walls. this is the orbital o to the world's most powerful title turbine. roaches spin in the ebb and flow, generating enough electricity for 2000 homes. it's just one of many prototypes being tested by the european marine energy center. here on orkney research suggest
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title power could provide up to 10 percent of the u. k. electricity with the same guaranteed output as gas or co title. and she's really interesting because it's entirely predictable. it's driven by the position of the moon and the position of the earth and the sun. so we know where the tides are going to be when the thoughts can be running a 1000 years from today. some of the machines are on the see bit, some of the machines associate on the surface, but altogether they actually provide a huge energy. so stance available. the island is hen have already capitalized on another force of nature. community owned commercial scale, wind turbines. they help generate more electricity than is required on the islands, the surplus being sold on to the u. k. mainland. this also a huge, offshore wind project planned and green hydrogen is already being produced to power marine and road transport. i spoke to dr. sandy kerr and harriet, what university he told me, the acadia and green revolution has turned the island economy around. we get
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students that come here from around the world under kaden's that come back to learn about renewable energy in this community. and a number of them, steve and jacob, jose was say at the local air renewable energy companies not really reverse in, in the brain drain that we see around the rest of the u. k. while there's still a long way to go these islands a well on the road to carbon neutrality, wind and tide, a driving a size make change, giving the rest of the world a glimpse of things to come. nick clark al jazeera, the oconee islands, scotland ah, recapping your top story so far today, the united nations is pushing for the release of ethiopian staff, detained by the government in addis ababa. the conflict between the central government and nolan to cry. rebels is escalated in recent weeks as far as i know, no.

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