tv [untitled] November 15, 2021 3:00pm-3:31pm AST
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ah ah ah ah, hello, i am emily angland im doha. these the top stories on al jazeera nato's secretary general has warned russia against what it described as aggressive actions on the border with ukraine ins. stalson burg says there has been a large and unusual build up of russian troops on new cranes. borders in recent wakes is called on moscow to be transparent over its military activities and to prevent an escalation. seldom burg, also warned the president of bella worse over his involvement in the migrant crisis at the border. he says, nature member, poland. has the block support? we condemn?
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oh, what to do to push a clinician is doing a using vulnerable migrants, including children and families, to conduct hybrid or actions against ne, 2 hours. you foreign affairs ministers at brussels will be discussing a recent developments in sir jan. it comes a day after general abdel father albert han shed the 1st meeting of the new sovereign counsel that he appointed. it's been criticized by the un for excluding the recently asteroid civilian leadership. the u. n. has released $14000000.00 of emergency funds to civilians caught up in the t cry weight crisis in ethiopia as well as the rest of the country's complet hit north. it comes as can years president visited ethiopia to push for an end to the conflict between the government and rebel forces mohammed a doe has more from addis ababa. alyssa,
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going about sandra that you special envoy to the home of africa has expressed some hope that there could be talks between the parties. but he says that is a window that is quickly closing and that end it talks will not succeed unless there is a says fire and present. looking at his visit to add to suburb is part of this international effort, which is growing by the day based on sun among the international community. that these conflict could turn into a civil war in a country of 110000000 people. and in that region, which is engulfed in crisis, south sudan is already facing it's on conflict. dana has its own problems and instability. so molly is recovering from conflict and it's there leg. yeah, but i have states of the rest of the world but has its own problems. now, when, if you pick many people think about the possibility of this conflict, and if you're p a tiny into
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a civil war. and then the refugee crisis that results from it will be very difficult for countries that are neighboring. if you appear to cope with prison, kenyatta is set to meet the us state secretary m anthony blinking, who lives in kings. sometime today, it will be meeting him on wednesday to bring him about the discussion. he has hot with prime minister, be about all other kinds of parallel initiatives to try and bring this war about a mess of humanitarian crisis to us for a 4th man has been arrested under terrorism laws in the u. k. after a man was killed in a car explosion, please say a taxi put up outside a women's hospital in the city of liverpool on sunday and then explained it. the passenger was killed and the driver is now in hospital. an american journalist sentenced to 11 years in prison and me and my has been released according to his employer, danny fen stow was the managing editor of frontier me and my an online magazine. he
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was arrested in may accused of encouraging to st against the military june some philippine president rodrigo deter tay, will run for senate in next he is elections. according to the state media to today's spokes. person says he will not compete against his daughter sour to take to capero, who is running for vice president. a new anti corruption party looks to be leading in bulgaria is parliamentary elections the way continue the change grouping ease up against a center right party headed by the former prime minister, m, and unhealthy air in new delhi will keep millions of students and workers at home this week the city has ordered its employees to work from home. schools have been closed and construction halted through wednesday. those of the headlines, i'm emily angram staging. now for witness. and i'll be back at the top of the hour . ah
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ha! as we're driving down the road just now i said, oh my god, we're coming to the police that change my life. for years. people have fought this struggle, fought for land and water. and i was at a point where i felt like nobody cared. and now it was like somebody shook me awake again and said it's okay to stand up. it's ok to want a better life in our luck,
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what the way many were tony means water is life and every living being an animal and plant on this earth needs water to flourish. ah we move that part down and then start taping the other one. we're good, that's good. i mean, this one's all in so the idea to have this encampment in a lot of ways it is protecting our way of life because it is not only asserting our right to be here and live here and having clean drinking water. because when
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you rip away all the layers of, of everything that's going on right here, what it all comes down to is wanting clean drinking water for our children. so we just wanted to get a little bit of an idea of how many people are going to be staying with. we got 4 families, one family to each year. each family, there are $4.00 to $5.00 kids and you are going to be here through the winter with what we're doing here is also living our sovereignty. because this is treaty land that we were guaranteed by the united states government in 18. 51. it's laquata treaty land, sol, in the way it's, it's like coming home. i just got here. so we've been here since like 8. so we have like 3 more to set up and then i'm gonna be done. anyway,
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i just got here. okay. with that, no, no, that's, that's good. yeah, i've lived in the river bed all my life. i drink the water from the missouri and we had our own garden, so our own food and it was a beautiful life. i lived there before the army corps removed me and i went back and i lived there to day. so we're stay we did anybody show up down here from denver, or i used to say to my mom, why did you have to name you washed a? we an english, it looks like waste when and people make fun of it and they, they butcher every day. and she would say, that's your grandmother's name. her name was washed ale we shockley. and that is to be a good given woman. so don't ever be ashamed. dear name. we were saying that putting
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up a t p seems so easy compared to a year. the planes and helicopters are made as final for like non stop. i think they thought we were doing something illegal. but the yellow helicopter is though one hired by to quote access ah, when we 1st 3rd that that code axis was going to come. when we started the secret storm cap in start praying for this proposed pipeline that is supposed to be pointed. her long room. and i invite you to go down to the encampments and standing to see the strength of the beauty,
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the perseverance. every day, we have 1012 other nations coming in to stand in solidarity with us. and we're showing the world who we are in a non violent manner. a nation isn't defeated until the heart too small of the women are on the ground all the day. we have grandmothers and mothers that are prepared to be here on the land for the long run. we're not going away with and then we got the notice for 48 hour notice dakota axis and star construction. ah. you see,
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i see each of you to come, for some kind of battle has just begun. ah, justice won't prevail for our people. if the laws are obeyed and followed, we will hold on to our treaty territory at all costs. and where peaceful, prayerful people. but it, it's come to a point now where enough is enough someone went through that they were bulldozing, overstate with
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a personal to me. my dad's buried up there. i buried my cousin died of cancer 2 weeks ago after. and we can't let dakota axis call to them on what happens if they do what, what are you going to do? we'll pray in front of the vocals with they will shoot us a lot of people think that the dakota access pipeline is just about native people standing up for their environment. but that's not true. they're 18000000 people that rely on the missouri river for their water, who are down stream from us. this isn't just to native issue. this is for everybody . this pipeline breaks world records. it's a $178.00 pieces. and what they do is they put it together many yank it all through
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underneath for a mile and a half. there's bound to be some structural integrity issues. if you ask a lot of engineers, they'll admit to that. numerous leaks can occur. but the problem is these tiny links, not only are they perfectly legal, they're not detectable which will be taken up by our plants and will pollute our water. and we won't know it until our water intake gets clogged. ah. i know the original pipeline was to go through north dakota, but it was going through white people's land, so they redirected it, put it through the indian. the proposed route was going to pass 13 miles north of
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bismark. but the north dakota public utilities commission denied that permit, because if there would have been a catastrophic failure, it's proximity to the water supplies would be effected. standing rock is downstream, sending the message that our people, our community are expendable a on september 3rd, the democracy now team came to north dakota to the resistance camps, videotaped the dog with blood dripping from his mouth and his nose. biting. protesters are protectors, these images went viral. 14000000 people almost immediately saw these images
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around the world. we will continue to cover what happens behind the bars more than a 140 people has been arrested. so with what i was most struck by was that the 1st people to take on the bulldozers to say, go back, stop desecration segment sites were women, why women are central in the stroke? good. there are acts award may have been committed against our people, the state of north dakota. they have denied the desecration. they have denied going to our aboriginal territory and our sacred objects. the water in sacred water is the 1st gift of life.
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and as women, we have a right to protect that water, the water of mother earth. because all i start is water continue and i'm putting you in prayer and there won't be no black snake going across the report. you know, oprah, my mother was in the american indian movement. we were always active in an issue. we're always expected to act a certain way. and growing up, we would joke about like, why do we have to be the ultimate indian? and it's just how we were raised, even in my community, they're like, oh, your moms, phyllis, younger people know, but i'm proud of that. you know, i co founded the women of all red nations. and we had to rise to the occasion of
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sterilization, the highest rates were here in this region. and it was an indian woman doctor from oklahoma who became an m d, and practiced in the indian house service, who exposed that we went throughout the united states and foreign partnerships with the women in all the cities and universities. and so congress passed to that to prohibit sterilization of native people. we also stepped up because of the adoption of indian children. so the indian child welfare act passed in 1978. these 2 very critical acts came from la quarter country. ah. my mom and my little sister always say that i don't all these billions of people on the earth like we get to be from sitting bills,
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and then to see the buffalo coming over the hill. it was like i was in a dream i . c me up to the native american protesters blocking highway 18 o 61. north dakota governor john dal recall had mobilized the states. national guard. took em approached me kenneth hello or state highways in our county, highways to be taken over by agitators from other areas of the country. though people on earth ever enjoyed a freedom like we indians enjoyed before the white man came to this country. everything was free. we were free and so were the animals and the birds and the
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rivers. then columbus and his gang hit this country by accident. or sorry that they did. our instructions didn't tell us what to do about the white man. we welcomed him when he came here. we fed him, we took care of him. we believed god had sent him here to help us. god gave the white man powers we never saw before. material powers, he was supposed to share these powers to make life better for all of us. he didn't . now our great chieftains are gone, our buffalo are gone, our weapons are bows and arrows. our tomahawks are in the museums. they sell our arrow heads and even our bones for souvenir. maybe if we didn't remember how it once was, it wouldn't be so hard for us. we could just become like every one else.
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can i please get your hair? how old are you? you're fly. everything was taken from us in. that's the biggest part of why our people are on math and using drugs. i worked under the meth grant and we see what math and using drugs was doing. not only here but everywhere. and so we put everything into fighting and raising awareness because this'll cause us to be extinct. tell me about her mother. how did she get involved in math and she got with a guy. and he was the one started her using math. and it just now, i mean she just lost to it. so this is a hard situation because they're going to take my grand daughter. i don't have no rights baby wakes up every night with night chairs and she's looking for her
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grandma good time. and i'm the only one that she knows that protects her. oh mm hm. in stanny rockdale, got every advocate from all over the world there. you know what i'm doing here is 4 children that are just as sacred and sat water. so i stay here and i fight this battle with little song about her i been compiling, standing on history for about 25 years, compiling the teeny ology. and one of the things that i learned is if we are allowed to know our history or culture our language, our way a life, i, spirituality, we can be balanced people again. and then we can choose to follow this way or not. it's our choice because we're our whole people. right now our people walk around
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with damage of herself, of being taken from their family. because you're indian. you don't belong here. i ha, and i have a home through the agencies of the government. they are then rapidly brought from their state of comparative savagery and barbarism to one of civilization. here, on the one hand, we have the navajo, as we find him in his dad at home. today, i have a group, and i have a whole children. western nav a whole albuquerque and im school on the high school institute. how many people know that you know, i think the mouth rate on family, we won that right. 1985 to raise our own family. 1985.
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ah, we got word that you can see them dakota axis is try to move in with their intention. we don't know and that's why we're cautious between the rubber bullets the bean bag guns a pepper sprayed, the dogs, dragging people out of ceremony. if we don't know what they're doing and we're not prepared, somebody's gonna get hurt ah with
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they really tried to paint us as these violent out of state people when the movement began with women from stanley law and how they can vilify our people for standing up. it's as though they are seen. how dare you this is al jazeera. it's november the 15th day, one of the new era and television. you. if you have known that, that was the scale of bloodshed would you have still gone to? moments ago to miss all landed about a 100 meters away from us. we're on the front line, but it's on the fall that isn't on is very real. it is coming our way.
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i was just over here. god. by the police on purpose. ah, you, with a vote for al jazeera is offices in garza, our house in that building and the cover has come down. little before in human history has a months, prestige environment of the arctic didn't such peril. in the country with an abundance of resources, trade bar and was indonesia, his big firms. for me we moved full to grow and frank, we balance for green economy, blue economy, and the digital economy with the new job creation law, indonesia is progressively ensuring the policy reform to create quality jobs.
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invest, let to be part when the lease is broke and progress invest in the media. now, lou . hello, i'm emily anglin, into how these the top story is on al jazeera, nato. secretary general has warned russia against what it describes as aggressive actions on the border with ukraine. in stoughton berg says, there has been a large and unusual build up of russian troops on ukraine's borders in recent wakes . stoughton burg also warned the president of bella bruce over his involvement in the migrant crisis on the border. he said nato member, poland has the blocks support. we condemn. oh, well, to do the question could assume is doing a.
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