tv [untitled] November 26, 2021 7:00am-7:31am AST
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i was in 20 belarus in presidential elections. that shook the country, self proclaimed dictators a seat of power. and now new tactics, migrants, people in power investigates the humanitarian disaster on to rivaling on europe's borders and asks what's next and the battle for bella. bruce on a jazz eda ah britain bans flights from 6 african nations and rising concerns over new covered 19 various it may be more transmissible than the delta varied. and it at the vaccines that we currently have, maybe less effective. ah, hello, i'm darn jordan. this is al jazeera live from della also coming up in an exclusive interview with a deputy head of sedans. routing council says last month's military takeover was the best available option. australian troops arrive in the solomon islands as anti
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government protests continue for a 3rd day. oh, and egypt unveils an ancient walkway, once cooled, the path of god and another sh parade. ah, richard scientists are describing a new cupboard 19 very and identified in southern africa as the most concerning they've seen yet. the u. k. health security agency says it has mutations that could make it spread and infect people more easily. it adds the variant spike protein is dramatically different to the original corona virus that cobit 19 vaccines are based off. we will be suspending all flights from 6 southern african countries and we will add in those countries to the travel read list. those
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countries are south africa, namibia recessive, s what teeny. and is involved way and for twana. and we will be requiring anyone that arrives from those countries from foi am on sunday to quarantine in hotels or dr. eric finally thing is an epidemiologist and senior fellow at the federation of american scientists he says assigned so far. i'm not good, it's in transmitting very quickly worldwide. it's also arrived in hong kong and had immediately to break through cases and which luckily were caught in hotel warranty. but it is very worried. and the fact that evaded the vaccines of the 2 people. these 2 people in hong kong were both double. pfizer by onset vaccinated also lends credibility that this virus is very, very basic. and could both really bad properties and could become worse than
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delta if it's not stronger than what before say right now the chain so far in the past 6 months is the delta variance. if it's not as successful as delta variance, it's not going to succeed because delta varying has, has become the global dominant strain. but if something is faster, bigger, stronger, in many ways, and more basis, more importantly, then that is what the variance could succeed among those parts of the world where we have a lots of axes and lots of people who've been previously, in fact, 2 adults very and have developed natural immunity to the delta variance, but that to the delta, not to this be 115 to 9 new area. that's why the, the big worry is that this could be worse than delta, and that's what a lot of scientists urban thinks they have been this worried since they saw the
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delta care. the deputy head of sedans governing council has told al jazeera that last month, military takeover was the best option to stop what was a spiraling crisis. gentleman hummed on day glo, also known as him, and he says they discussed it with all parties, including the detained prime minister, who he says was on board of della ham dock. has since been reinstated by the generals in a new power sharing deal comes in hitting it over here or what's happened on october 25th was the ultimate outcome of a long process. since that change started in sudan during such process, many discussions were made. and many initiatives were proposed by various parties, the prime minister himself proposed to initiated and during our meetings and the transitional partners council or the sovereignty council. with that cabinet of ministers, we made maximum effort, but we couldn't reach a breakthrough. at that point, we were left with 3 options,
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the best of which was the move we had taken. who was it was completely agreeable to the prime minister himself of the work. we did not make such a move on our own. and you can watch the full interview with general dec low on talked on to 0 at $730.00 gmc this friday. meanwhile, thousands a sudanese have been back out on the streets, renewing their demands for a full civilian government. security forces to some of them with tear gas. the crowds also charted messages to on the at least 41 people killed in the military crackdown that followed. the takeover officers deny a foreign live rounds directly of protest as prime minister. the hum dog has ordered an investigation. what can we still conducting peaceful protests? but it's known that the security apparatus is turned into an oppressive apparatus at the hands of army generals who do what they want with it. they will heavy firing with bullets as well as to gas and arrests. peace has been our weapon and will
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hopefully bring us to our goals. the oppression that the security uses against people is plenty and intend to that. making sure the st suppose is not heard. now i can hear the sound of bombs behind me, but there's also the sound of porter says remain peaceful. i say no to deal with instigated australia. peacekeepers of arrived in the solomon islands to help his government respond to protests and riots. the pacific nation are fewer than 700000 people, has been beset by ethnic and political tensions for decades. the latest unrest was bought by pandemic field economic problems and an unpopular decision by the prime minister to break diplomatic ties with tie one and moved closer to china. sarah clark as managing developments from this training in city of brisbin, we've had 2 consecutive days of quite violent rot and protests in parts of the capital. honey yara, in particular, around the area of chinatown,
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there are also some unconfirmed reports. i should say that some protest is now looking to target one of the prime. this is residences in longer, but the less reports and the vision that we've seen and the one of our colleagues is on the ground in our has told us that by the fire, burning streets, the strewn rubbish across them. a lot of people, widespread losing in some of these areas have been bent down and as of last not around 31 stretches big stretches. when i say that part of the department building the central government parliament in the parliamentary precinct, it has been damaged in part of it. but we've got a bank that's going down a high school that's been torched and some of these areas that are being targeted chinese businesses, chinese funded operations. and that's the target of what you mentioned before, the anger that triggered this particular demonstrations. these people are angry at the prime minister to go by, they want him to resign. their anger is focused on the fact they say he's holding
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back on delivering infrastructure. he's giving big contracts to foreign firms and not the locals. and of course, the long running anger has been fueled by the government's decision in a 2019 to switch in different medical legions from taiwan after 36 years to china. so that's triggered this and what we are expecting. we got the strong peacekeepers who arrived, but we are hearing that the crowds are gathering for a 3rd day and i should note that the 72 out curfew was lifted this morning. so people are allowed back on the streets. it's whether or not they gather to cause balance and certainly continue the burning of these my infrastructure and government buildings in the capital. britain and france are calling for a coordinated response to stock people smuggling in the english channel. european ministers have been invited to paris for an emergency meeting. that's after at least 27 refugees and migrants drowned off the northern french coast or trying to reach the u. k. well,
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they set off from near the port city of calais from my under simmons. now reports rescue boats are on petrol, less than 24 hours after the tragedy there. surveillance from above please. so using beach buggies and what passes for normality in cali, migrants and refugees being escorted to buses, bound for some sort of shelter. no, for our police and mobilized day and night. not only yesterday or the day before, but they have been from the very start. they are on our external borders. never. his france had is many police officers and it timed soldiers involved in a fight against illegal immigration. this is about addressing long tamper factors smashing the criminal dance at chief human beings as cargo and tap in supply chains all along this part of the french coastline. more than 50 kilometers of it, there are spots where in secrecy, people smugglers arrange the sudden boating of small inflatable boats. it's
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happened before and it's still happening. these images were filmed on the same days . the migrants died. people intent on getting to the u. k. no matter what the risk, it's hard to imagine the level of desperation for these people in braving the seas to cross the english channel. but they're doing so in their thousands of numbers. a growing this year alone, $25000.00 have made the crossing. that's triple the number of 2021. for many of the people arriving in cali, this is where they are given help. carrots as a charity tries. it's best to persuade people not to make channel crossings warning of the hazards. most of the time they fail. they do just blame the people smugglers, they blame governments on both sides of the channel. even though after what happened yesterday, people will try again. so it's really tang to change the politics here. it's really, it's really time to change the situation into an into open, safe and
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a guy routes to let people, i mean, to cover basic needs when people are here and to lead them settle in france as well . the british and french governments often blame each other for the problem, getting worse. what's the rhetoric dies down though? there is some hope that wednesday's death could bring a new level of cooperation. what was intended to be a new beginning? was a tragic end for the men, women and children who died in the english channel. how many more may have to die before there's an increase of humanitarian moves to help these people, instead of politically motivated actions on both sides of the english channel. andrew simmons al jazeera kelly, while the drownings hadn't deterred migrants from attempting the perilous crossing with dozens more arriving in the coastal english city of dover, po brennan, as death. it's already bitterly cold here on the south coast of england, but the window of opportunity for migrants who are thinking about making the dash across the stretch of 30 miles from water between france and england. the window is
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closing because the weekend gale force winds forecast, and it will be like that for several days afterwards. so it's entirely possible that yet more migrants, despite the tragedy on wednesday, we'll make that attempt. the debate over how to deal with this has intensified here in the u. k. on 1st day with the intervention of. busy busy church leaders, the chief rabbi, both the church leaders of the roman catholic church of england, saying the frank, the something has to change. the system itself needs to change. that sentiment was taken into the parliamentary debates as well with the home secretary, pretty patel saying that the crossings were illegal, unnecessary and desperately safe on pledging to get even tougher with the criminal gangs that are organizing. but just on the leader of the opposition labor party said frankly,
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he was sick of the home secretary playing through the headlines. and there is pressure upon this government who forrest johnson to try a new way to open up legal ways for refugees to claim asylum without having to arrive here on versus shores before having to do so. as the current system dictates, the refugee council said that frankly, it should be a wake up call for the government to rethink its approach to the channel migrants. but it is important to have the context that this government is a populist government, and immigration was an absolute keystone issue. both in the most recent general election and in the breakfast vote that preceded it. the idea of taking back control of the board as a central issue in the vote that so far is johnson when his majority and parliament and so britain leave the european union. so it's one thing to have humanity and compassion, but for the politicians in charge of this country votes appeared to him at the mall,
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was more so to come here and al jazeera, including protests against corona vases, frictions in the french territory of waterloo, turned into a full blown crisis plus o vans around the world, paid tribute to football legend. diego madonna, a year after his death. more in that state. ah ah, look forward to brightest galleys, the winter sponsored point cattle airways. hello. they will have a look at the weather across africa in just a moment, but 1st to the middle east, and it's looking fairly quiet. we have got some cloud blowing across turkey into iran, bringing some showers and some heavy snow to the caucuses. down in the south of iran, if you shower is popping up here, but it is going to dry up as we go into saturday for the south of this, it's
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a lot fine up dry up more settled. we do have a shipment. it's going to pick up across those gulf states blowing up some hazy sunshine for places like guitar and the united arab emirates. but there'll be lots of sunshine around as there will be for the north of africa was singing hans chow was around coastal areas of morocco and algeria that thanks to low pressure that's plaguing the mediterranean. but for western parts of africa is dryer than it has been recently temperature here, slightly above average, some record breaking temperatures in places like gonna for the reins, we have to head to central africa. those seasonal rains have shifted further south . we are seeing heavier, full food, zambia, and places like weston bought swan as we head further south is looking very wet as well for much of south africa. cape town, seeing a lot of rain over the weekend. it is going to be dry in johannesburg with lots a cloud this weekend. oh, the weather sponsored by casara always stepped beyond the comfort zone. were
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assumptions or challenge travel to the ends of the earth, and further experience the unimaginable of the people who live it is probably the most extreme situation i've been involved in. how quickly things contract award winning documentary is that also a perception witness on a just the euro. lou hello. welcome back. happy to might about top stories here this ella, british scientists are describing a new coping. 19 variant identified in southern africa as the most concerning.
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they've seen yet, the u. k. health security agency says it has mutations that could make it spread on infect people more easily. the deputy head of sedans governing council, as told al jazeera that last month submitted to take have a, was the best option to stop what was aspiring crisis. gentle mohammed hummed on bigelow, says they discussed it with all parties, including the prime minister, who was agreeable to australia and peacekeepers. arrived in these solomon islands to help the pacific nations government respond to protests and riots. the unrest spotlight on demick fuel economic problems. now, an ongoing strike and guadalupe has kept the french caribbean island at a standstill for a 2nd week denouncing cobit 19 restrictions on long standing economic problems. protest has remained defiant while the french government does call for calm, but no officials from paris have yet made a trip to the island. natasha buck. the reports calls of forced to turn back as
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protesters block road on the french caribbean island of guadalupe, where anger continues to simmer. what began more than a week ago, as a strike of a mandatory vaccines for health workers, is now full blown demonstration against the french government. people here say they don't trust the vaccines. all politicians in paris. the problem i wasn't really book or proposal, the problems and guadalupe frontier. the cost of living is high and there is no training for young people, no jobs for the skilled. we feel totally ignored by france. they pile obligations on us without understanding us. but while i've hoss demonstrators of set up blockades like this across the island, making it difficult to get around. this is the main road, the links, the 2 major parts of the islands, and it is blog that is causing disruption. but what the protesters have done is put in place a system whereby essential goods, food and water can get through, as well as patients who need to go to hospital. despite the difficulties this
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paramedic says he supports the strike. yeah, 30 slaughter recovered past day. obligatory vaccinations. there are lots of people in guadalupe who say you shouldn't force people to do what the don't want to do. that's dictatorship at this hospital in the city of plenty. pete, the atmosphere is festive with these health workers say there is little to celebrate suspended from their positions for refusing the clothing vaccine. they say they'll protest until they get their jobs back up with my mom. you can just interfere with my body. it's my body knows my crowns or prime ministers. every one's choice must be respected. we are human, so will remain against the vaccine and call it past because they are only aim is to destroy the economy. the head of the hospitals cov, it unit says white spread vaccine skepticism is putting lives at risk. yeah, it's only one 3rd of people in guadalupe of vaccinated, so it's very, very low and it won't be enough is a cisco wave arrives to stop
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a high number of hospital debts. the french government has sent extra police offices to the island and called for com. it says the covey restrictions will be lifted, but ministers will work on finding solutions for people here. say they fed up with being told what to do by paris. rather than being heard, natasha butler, al jazeera guadalupe, a corona virus infection, as put the check president back in the hospital just hours after his release from a 6 week long stay. 77 year old me lawson and had to cancel that meeting, which was to officially appoint the new prime minister efforts to finalize a new government line up after recent elections. i've been delayed by the mans treatment for a chronic illness, which hasn't been publicly named. and slack here has gone into a 2 week locked down. people can only leave home for buying essentials or if they have to go to school or work. those who can't work from home need proof from their employer. they're also exceptions for backs nations and medical treatment. slovakia
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is moved follows austria, which put a lockdown in place on monday. now the pandemic is one of the perfect storm of problems to derail the will. supply chain networks business is everywhere dealing with bottlenecks. they tried to order goods and countries like the u. s. a bracing for the delays to stretch into christmas to 0. gabriel is under reports from hoboken in new jersey. ah, there's no shortage of form in the frothy cappuccinos it cower bunker coffee shop. what there is a shortage of is pretty much everything else. the global supply chain strain has made it difficult to keep the coffee shop stocked with a central food and beverages. the sign on the door says it all. customers are urged to be patient with staff members because they're out of a lot of stuff. we're short on everything from bacon and cran. straw's cups, silverware, packets catch up packets. the just small things. take this coffee cup and it's lid
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it most certainly was manufactured in china. and according to one supply chain expert i spoke to, it probably took over 200 different entities to get this, the factory and china to the coffee shop here in new jersey. the supply chain is like dominoes one falls. they all fall, the well documented supply chain problems could be exacerbated during the christmas holiday shopping season and into lunar new year in february. experts say a few big companies are prepared, but most are not. for 99 percent of the companies on earth, they are managing with spreadsheets and emails and it is taking 50 or 60 phone calls to manage one shipment. and we have people in the industry literally breaking down in tears over the pain of trying to keep track of a 1000 shipments across the world. oh, it gets very hectic in here,
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especially saturdays for erica when she calls her distributors, asking when she and reliably get supplies for the coffee shop. the answer she is given is not what she's looking for. right now we're being told that at minimum, 10 months at maximum about 20 months until our supply chain here is completely back to normal. you said also for her and millions of business owners around the world. it can't come soon enough. gabriel's hondo out is eda hoboken, new jersey was gabriel was saying that china is a center of world manufacturing and is struggling to get its goods out. it's been hit by coven 90 and locked downs power outages. and the shortage of shipping containers, katrina, you as mono from the chinese capital alarm. there's very little that china can do other than try to improve the infrastructure, run it's logistics. one big problem is this simple surgeon demands of goods from china. now regionally, for example, when you take china in the u. s,
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there was already an imbalance and trade that you had about a choose a one goods going into of us from china. now that ratio is as extreme as $5.00 to $1.00. so you have the ships packed with goods from china, leaving chinese ports arriving at the u. s. but not enough goods for them to justify having trips back. and so there's simply a shortage of freight, the chinese factories now. and that's adding to the backlog of many good kind to get over there. and also that's also led to a search in the cost of shipping. one exporter, we spoke to ships bicycles, to the u. s. as that one shipping container has gone to from about $7000.00 to costing $10000.00. and that's adding all sorts of costs to this whole process. know, so that's one thing. the other side is trying to is the, one of the few countries maintaining 0 tolerance approach to carbon 19. that means if there are few cases, even just single digit cases, chinese government react by severe lockdown and quarantines. and so we had major
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ports here in china, in the east and in the south, partially or completely shut down off to some stuff, reported infections. and adding to that incoming crews for crews still need to corn g when they arrive in china, that's about 2 to week 2 to 3 weeks of extra quarantine. and chinese crews coming home need to do even more weeks. police and turkey have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of people who are running for women's rights. in istanbul, demonstrators used international day for the elimination of violence against women to demand that turkey returned to a landmark treaty. the pact was designed to better protect women and girls that summoned the governing. at part, he said it's inconsistent with turkey's values. football fans around the world are paying tribute to diego mara donna, a year after his death. thousands of people gathered outside the stadium that bears his name in the italian city of naples. meanwhile, in his native argentina,
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players from his former to him and their opponents came together for a special tribute. daniel shanda reports now formed when his iris, awe availed of the 1st anniversary of his death on the walls of the diego madonna stadium boulevard containers juniors where the player began his professional football career as a precocious talent just before his 16th birthday. her mother silky at a law was one of the collective art, is determined that madonna's legacy should live on both in his art and in his studio. when he's collections constitute a sanctuary to the man known effectually as simply diego or number 10 to amazon. gregorio, gartner, fossil, i thought a good one of if we take a tour of my stood you, you'll see nothing that says diego, forever, or he died on such and such date, because here diego is still alive, diego, as breathing through. that's what i feel in my heart the moment. oh, there were outpourings of grief around the world when he died last year from
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a heart attack. a few days after brain surgery. his death, like his life has been controversial with legal case is still proceeding over his care. before he died. diego may be gone, but he lives on the mural light. this one which have been painted all over one osiris and beyond. in showing the creation of a legend likely to endure for generations to come on is credited with winning the world cup for argentine or in 1986. he brought joy to millions of fans in argentina, spain and italy who view him as more than just a football player. maxi says he's proud to have married donna under his skin. today's a sad day, but not so sad because for us he's eternal will remember him on every corner on every t shirt every tattoo. and whenever we watch a match, after 10 minutes, the fans will chant the name, diego. others weren't even born when he retired from football and i never saw him
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play an old video footage. can again, i mean that other houses that he can, as i believe that when you take into account where he came from, he took his ideals around the world. never forgot his convictions. that's what i like about myra donna, why i came here. he's in my heart, i don't know what else to tell you. or donna retired from playing football in 1997, already addicted to drugs and alcohol. he managed the number of clubs but was never, far from controversy over his health. his relationships with women and conflicts with the media. but he never stopped winning friends and admirers and a year after his death, the magic of madonna shows no sign of fading. and which one the al jazeera one osiris. egypt is unveiled an ancient walkway that dates back thousands of years . the path is located near the city of luck, saw and lay buried until its discovery. in the late 19 forties. it's been restored
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to its former glory after decades of back breaking work by archaeologists. cuttin up as not a young has more a glamorous ceremony to unveil egypt latest archaeological treasure. it's an ancient pathway call the avenue of sphinxes and dates back more than 3000 years. pilgrims, it's believed walked along the 3 kilometer promenade, mark, in a procession from the famous carnac temple to the nearby looks or temple built on it. then october. good luck. so deserves this, and mo, the city has the most important antiquities in the world. for centuries, this ancient track was buried under sand, but that changed in 1949, when an egyptian archaeologist discovered one of several statues for decades, morris with ations and renovations followed. ah, president abdel font,
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i'll cc who attended the ceremony is eager to revamp egypt, struggling tourism industry. it was hit hard by years of political turmoil. and the corona virus pandemic has made things worse. ah, it's been described as a largest open air museum in the world. now egypt hopes the countries of rich archaeological past will also play a role in the country's economic future. katya low missile young al jazeera. ah, i drive a picture of the headlines here on al jazeera bushes, sanchez saw describing a new cobit 19 variant identified in southern africa as the most concerning they've seen. yet. the u. k. health security agency says it has mutations that could make it spread, and in fact, people more easily south african side to say they've detected the bare and in small numbers of people so far cases. i've also.
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