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tv   [untitled]    November 12, 2021 6:30am-7:00am AST

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see, had run its course. ah, i have a quick check at the top stories here now just sarah sedans, army chief, i belt, fata albert han has appointed a new ruling counsel lead by himself weeks off of the military. it sees power. the new 14 member council excludes members of sedans, main opposition coalition. it's drawn condemnation from the un, which says sedans been put further away from returning to constitutional order. obviously, taking a look at these developments. oh, i would say they're very concerning. oh, we want to see a return oh, to the transition as quickly as possible. oh, we want to see the release of from houser, us, of prime minister, ham dark. as well as all other politicians and leaders that have been detained. thousands of people trying to cross into the european union,
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remained trapped on the border between bella, luce and poland, that he was accusing bella, ruth said, deliberately letting them cross and what cause a form of hybrid warfare. the block is threatening, you sanctions. bella rou, says it'll retaliate by cutting off gas applies to europe. the united nations security council has meant to address the board of crisis western countries, including the u. s. and u. k. se, bella luce is trying to destabilize its neighbors and accounting for stronger international action. the bell, russian authorities should understand that putting pressure on the european union in this way through a cynical instrumentalists zation of migrants will not succeed. the united nations secretary general has urged delegates of a cop 26 climate summit to pick up the pace and agree on away forward antonio teddy says the effort to keep global warming to one and a half degrees above pre industrial levels is on life support discussions and
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commitments so far failed to meet the u. s. goals. witness testimony has ended in the trial of an american teenager accused of murder during anti racism protests last year. coll rittenhouse says he was defending himself when he shot and killed 2 men and into the 3rd in kenosha in wisconsin. he used an assault style weapon and is not a local resident. prosecutors allege he is a vigilante had been doing demonstrations falling, the police shooting of an unarmed blackman rittenhouse faces life in prison. if convicted closing argument a set for monday. well, those were the headlines. the news continues here now to 0 after fort lines state you in thanks to watching bye for now. november. oh, now to 05 years after the his story, he feel between fuck rebels and the colombian government algebra examined white tensions and violence of rising once again. and the award winning pool flies investigates the untold stories across the us,
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millions encompassed on boat in parliamentary elections under a new constitution. and more than a year after the last o figured a political crisis immersive personal short documentary africa, direct show cases, african stories from african filmmakers, china marks $100.00 days until it has the winter olympics. but how will the pandemic and cruise for a boycott impact this voting event november on out jazeera? ah, we have no more time to wait. where on fire were covered in a blanket of smoke? the whole west is an drought. 2021 in the summer of record. bringing hayton extreme drought across the american west. this is laura dry field looks like in oregon. klamath basin builds are running dry because the federal government has shut off water to farmers. most years. farmers here use the water and upper klamath lake
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to irrigate their crops. that lake exist thought that all this land out here could have water. that watered ours. we should pray for rain. we need water. these farmers won't be able to stay here if they can't get water. you alone are the lord. if you give life to everything and them all, and dr. hussain with all their water, it is all about them having the power over us. and that power is water. the government is withholding water from farmers to protect endangered fish that are sacred to native american tribes. here. ah, east fisher mode, the 1000000 species of plants and animals, the climate change is striving to extinction worldwide. we destroyed their habitat for agriculture, for irrigation, for colonization,
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for profit, that was one, the last of a dying breed higher christian story tells us that if the fish die, the people die. but before that happens, we will fight because it in our blood this feels like war, this world that we're living in now. oh, on this episode, winds climate change in supplies, one of the fiercest mortal wars in the west. and pushes an organ town to which breaking point. oh ah, upper claim is like the heart of the struggle over water and organs, klamath basin,
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or thousands of years. the lake team, which sucker fish that sustained the clamor tribes. vast woodlands acted as a filter for the water. then, in less than a 150 years, agriculture pushed the fish to the brink of extinction. as farmers trained to wetlands to grow potatoes for potato chips and hay for dairy cows. now deprived of its filter, the water turns toxic every year. i want to see the the impact 1st hand with my eyes. i want to see what it is we're fighting for. this is the 1st time i'll be able to see it face to face with how many of those fisher left all told round 24000.
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and no babies to replace them. no, no driven. every year thick cloud, blue green algae clots the water in the lake, state health authorities where people and their pets to keep out with nowhere else to go young, succor fish die in mass before reaching adulthood. if you were to have your dog drink that it would become incredibly ill if not till this year, because of the extreme drought, extracting water farms could put the remaining fish at risk. there is very much a correlation between the quality of this water and the mortality of this fish. and the quality of this water is a direct result of irresponsible agricultural practices. one view of this is that what's happening here is a preview of what's to come because
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a climate change. does that resonate with you? absolutely resonates. we obliterated ecosystems to create agriculture and irrigation. it's always extraction, extraction extraction, profit at the expense of our interchange. people at the expense of our tribes at the expense of what little resources we have left. ah, 1st is the west usa, 17 state where water is well. the richness crisis. go back to the early 19 hundreds, when the federal government trained lakes duct canals and re routed rivers to deliver water to farmers with the irrigation projects were part of the government's push to encourage white sellers to move washed. mm.
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later, the climate tribes lost their land to a federal policy known as termination that was here, fence termination. when i terminated the tribe indian land were broke up and sold. we occupied it just like the romans. did. this gong was wrong. actually it's been since time get the strong take it away from the week. i am always happy with our people have survived genocide, murder, disease, and war. we survived federal termination, but one thing we did retain was our right to hunt fish trap and gather on these land. in a treaty, the federal government promised the claim of tribes that they would always be able
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to fish. the fishing piece of that implies that there will be fish for them to fish . so that's the 1st promise that the u. s. government. and then the us government handed out a bunch of homes. so bunch of white settlers and the promise seemed to be you can have this water forever. and there were a lot of promises made that cannot all be filled in recent decades. the ports of affirm that the government must honor the clam and tribes treated before the fields its promises to farmers because the climate tribes were here 1st, there bought a right to proceed. everybody else. so even if you have a piece of paper from the federal government that says you can have water every year. if there's not enough water to go around the climate tried to come 1st. we build the call with your occasional project in the early 20th century, like we did most of these big water projects in the west. and there was an assumption that the hydrology and the early 20th century would persist until the
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end of time. that was faulty assumptions. here we are in 2021, and a 100 change global warming. we're in the midst of it and there's not as much water to go around. i think of my god, when i see i was my dad's little fishing buddy. ah. when you are hoss native path and not native, there's a bit of learning and trying to figure out what what exactly am i where do i fit in my mom married my dad at the disgust disapproval of her parents. my grandparents. ah, they were just not happy. she married a klamath indian. that is one source of tension. addison may be
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why i am the way i am. oh, i moved away 2 days after high school graduation. i never wanted to come back. she went away to college just right out of high school and lived away for quite a few years. after coming back after living in a more open diverse community. it was a shock when she came to class basin. ah, i came back in 2016, florida. oh, it was uncomfortable hearing this repeated sense of entitlement from 5th generation farmer, 6 generation armor that their grandfathers told them that there would always always be water. at the time i remember thinking, well,
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there's the problem. your grandfather is hold you. there would always be water. but my dad was telling me we gotta release fish back because there's not enough. ah . was the federal government who wanted all of us people to come down here and farm has nearly reclaim land. so my family did came down here, we've invested our whole entire life for 4 generations in the making this based on what it is today of now the tables turn it in the same federal government to pull my family to come here $100.00. 15 years ago is now telling me to get the hell out of here or forcing me for a better time to get the hell out of here. a i feel betrayed without access to water from upper klamath lake. some farmers in the basin are pumping water from underground the water. this in the canals coming from a well your neighbors?
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well, yes sir. this is just out again if that was hard to let anybody else here again with his water basically. yeah, well hi guys. i mean, my family's been here for, you know, 117 years 15 years. i feel like what i was born do i've, i feel like i do a good job at it. and i've got everybody in the entire world against me. and that's not a good feeling. oh, hi. rodney sheen did not kick anybody off any piece of ground for his own benefit. i wasn't the one that was in here physically, kellen and moving him and taking them off their land. the fish is the only way the tribe can get retribution on the white man. 20 years ago was the same story in the barn. there's 5000 mara main street in 2001 another severe drill,
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threatening the fish with the government shuttle, the water, thousands of farmers pack the street to plant falls symbolically moving water into the irrigation canals. we will pass it to where sun, john and van to his grandson game. they called it the bucket brigade generation. i was in 7th grade. everybody was there. we were united as tensions rose, members of the claim of tribes based harassment in town. under pressure, federal officials turned the water back on later that summer. federal government came and gave us our water at the victory for farmers was a disaster downstream. $34000.00 sam and washed a short dead taking water from the lake during a severe drought at unleashed an epidemic of fish disease. it devastated the york
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tribe, which has subsisted on sabbath for thousands of years. i remember smell just the smell of genocide as so i'm best way to describe it because he's now so much death in these places that offer nothing but by forgiving opportunities. ah, today the tribe estimates at less than 5 percent of the salmon run remains a despite the fishkill market, protesters memorialize their success 1000 want to be installed and metal bucket under the county building farmers and it stayed on display for 13 years. a powerful symbol of farmers defiance the message sent this buck and send was klamath supports the former. ah,
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i use the bucket brigade as the to the point. that bucket is all erased this monument ah, this summer, when the government shut off water to farmers. the bucket reappeared in town last week. this 40 by 80 canvas 10 popped up out of nowhere. a group of farmers and our right activists made national news when they set up camp next to the heck gate to the irrigation canal. and threatened to take the water by force even gotta stand up and take it or, or high water here. yeah. that was dan nielsen, very good neighbor, very good brand the communities. happy to have him because without him there would have been a lot of stories of this year. they parked the bucket next to their tent like climb that the barker are here behind me is racist. white people are racist of your christian erasers. if you believe in the constitution,
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you're racist. how serious is it getting? here? we are literally to the point that people are gonna start shooting each other before this is all send out. i am concerned for myself in my safety. i've had people come up to me and say, you're the chairman, the better watch you back. i can actually say have a hand gun now that i never had before. ah, the climate tribe said this hostility goes beyond protest like the bucket brigade, they say it's baked into the way farmers and ranchers manage their land and that some refused to make human small changes the could save the fish. just despite the tribes. leroy gingrich family has wrenched these 280 acres for the better part of
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the century. ah, but although oregon law requires that he keep his cattle from contaminating the lake, he refuses to put up fences. they complain that the cows are contaminated, the like that their complaint his 1st this is from the oregon department of agriculture because one indian complaint i dwan big bear. you're faint when i can't see through i enjoy my view. i've had that view all my life. i enjoy it. nora, this is minor. my favorite spot here was in indian farm. go right up there before little trail
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trail, men walk, but you're near many a year. now if you look right up on the top of this rocker, i don't hear. you see an old indian bull there for keynote man you get to really look and ah, why not work with them? you know, have you ever tried to work with a gimme of with the what? a gimme. gimme. gimme gimme gimme. that's right. court with the tribe gimme gimme gimme gimme. they don't give you. gimme gimme, gimme gimme ah
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. the kind of colonialism that brought those forwards here. the 1st place. how big of a stumbling block is that to moving forward? i'd say it's more than a stumbling block. i would say it is the root of the entire problem sort of set where mindset that way people one and they should be able to run the place as they see fit. the beating heart of the whole problem ah, in may 2020, as black lives matter, protests spread across the country. demonstrators gathered in downtown klamath falls and a few 100 people. counter protesters armed themselves against friends, neighbors, parents, children, teachers, students who were armed only with posters. there was a face off on main street. i
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assume were yelling at us, go back home, but when you tell that to an indigenous person, where are we supposed to go? this is just a tiny bit of the hatred and disdain. he thought to our tribal members on out from that horrible device of incident, our city council form the equity task force a several of us contacted city council. what are you going to do about this? what can we do? and so that's how i ended up on the task force. we retained our right to hunt and fish happened and failure for us to do that is an act of racism and act of white supremacy. and i can say that to you guys, but you could say more
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than a year after the protest, the racial equity task force is preparing to deliver its final report to the city council. this blue is the color of peace, but it also represents water than silver. of course, this are healthy fish in our healthy, peaceful, rivers, office and green. it represents our agricultural industry here. the i've lived here in this community grow almost 70 years, and i have here and i've been in the background and i haven't i haven't realized so fearful i am to live in this community. my home to where you're doing in the navy, woman,
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you are doing things that i always wanted to do. this helps me put myself out there in through you with you. besides you ah, with you look, work, dad, to me. i see a lot of dentistry. i was really nervous that because the task force agreed to take on confronting racism against the tribe. i was concerned that we were in danger. yeah. i knew that would be our position. i knew that there would be unhappy people.
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so what we're here to day to talk about is the equity task force is final report. next i will be introducing joey gentry, who's a member of the equity task force, who will be speaking on the water issue in climate thank you. thank you again for being here. klamath has a history of racism that continues to be handed down from generation to generation . our water crisis still exists today because of racism against the tribe and racism against the tribe exists in part today because of our water crisis. i'm just going to read some community sentiment in words and indians. could it get any worse? this is a cowboys and indians fight to bad. we didn't finish the job the 1st time. we are asking you to issue a formal proclamation, acknowledging that a long history of anti indigenous racism has worse and disagreements over water.
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how i knew i was a native how i knew i was climate indian is because i fished with my dad. we're just asking for our fish to be preserved to prevent them from going extinct m the following month. the city council disbanded the task force without acting on his recommendations. ah, louis creation story tells us that it's the 1st die, the people die. so we have to hear the message that our fish are telling and, and if it doesn't rain,
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people are going to go to the kitchen or no water. going to come out of the tap. it's happening. gracious god, we're grateful that we can come together as your people and lift up things that are on our hearts to you, the living god listens to our prayers, who encourages us? there's massive wildfires. massive hurricanes, and there's about to be water shut off on big scale. ah, existential crisis that we best solve. i don't know how i fix it, but i know that coming to terms with that history and it's a problem, is step lawn ah,
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or does turn. i almost happier unlike of 2001, widespread support for the farmers protest never materialized this summer. they packed up and left, 2 days after the racial equity task force presented a triple word . trouble quickly that the bucket was going oh, they're gone, gone. the buckets gone to their good? how are them? is that a good a this
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distraction is gone. i guess that we're doing some work, i guess it's starting to make a difference. so now the real work begins. a community decimated by cancer fights for the trees to in this room has cancer or know is that someone that lives here that have cancer, quote lines exposes houston's candidate cluster. these are the 110 properties that have grown contamination underneath they look data visible public community. it just cycle did fill them out. so we were sitting phone lines on al jazeera ah
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2 weeks on my military coup sedans. army chief reveals a new council to manage the nation's affairs. would exclude any part of the opposition. ah, hello, i'm darned, jordan, this is al jazeera live from dough are also coming up. what politics plays out? but he'd, bella, luce, and the you. thousands of migrants faced another night in freezing conditions on the countries border with poland. as a cop 26 climate summit draws to a close the u. n's chief calls on word leaders to pick up the pace and agree to a.

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