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tv   [untitled]    November 14, 2021 12:00am-12:30am AST

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ah, ah, this is al jazeera ah, hello i mariam nemiah's, a welcome to the news our live from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. it is so decided almost $200.00 nations agree, a climate deal at the cop $26.00 summit. but a last minute change on coal leaves many disappointed. i apologize for
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the wait and spruce was, has unfolded. and i'm deeply sorry. one, at least 5 people killed, listed on security, voices, use alive fi to this buzz tens of thousands of people protesting against the military takeover. and the body of a young syrian man is found near the pole and better roost border where thousands of people were made stranded in freezing conditions. i'm devin ash, with the sports more teams close in on places at the world cup finals in cat saw brain champions, france lip to have sailed. best spots, they lead it cuz it found that thanks to a hattrick from caitlin and buffet. well cop 26 was promoted as a last chance for countries to agree to work together to save the planet from catastrophic climate change. but at the end, the summit president alack sharma was close to tears. apologising to delegates that
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the climate somers in glasgow for a final agreement that left many countries deeply unhappy. india proposed a last minute change to the language of the final statement, saying cold power should be phased down rather than phased out. but the glasgow agreements are still the 1st of that kind of specifically mentioned coal or fossil fuels. the statement the asked rich nations to increase their financial support help poor countries adapt to climate impacts. and urges countries to revisit and strengthen their climate pledges for 2030 by the end of next year to help keep alive. the goal of limiting global warming to one and a half degrees above pre industrial levels was actually general of the united nations and tenure. good terrorist says, acknowledge the disappointment, but says it's an important starting point. the outcome of god $26.00 is a compromise. it's reflect the interests, the contradictions and the status political really in the world today. it is an
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important step, but it's not enough. we must accelerate the climate section to keep alive the goal of limiting global temperature rise to a point 5 degrees. it's time to go into emergency modes. we must have fossil fuel subsidies phase out. call peter price on carbon, protect well little communities from the impacts of climate change. climate activists including grad 10 bug. we're not impressed with the outcome. timber tweeted immediately providing what she called a brief summary, blah blah blah. she said the real work continues and they will never give up live now to nick clark, who has been following all of this and changes now from black go. and just i started getting a sense in that conference all of how and ago she ation had been going and what was behind the delay. but there really is a sense of frustration and division among countries. they accept the deal. there
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isn't wholehearted support right? yes. after 2 weeks of endless negotiations and many, many sleepless nights we finally have at glasgow climate pots. but there was a sense of ambush, right at the end. that sense of drama. when india, south african china suddenly came to the foreign said, we want to water down the tanks, we want to change that little bit on coal. it was fantastic. that elements was in there towards the 1st time that's happened and within a climate agreements. but they wanted to water it down and that took everybody by surprise in the marshall islands. and they are very upset afterward saying that they're profoundly disappointed at that this is changed from the words changed from phase out to phase down on coal. at the commitment on coal, they said was a bright spot in all this. and it has deeply to see that bright spot dimmed, but they said they are critical elements within the text as a whole, which they need to take on, so they would approve it. so that created a real problem for alex charmer, who got very emotional, trying to push it through because he's been work on this for 2 weeks. and he
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thought he had at his deal. donovan, something at the last minute looked as if it could be in jeopardy in the event. he did gavel it through, and there are some bright elements within the text that not only the issue of coal being in there at all, but also ambition and how countries need to come back next year to up their ambition to reduce emission to the paris agreement they didn't have to come back until 2025, but not agreed that countries need to come back next year and onwards. let's take a look back at the last 2 weeks. objections it is so decided the end of the road, up to 2 weeks, and countless sleepless nights these were negations with the dreaming intensity. mad you say to all our delegates, i, i apologize for the way this process has unfolded. ah, and i am deeply sorry. i also understand the deep disappointment but i think as you have noted,
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it's also vital that we protect this package, hold red, no planet b. this was effectively an emergency meeting for a while to keep 1.5 alive. did it deliver the fortnight, started with a summit within a summit, wildly this gathering, as nations were exalted, should pull out all star label. it's one minute to midnight on that doomsday clock, and we need to act. now. if we don't get serious about climate change to day, it will be too late for our children to do so. to morrow. away from the nitty gritty of negotiations, a raft of big announcements were made, hoping to shake the outcome of cop 26 on forest. more than $100.00 countries pledged to end and reverse deforestation by 2030 bank rolling $19000000000.00 to do it. another 100 countries pledged to cut 30 percent of highly toxic methane
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emissions by 2030. it was declared. the end of coal is in sight as more than 40 countries committed to shift away from the fossil fuel. on finance, corporations controlling 40 percent of global assets. pledge to align themselves to the target for 1.5 degrees celsius warming limit. and the rabbit out of the hat, u. s. and china. surprising delegates with a declaration, the val to boost cooperation between the world's biggest emitters. but many say all that just means nothing unless nations act on their promises. as the usual suspects, block progress in the talks. masons like saudi arabia, russia and australia, the voice on the streets was loud and angry. ah, no climate conference, they just know at global norm green of festival. ah,
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crazy fossil fuels and climate finance were both major stumbling blocks, the consensus and negotiations themselves. and the bid to get countries to up their commitments every year, as opposed to every 5 years, at least, people are starting to realize politicians are starting to realize like, yes, this israel, yes, we need to take action. yes. urgently. so, but now the issue is okay, they realize that, but what is that going to happen? that's the, that's the real question. and so the process that began with the parents agreement in 2015 continues. but the urgency for action grows with each passing day. the next you and climate conference will be held and sean will shake in egypt in a year. in the meantime will apply just beyond will, the promise is be kept. will countries return with greater ambition? because one thing is certain time is running out nicholas, i'll desert glasgow. right, well,
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nick her because still with us in glasgow and is been of course there covering that the summit throughout these past few weeks and providing analysis. and so, nick, just tell us about the, the mood among activists and, and environmentalist because it seems, you know, on the one hand, the analysis suggests that one and a half degrees that, that important climate goal is out of reach. but there still seems to be a sense of wanting to keep that alive somehow. yeah, with his 2 narratives going on, you have the rich nations. he will say this has been a relative success and we're doing pretty well to keep at 1.5 within reach. and then you have the other narrative, which is the n g o z. and those who come from the poor nations who say it's been an absolute disaster and hasn't worked in their favor tool. and other critical element of the text is actually what is not in it. and that is something that was proposed about lawson damages. there was
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a facility that was propose to enable compensation to be provided to poor countries who feel the effects of mo, stove climate change in the cloud change brought on, not by their actions, but by the actions of rich nations. and it was put forward by the group of g, a 77. the group of them were developing nations plus china and then, and it was removed from the text. and so they were very angry about that. and there was a sense that there was gonna be a real fight, but that she didn't materialize, but it's been pushed on down the line and. and that should be a major subject for the next call, which is going to be in egypt in africa, in a year's time. and we're going to speak more about that right now with either on k, e, e, getting a corporate accountability and public participation. africa is where you're from. before we get on to egypt. what do you make of what's happened here? has it delivered? thank you so much. i think um, that's a very general question. um, i asked myself that every day of this process,
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what's out, what has happened to be, would you say task contributed to the process of being a rich one? but my answer is not with ring natalie's categorical, it's in no. there's a lot of the supplementing the air and the reason i say this is why you even look at the beginning of the call itself. it's was absolutely exclusionary in the sense that there's them already on the, the civil society population, the frontline community, um, people who are mostly affected by the climate crisis that we have walk, it's a new park said who it will dall have contributed the least or very insignificantly maximally affected. i excluded. what do you see when you look around? you see all these big boys. god, men, boys, the lobby. so you see industrial really present, you see government of the not really present. and then he begins to look like a scramble. you know, for the voices of the people to be heard,
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people who actually affected so it is a rich nations who get their voice. absolutely. the rich nations are the presence is overwhelming. even the voice is out of the loudest in the room. so when you look at the people who should actually be speaking, they don't know where to be found. and there are many reasons that we cannot do what these will talk about boxing up. i'd look at the rules. first of all, that havoc excluded this population of people from the start. so the inequity is from the beginning and then you begin to look through it. and the warranty process has been causing a charade. so looking ahead to egypt to show more shake this time. next year, what needs to change? i can those kind of things be adapted? well, i believe in hope on a highly optimistic person, what would we have to stop deceiving ourselves or some point before we can have any real change? there has to be real commitments. the has to be sincerity or papa's. so you look at some of the promises that have been made, some of the ambition. in fact they are just that ambition. no real plans,
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not trackable action plans to say, okay, this is how well when to track this on track that no real commitment. these are just bought words that are thrown around and the ones that want to talk in terms of as jelly, the global, not government talk in terms of all mitigation adaptation or even financing to the south that speakers door in favor that has been dawn. it's not a fib, let's always remember that there's a history called damage ecological damage that has been done to the global south. i come from africa for instance, and the impact of climate and the climate crossing as traction that are going on for a yes, the impacts are really in our faces every day. don't tell us about some of those are sort of a lot of as a part of nigeria for instance, for the niger delta. you see this is where the oil extraction extra channels for sulfur really started. every day you have an ongoing extraction of all, you have all of these extractions. so in this community, you seek gas flaring. you see that me what i put new did undo the community the
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ordinary need. the preoccupation damage or preoccupation is either fishing or from meetings or agriculture. basically, the land right now is destroyed. you see that people, you will life expectancy as really gone down. no, talking about what to one years of age for a population. they used to have very rich livelihood and lives, but now that is being quite sure. so people are getting diseases, respiratory diseases, and these are all in our faces. so these are things we see every day. certainly many things to be addressed when we had to shake the campus sunday. thank you so much. i got blanket you. good. thanks very much. indeed. so all eyes now on egypt 2022 when everybody will be daunting. that the promises and pleasures made her will be honored. thank you very much. her arm at edison clark in class go. thank you. nick or one of the countries i'm willing to commit to stronger short term targets are called $26.00. was australia, federal government that does not support
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a phasing out of coal critics of called australia, a climate pariah neglecting its pacific island neighbors, such as 9 o 2, which has a lot to lose. the island group is one of the most at risk countries in the world with rising sea levels already encroaching on its land. mass representative is a calling for more investment from wealthy nations to protect the vulnerable islands and villages in van. o, i to have appealed to wildly. dest help safeguard their communities from the climate disasters. they are constantly suffering, we just build, and then it is destroyed. and we build again, if the whole world could see what we are going through and find a solution to help us overcome these natural disasters. whenever a natural disaster comes, instead of us just rebuilding and rebuilding, we need solutions to be found for us at a community over level. sara clark has one out from brisbin in queensland. australia was very slow to commit to the 1st round of targets where they took about the 0 net emissions by 2050 little and the short term targets by 2030. so by the
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end of the decade, trays been pushing back on that. and the suggestion was, a study has been leading the charge this week in glasgow to try and walk down that agreement, which looks at the shorter, tougher target for the short term, as well as the phasing out on the dependence on coal. a strategy, of course, is the 2nd largest exporter of coal world. so one of the highest i'm, it is in the prime minister has a said scott morrison has it even before he went to glasgow that destroyed its no strolling policy to commit to mandates. like this now strongly has pledged $500000000.00 in new climate funds for its asian pacific neighbors. and that certainly be welcomed by some of those countries including fiji. the fiji prime minister met with scott morrison in glasgow and he said this is certainly a start. now, unfortunately, due to covered only for the specific nations were able to be represented by the leaders in glasgow. but i have so much to lose that was a small group, but a large voice that scientists have said that the sea level rise in the pacific
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islands could be $2.00 to $3.00 times the global average. and some of those low lying coral at holes simply won't survive and some of the islands will be uninhabitable by 2030. well, coming up on this news out from london, new delhi is set to close schools and construction sites because the pollution there is getting worse could be deterred versus deterrent over the phone, philippine vice presidency and next year's elections. we'll have that story and then install with jama. the former, the one championship leader is fine, but a voice, a punishment after touching his rivals calm. ah, ensued on the health ministry is saying at least 5 people have been killed during mass rallies against military sydney, security forces, 5 live rounds and tear gas to disperse. the crowds state t v says 39,
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policemen were injured and many police stations were attacked. demonstrators are accusing the military leader of tightening his grip on power off. they formed a new rule and council, mom the val has the latest. oh, showed no, no to military room. civilian room is the people's choice and don't let the entire council. although concise figures are available, i couldn't status, could be seen on nearly every street in the seventy's capital and elsewhere. they've been mobilizing for the so called 1000000 man march on saturday, a very large protest to, to, to counter at the very real now and implementation of this cool people feel like we're taking many steps backward with crew. and that's why i think we've seen so many people come out with security forces, use tear gas to disperse demonstrations with him. since hot reported hearing the
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sound of gunfire or to rally east of cotton at the central committee of sudanese doctors has reported a number of cases of security forces using life fire and causing death in the sudanese. i'm not going to certain we're a military dictatorship. these guys are wanting to evade accountability and in a few days they were supposed to hand over power to the civilians. instead, they moved to try to preempt that the military has used to force against opponents since the 2 moved and detained its civilian partners in the government last month, including prime minister, the handbook is still under house arrest. while some of his cabinet members have been released earlier this week, the head of the military council, general abdel fatah had perhaps appointed a new cabinet of his choice and continued to ignore domestic and foreign calls for the restoration of the civilian government. as part of the 2019 power sharing
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agreement and got those misers escrowed across to dam rallies have taken place in the cities of hospital castillo. why didn't port sudan and other regions be north telephone? in cartoon, the army closed bridges and set up roadblocks around the city and managed to prevent access to the general military headquarters. but raleigh's big and small continued to spring up everywhere in the city, saturdays. considerable turnouts comes one day after the new cabinet appointed by the military. was it excludes all the civilian members of the deposed government, despite international condemnation of hum, advise unto sir. hello. okay, busy sidney's activists and research as she joins me now. my skype is re hearing and tear gas and live bullets. we'll deployed against peaceful protests is today. what are you hearing from people that you might be currently in touch with or
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speaking to, or is it their plan for these demonstrations to continue even if violence gets worse? well, it's a, it's a mixed feeling. so, you know, in one hand, it has been an extremely successful protest, you know, and we will, they just came out massively and in large numbers across a gun. i think you know, more than 20 cities, they participated in this protest and even a protest test. and i, d, b 's comes in remote areas and therefore has actually managed to show the fact that they were part of, you know, of this broadcast in terms of reject, rejecting the military. but on the other hand, the lethal force, you know, the killing and the detentions of testers. and the attack that happens, you know, at the moment we're talking about more than 9 people at least killed according to
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the central doctor's committee and hundreds who were injured in different host with us across the cities. so it's very, very tense situation i would say or do you make of state television saying that policemen were injured and many police stations attacked? well, i think, you know, that's dental. the vision is really echoing, i would say, i like, you know, the rhetoric of the, of the military leaders which is completely isolated from their reality and desperately trying to assert themselves as leaders of to them. but it's not, you know, they are not succeeding in doing that. you know, there is a massive gob that's expanding every day between them and between the sudanese
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people i mean the level of cultivating hatred constantly you know, between them and so the nice people is increasing every every hour i would say where is this likely to lead is that because one of the greatest strengths i suppose for the, the protests is that took part in, in the revolution, the ousting of a model, the shares, the fact that these protests were non violent. they were peaceful. all they do worry about groups being deployed and people being drawn into something else. well, i think the level of awareness and determination amongst the news is extremely high . you know, and people are determined not to deviate from being peaceful. you know, i'm from leading corners. sense the peaceful protest, however, you know,
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the fact the lack of wisdom that we are currently seeing from the, from the military, john talk and their lack of interest in listening to the voice of so many people. it's extremely wording for sure. thanks him. john has halla curry, allen russian president vladimir putin is accused western countries of being responsible for the refugee crisis at the border between poland and barris. this is a european union prepares new sanctions against batteries which it accuses of pushing asylum seekers towards his east and board. as meanwhile, thousands of refugees remained stranded and freezing conditions at the border where the body of a young syrian man has been found. asset beg reports from just near the border, still stuck still with no where to go. what from one side, by billy ruffian,
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soldiers, and on the other by polish troops, emerald leaves families, men, women, and young children are now trapped in no man's land. poland has accused russia of masterminding, the crisis. russia denies that. i look here, the history of susan. i want everybody to know. we have nothing to do with it unless everybody is trying to make us responsible for something at every given opportunity. and without it, the you says values is raging a hybrid war using migrants as a weapon. it is accused minutes of flying and people mainly from the middle east to then push them to cross the border, illegal by the russian president, alexander lucas shanker, denied the accusation and his threatening to cut gas supplies. if the ego imposed more sanctions reported, he is up in the rhetoric. meanwhile, people are still trying to make the difficult journey across into europe again. malik tried several times to cross into poland. finally making it along with her 3 children. a 1000 shall eshola. this has been the most tiring,
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2 months of my life. we even fell into a pond water reach up to here. i fell and we didn't have clothes. then i got sick. when the border guards found us, i couldn't even stand by myself. she is now at a migrant center in the polish city of billy's stuck out in the forest that surround this area. there are signs that people have made it. we came across women's and children's clothes. and in the pouch we found one piece of paper, written in arabic. my husband with a phone number on it. the state of emergency needs. there's an exclusions own near the border where 8 workers and journalists are not allowed to enter. but the signs are clear. all across here, within the exclusion zone, i find that people who are very, very recent in some of the flow of filth drive different than here. i can see some money that's been literacy among
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these people have obviously crossed the border region. fresh food, not even a day old thermal blankets and other signs that people have managed to cross into poland. not everyone makes it. polish authorities said the body of a 20 year old man was found on friday, but for many others, they still waiting for the opportunity and willing to take the risks that come with it. as i beg, i'll jazeera poland, said a head on his name is al, from london. this theory on the seat of kinshasa thousands, much against the presidential appointment, and any by my phone tax. could it be 3rd time lucky from bulgaria, yet another election for a country racks by corruption and coven misinformation?
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mostly g. p legend, valentina rossie rice for the final time on sunday will show you how he gosling qualifying in school agenda. ah hello there. we'll see. so i was becoming a little more wide spread across central parts of the mediterranean over the next couple of days when we do still have what remains of storm bloss worrying away about western side of the med. but as we go on through the next, i'll say we will see that where to where the pushing over towards italy, he's in through sardinia and corsica, some showers to a little further north, sliding down across the low countries through germany, snow over the alps. quite a bit of that term for a time. those at wetter weather just started to make its way towards that western side of italy. further east is generally drive little the course i said is a nice,
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it's not too bad for the time of year there. for many as we go on into our monday. similar temperatures haber brightest skies into our northern past germany there, back up to was a low countries, northern areas of france and across a pretty shells and the island of island lossy dry. too. for the iberian, pernicious and snow there just around the pyrenees, we will still see summit. i shall, i'm afraid, just pushing the way back into the valley. eric islands monitor their showers, affecting the far north of africa. since thick cloud there to southern areas of algeria might be thick enough, retired to produce a little bit of wet weather there for southern algeria to be southern areas of libya. will showers there just around the gulf of guinea radical part west africa? ah. who from the shores of the red sea storage a cane more time with co manager the major. but enjoyed in this team, a fema climate change to the peaks of the himalayas where water conservation looks
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like this dazzling solutions to cite the world's most precious resource. in the next episode of at right, we look at what is being done to send the once a twice on al jazeera, counting the course climate change is reshaping with a health food insecurity. cruise and the pandemic leading to a rise in violence and terrorism on the drought. ravage central valley and california that provides vast amounts of food for the us. but for how much longer? counting the cost on al jazeera. oh, you want to help save the world. sneeze into your elbow, m o.

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