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tv   [untitled]    November 15, 2021 12:30am-1:01am AST

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where the waters woman the land, and that's true both sides of europe. that's where the active weather has been. and the last couple of weeks has been the western measure. and it's still is where as the incoming winter is stuck up here in the north atlantic. now i see him coming winter cuz behind it is plenty of cold enough air to bring snow to iceland and every now again, it brings the same to doorway to the high grounded noise doing the same on monday, maybe more so on tuesday most it's rain there, was quite a wind, but it's a southwesterly, but it's, it's not exactly cold in london, but it is fairly coating. for example, riga. however, these are temperatures are not far away from the average is supposed to get colder is tandy. and it's doing just that. now around the mediterranean, well, it's just still stormy. there's more rain likely anywhere in italy, possibly. viruses, coffee comments, we're dramatic. and then further west is that to affect the bali arcs with a northerly gout. the same time was right on the north coast of algeria. this may look familiar to you, but it seems to be rather long lived. i have to say, in fact,
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has been so active, it may push a front down to me as to how you might find a few spots of rain right in the middle of the desert time, russet, and beyond. the seasonal rate in africa. further south is doing what it's supposed to not as funnel cit walters and be concentrating more around the gulf of guinea. ah, it's the one most populous democracy, diverse dynamic and undergoing meaning to see context, india dixon in depth. look at the people and politics of india, exploring how to call the 19 pandemic struck the mission. it's continuing impact and the lessons learned for the future. join me feel that those are for context india analysis either because one of the fastest growing nations in the well,
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the cause of needed to oakland and development school international shipping to become a middle east and or craig and money skillfully my fell free key is up to about filling up roman, connecting the world, connecting future while the car. so those gateway to whoa trade. lou ah ah, welcome back. a look at the main stories now. and elise have clashed with protest as into noisiest capital of thousands of demonstrators rallied against the president guy. saeed. security forces blocked off the area. web protest is we're
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demanding that saeed, restore parliament and normal democratic rule. in all the headlines, the son of libya's woman dictate and warmer gadhafi is registered to run in the country's upcoming presidential election safe. i'll islam gadhafi his wanted for war crimes, as he wants to restore immunity to libya. and austria is ordering millions of unvaccinated people into locked down from monday's covered, 19 infection surged to record highs about 65 percent of all strains of funny vaccinated, but it is one of the lowest rights in western europe. now the president, as he called 26 summit to which ended on saturday, has branded the glasgow climate deal historic spite watering down of language on ending the use of coal and fossil fuels. but alex sharma says that india and china, which push for last minute changes to the text, will have to explain themselves to countries most at risk of climate change. these
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are countries on the frontline of climate change for them in the 1.5 is you're really very bad news to degrees is a death sentence. of course, it matters to them and there was lots of emotions. and in terms of, you know, china and india, i mean, you know, they will, on this particular issue, have to explain themselves to developing countries on the u. k. formula subarus johnson is saying that he is disappointed. some nations are not doing more to limit their emissions, but he downplayed the significance of the last minute change to the tax. it's an immense thing to get a commitment from 190 countries to, to phase down or phase our core i did it with, with the language is phase down or phase or it doesn't seem to me as a, as a speaker of english to make that much difference, you know, the direction of travel is, is, is, is pretty much the same. you that's never been said before. any experts are criticized endeavor for watering down the text on the use of coal in that agreement
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. toxic air is a widespread problem in india itself with new delhi topping the list of the wells most polluted cities, schools and government buildings in the capital, in order to close for a week now, because of the poor quality part inflamed on coal emissions. india's energy needs are expected to grow exponentially in the coming decades of the country. so being heavily reliant on coal and millions depending on it to and their livelihoods. for those of further, you bought more problem order. yeah, we're facing, that's a problem. because pollution burning sensation in the eyes and fitting suffocating while wearing masks he or the euro. many problems, families are not healthy. people have breathing problems, but i login on my dizzily ala in our country. this is the only means of livelihood for many. if the foreign country say we should stop using coal, then if we stop call, what will we eat? will other countries give us food? no, they won't. they're developing their own countries. battered
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by extreme weather and rising sea levels, coastal bangladesh is on the front line of the climate. crisis is foreign minister, abdomen expressed disappointment as of the dale, he says the summit could have accomplished more. oh yeah, we had the high im, lisa, an expectation of caught up quinta and my feeling is the cop parenthesis can accomplish more, unfortunately is who if it didn't happen, so we look forward to better beings. well, among the g 20 countries, australia has the highest level of greenhouse gas emissions, and that's on a per capita basis. it was one of several nations that pushed a watered down wording of the agreement. or clark has worn out from brisbin. a study did not support phasing out coal to be part of this agreement, nor did it support the inclusion of stronger emission reduction targets in the final agreement. now, prime minister scott morrison,
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he's publicly said that the striding policy is not to commit to such a mandate. but climate activists have accused australia of being the key troublemaker in the last week of the go, she ations at cop 26. they've accused australia being the leading country a trying to water down this final agreement. now bit of background. australia is the 2nd largest export of coal. it's also while the highest r emitters per capita are in the world. now the federal government, it has actually done one thing. it's commit an extra $500000000.00 out of its specific neighbors. now scott morrison. he met with the fijian prime minister, ab slice, pacific islands have said this climate fund, the new climate money is certainly a stars, but the scientist is suggesting that the pacific will see sea level rises 3 times the global average. it's also said that some of these alans will be uninhabitable by 2030 on a small number. pacific, on and late us were able to attend the glasgow climate summit simply due to the covey pandemic. but they message was loud and clear. they want the big polluted the co producing nations,
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as well as those rich countries to boost their investments in the climate adaptation projects across the pacific islands. otherwise, on the current trajectory, where the rise of emissions up to 16 percent by 2030 scientists say the pacific islands are in trouble. we can now speak, you can't and climb activist patients number color. she was at the climate summit in glasgow and joins is leih from edinburgh. how do you feel about the outcome of the climate conference? i am. it's really so sad. i feel i feel be changed by the u. k. u. s. and ah, they repeat conscious. they did not too distant, they did not stick up as lee does. they did not secure enough money for countries. lake uganda, which i'm a vulnerable to the climate crisis that are already struggling with the effects of climate change. they didn't secure enough concrete plans to keep the
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1.5 degrees 20 if twin the 1.5 degrees, 2.4 is a dead cities to us and add one. yeah, i can take a concert co. 26 was not a success, but i can, i can probably say twice that a complete failure. that because, or we can't judge a book by its cover. it's a up let but we shall judge, but like we shall really judge them. we shall really judge whether action that what, what the, what they act to follow their words. it is when we shall judge a no really, really what with our, what they, what they really planned. and they acted upon to secure though there was but for
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now to me, cook really looks like it's not as that says, and i get definitely get a sense of your disappointment. hours. speaking to jennifer morgan of greenpeace, she said that while this deal, barry keeps a one and a half degrees go alive. it does and a very powerful message that the era of fossil fuels is, is coming to an end. so. 3 do you think, do you take some hope from that? i really, i really don't oh well, you know, what will that will i will try and. oh, on my cheek in that all sorry about that. her patience now because of joining us there, a gun and climb activist who was at the summit there in glasgow. apologies for the shaky line, but to a sense of her disappointment and frustration with the outcome of the summit. we do
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have other news to bring you as well, and it's a day now after 6 people died in mass protest against you. don's military take over the army chief has now chaired the 1st meeting of the new sovereign council. now this is the body that replaced the power sharing arrangement that was dissolved by general abdel for talbert han late last month, been criticized by the un for excluding, recently ousted civilian leadership. where al jazeera has condemned in the strongest terms, the actions of sedans, military after it, arrested them, networks bureau chief and hard tomb. alma sal me, alca, but she's home was rated on saturday night and he was taken to custody. al jazeera is calling for his immediate release and says, it holds the sudanese military authority responsible for the safety of all of its employees. kenya's president is in ethiopia pushing for an end to the conflict between the government and the to grind. rebel forces who are kenyatta as hell,
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talks with the prime minister abbe honored the african union. envoys also been talking with both sides. since fighters from the northern tegra region pushed further south towards the capital this month, alesongo passenger says that an immediate cease fire is needed for dialogue to begin. thousands of human remains of being exempt from mass graves in burgundy. its truth and reconciliation commission is also recording. testimonies document or than 3 decades of ethnic unrest. panel was set up as part of a peace deal that saw the end of a civil war. katherine sawyer reports now from burgundy. you might find some of the images here disturbing. these other remains of brune dns, who are killed during the countries ethnic was, they have been exuberant truth and reconciliation commission from some of the 4000 mos greeves scattered across bruni. the commission began its work with a master called mostly hutus by a tootsie government,
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between 19721973. more than 800000 professionals were killed by state forces that accused them of starting a rebellion with the shoot. the commissioners are also taking testimony from baldwin, dns. they want to reconstruct through those testimonies exactly how many tutsis, hutus and others from different communities were killed in more than 3 decades. victims or not allowed to barrier of the people. they were also refused to cry or to show an emotion full a wing at the last off the beloved ones. today, really, the dorothy people are, are seriously traumatized. in the years that followed politicians played into ethnic tensions that already existed,
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panning civilians against each other. a civil war broke out in 1993 after their fascination of president milk yard and i, more than 300000 people were killed in the 12 year conflict. the truth and reconciliation commission has not began documenting what happened in the ethnic violence that started in 1993. but perpetrators and victims in this village were more than 60 people are killed. have already started the reconciliation process. they say this is the best way to deal with their trauma. kurama juvenile killed the parents of police family. there are still neighbors. he was a family friend. no gear you call. i'd been living with a lot of fear since the siblings came back from tanza, near where they'd fled to every time at sea them. i'd have no peace in my heart when they finally fully forgave me in 2017. my heart was the full isaac be go hora was only 15 years old. it took him
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a long time to forgive. he says one room while in the church where he publicly said, sorry, we told him to take us to where the remains of our parents were dumped. we went to the mouse grave, where the priest done blushed. those who were buried there. this investigation is starting up emotions and opening up old ones. but this families, enrique it, alice, it is a healing process. katherine saw all 0 rig province. burgundy, ecuador government says it's now living to identify the 60 inmates who are killed in a prison riot that began on friday. government blames a violence on rival drug gangs. alexander lurch has more. ah. 3 dozens of ecuadorian gathered outside this prison on saturday, waiting for any news of their family members. there was an overnight riot at the little royal penitentiary in the southern city of guayaquil that began on friday
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evening. information is difficult to come by. they desperately looked through an unofficial list of victims names that was posted outside the building like that i saw that you knew. i'm hoping that my son is one of the injuries, but we don't know anything because there's no official list from the authorities. only list there has been leaked, but we don't know anything. oh, yes, below that nothing is known. what the prisoners are saying from inside is done. no police or military are controlling it, that they are letting them kill each other in cold blood, police or blaming rival gangs for the violence. is still st. just of in a thing. i will not. these will that it, that it body of these events are due to a territory dispute by criminal gangs inside the prison. at the moment, there are certain pavilions that are without leaders because this may be surprising to all citizens. but the leaders were released after having served 60 percent of their sentences, of at the same prison. earlier this year, more than
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a 100 inmates were killed in the worst incident of prison violence in recent years, ecuador prison system has come under the spotlight recently. for overcrowding and poor sanitation and living conditions. officials say they are accommodating about $9000.00 more inmates than the prisons were designed for. the literal penitentiary was built for 5300 inmates, but it holds 8500. in september, president gear moore laughed so declared a 2 month state of emergency in the prison system. these also called on the highest court to allow the military to enter prison to stop any violence. the court responded in a statement echo doors prison crisis will require more than temporary solutions. alexander lurch alger 0. afghanistan's shia minority are demanding. the taliban provide more protection following a spate of attacks and mostly she a neighborhoods on saturday, a magnetic device attached to
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a mini boston native and maney, shia area of cobble. several people were killed. no one has claim responsibility, but i so has been targeting the shia has our minority in the country. well, the taliban as hell. a military pride in the capital cobbled featuring dozens of us made ahmed security vehicles with. am i 17 helicopters patrolling on the head? many of the soldiers in the parade carried american assault rifles military equipment was captured when the country fell to the taliban in august. we watching the news, our life from london, and have all the sport very short in. we're going to find out if what is january now let's go down in not in a 2nd place and next year's wild come ah, it sounds in the walls. largest orchestra will tell you how many classical musicians make their way into the record. books with the form is
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ah, people are much more goes to the community. they live in, no matter how much it needs to presentation as much as anyone else's. going to like the main sort of the most hideous police that's part of the night that delta and now it's people say they want to clean up all their destroy them. waterman with the media lance. the coverage all covers you just when you suffer calamities. i don't think that's right, but is what i want to change. i wanted to go further to cover story stuff in the lives of people to truthfully health this towards the i was really passionate about stories with fox, but government support rather than keep him in story stuff. drop the fixed narrative only depend on the reality on the box is why i became
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a journalist. i'm huh. that book ah ah. half all the sport with joe and mariam. thank you, christiana, rinaldo. portugal have blown the chance to qualify automatically for next year as well. coming katha, that's also a loss at home against serbia. we're not sanchez to poach. go ahead. just few minutes in tucson package, then equalize to serbia after mistake by the porch. we'll go peeper for a drill. would have been enough to see portugal through the group when they let in a 90 minute equalizer from alexander metro not spoke while celebrations from
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serbia who still we also bought portugal, heading for the player. 2010. well, champions fane, or on the road to 2020, to a very like go from a voter, murata sealed a one. know when over sweden to secure the top spot in the group. even we haven't sold draw would have been enough for spain to go through creation, joined them. they were up against russia and had to put up with driving rain and a water load pitch and split. it all came down to his own go from russia, with 9 minutes left. one know when enough for creation to finish top of the group by a single point and qualify symmetrically and north macedonia, close and who at 1st well covers it, but to place in the playoffs. the 31 home when over iceland killed him, the runners up in group j. the now of course to reach the 2nd successive major tournaments as an independent nation having played at the years earlier this year.
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australia, the new t 20 cricket. well champions off the beating you zealand by which it's in the final in to by australia when the toss and chose to bowl you the captain. kane williamson . lead by example. heading ac 5 or $48.00 goals of the black cats. 972. from the 20 overs that left australia needing to chase down the highest total ever seen in the men final or they got the thanks. brilliant thing of their own half century from open a david warner, and an unbeatable 77 for mitchell marsh, powered them to victory. but it was glen maxwell, who hit the winning runs and they got over the line with the suspect celebration to be all the now to st defeats and using them the limited over finals australia lifting the trophy for the 1st time. they've made so much talk about this being the one that's been elusive to australia and when to be fair we probably underperformed
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in the past if, if we're being honest with yourself, we've had some great teams along the way. this seems pretty specially the camaraderie, the the way that ever i really care for each other and looks after each other looks out for each other. it's pretty special. so yes, awesome that as best berlin and it's great for 1st rally and cricket. there was hamilton pulled up what could be the drive of the season, going from 10th on the grades to win the sao paolo groan. pre embassies drive a fort, his way to the top of to taking a 5 place grid penalty for an engine change. he overhauled title, rival max has stop in late in the race and finished ahead of him on the podium. hamilton's teammate val triple test to accept it. that's how you do it. my god, it is how you do it. oh, good. thank you so much. that's great. work at the garden, people. well,
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it was turbulent weekend for hamilton. he was forced to start saturday sprints were a sprint race from last over rule breaking ray wing hamilton is now cut the stephens lead in the championship to 14 points with 3 races left. but from last on the grid and then another fi place penalty was i think the hard as we can i've had but my dad said he reminded me of 2004 when i was in florida, 3 in bahrain and i started last and i, i finished and then, and i finished 1st. so this was more than one of sports global superstars. valentina rossi has completed his final race in motor gp bringing the curtain down on an iconic career, which has lasted a quarter of a century. geminus reports after 432 races, 115 winds and 9 wild titles. one of the most charismatic figures in motorsport is calling it a day. valentine, a rossi,
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a wave that his fans for the last time. after finishing his final race in motor g p, his become a familiar sight over the past 25 years, a sea of yellow in the grandstands. as the italians devoted support as said good bye to their harry. ah rossi finished 10th, and valencia a far cry from his championship winning days. that is not just his success on the track that has endeared him to millions. he is just one of the most incredibly talented, no true schuman. he is a, a certain charismatic energy and that comes across really well and camera. and i think bah, as much as if not more than his talent on a motorcycle is the reason that he is. he is o rossi, when his 1st well title in the 125 class in 1997 when he began his now legendary post race celebrations. but he wasn't making every one laugh. the man, known as the doctor, had his fair share of fierce rivalries, which often culminated in some incredible battles on the track on either todd rice
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and obeying. i am a holla, but for me i was on past the point. despite his triumphs with honda, he famously chose to join a struggling yamaha team as he wanted to prove it was the rider he could make the difference. and he did just that winning the 2004 championship in his 1st season with the team. always looking for new challenges, rossi considered switching to formula one and tested with ferrari on several occasions. but he couldn't turn his back on the sport he loved most. he is though universally admired in the f one. paddock. i think he's dr. he's approach just everything he's done has been incredible. the passion that he's is had for so long as, as shown through. and i'm just such a legend. one of the greatest to over there. as for the next chapter, at the 42 year old plans to give car racing and other guy as well as overseeing his own team, which makes its moto g p debut in 2020 t o ross. he says his biggest achievement was making moto g p popular,
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his global impact on the sport has cemented his legacy. is one of the greatest motorcycle races of time. geminus ouch is era and that's what we bought for you on a busy day and sport. it's packed to marry em in london. it's lovely. thank you very much, joy. well now it just one of the sort of brave and his writers attempted a bright against while record for the largest orchestra. ah, all in 12000 musicians from the national system of youth and children's orchestra performed a classical piece for more than 5 minutes. the current record is held by russia, by more than $8000.00 musicians played together. a tempt will be judged why innes, in the next 10 days, we know that before holy i went over course, it's a great responsibility. and my message for the venezuelan youth is not to give up. i have a dream put your heart into it, and that dream will come true because dreams come true, but you have to preserve the fight to achieve them. well,
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that's it for then he's out that topic that morning in just a couple minutes. ah hm. and a tens of thousands of children were born into all lives under the i school regime in iraq and syria. now many are in camps, either orphans all with a widowed mothers, rejected by their own communities, chicken thought people are going to welcome them about of course mom. and you documentary his, that chilling and traumatic stories for the children throw stones at me,
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iraq's loss generation on al jazeera, a community decimated by cancer fights for the truth. who in this room has cancer or knows that someone that lives here that has cancer phone lines exposes houston's kennesaw class death. these are the 110 properties that have grown contamination underneath. they look data visible, paul, but i come in just say from give them bow. no, no. we will see full lines on al jazeera for did remy, they simply molina families. the pain is unbearable for their relatives were killed last week during a military operation ordered by the venezuelan government. security forces accused him of being part of a colombian rebel group and said they died in combat when neighbors and family members insist they were innocent. taken from their homes and executed under pressure vinnish were as defense minister, believe me to pay the bill. you know,
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said the on forces were applied to the friends that come through from your regular groups, but added that human rights needed to be respected. and that the events at the border would be investigated ah, thousands of to museums protests near parliament against the president's power grab, which they consider a co ah, hello, i'm sorry, i'm to mozy in london. you're watching al jazeera also coming up on the program. a surprise in libya, monica daffy san say fall is lum announces he's running for president in next month . elections. poland, i just need to take concrete steps to resolve.

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