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tv   [untitled]    December 2, 2021 7:30am-8:01am AST

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at the top of the grass and at the top of spectators. and this air is all the time recycle is not like i'm pulling air from 40 degrees c or 42 degrees c and push it back in the stadium. we're using the same air and call it and re quote it again. and at the same time, what was done is we looked at having the best computers, her control algorithms, and control. it's using sensory as well, in order to make sure that we're doing it as soon as possible. ah, and are you watching out his ear and these are the stories were following the sour south africa's daily corner virus cases have doubled more than 8500. most of the infections of thought to be from the only con variant. it's now been reported in at least 24 countries. the u. s. is among the latest. we knew that it was just
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a matter of time before the 1st case of armor crown would be detected in the united states. and as you know, we know i've been saying it and my colleagues on the medical team, another 7 saying we know what we need to do to protect people get vaccinated if you're not already vaccinated, get boosted if you've been vaccinated for more than 6 months with a name or a day, or 2 months with j and j, and all the other things we've been talking about, we're getting your children vaccinated. masking in indoor congregate settings. the women's tennis association has disbanded all its tournaments in china. the decision was made over consent for the welfare reform doubles, world number one ping pong that schwein. she had accused to form a vice premier of sexual assault it. abby t, i had said players and staff could face risks in china. the south korean and u. s. defense chiefs have met in sol to strengthen the decades along the military
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lines between both countries. making ames to count to china's growing assertiveness in the region and that north korea's nuclear threats. the european union has launched a $340000000000.00 game to rival china's belton road initiative. you're paying commission president. ursula under lions says it's a true alternative. it involves investment in digital technology, transport, and energy. both pro and anti abortion rights activists have been protesting at the u. s. supreme court. it's deciding whether to uphold em, mississippi law banning most terminations. after 15 awakes, it could lead to abortions becoming a legal once again in many states size. ah, the headlines, the news continues here on al jazeera after the stream and in the meantime, you can stay up to date at our website, out to 0 dot com, a mass pro democracy movement, violent crackdowns assassinations, and you imposed sanctions. all talk,
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dixon struggled with ensued from the 2020 bella rue soon presidential elections. that shook the country, self proclaimed dictators. seat of power. and now, new tactics, migrants, people in power investigates the humanitarian disaster unraveling on europe's borders and asks what's next in the battle for bella bruce on a j 03 i as i me ok today on the stream south see dance flood emergent, say hundreds of thousands of people up how it being impacted by the worst flood in 60 years. if i mentally assigned that this is caused by climate change, his, our desires harriman tasa, just reporting back in november from john glenn, one of the worst impacted states. take a look. this used to be
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a road until it disappeared under water mid last year. now the only way to get around it in this part of south saddam is my boats, and canoes is the worst flood this region is seen in 60 years. in this area, every home is abandoned, families had no choice, but to leave people like no al mcquaid who arrived here in july. her children an extended family. now sleep in this makeshift house. not sure if and when there will be able to go back home. film on catalina, my house is still under water. no, there are a lot of his neck sad ripped, i one on the places dealer, eva, it's no longer home. so how can i go back? joining us to be part of this conversation. we have joseph, we have more or we have near thorn. good to have all 3 with here with us. more a festival. introduce yourself. tell everybody who you are, what you do. hello everyone. my name is mara,
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jack. i own freelance journalist messenger over here to have me near san welcome to the stream. introduce yourself to our global audience. you hello everybody. my name is not on on mine. i'm a bolster research and analyst in the area of climate change and global entity in at the said institute. alice, always good to have a government voice in a conversation. we have joseph bartel. you see him, but you don't have the government voice quite yet. we are working on the audio. joseph is the under secretary for the ministry of environment and forestry, and he is coming to us from jibber south it down. we see him any moment now we will be out of here him as well. as far as you're concerned, if you're on you to please be part of this conversation, this is an under reported story, the flag crisis in south dan, put your comments or questions right here. we will get, i guess, to do the very best answer as many of your comments and questions as they can. let's start with a map here near thorn. i'm just looking at south sudan flooding the worst affected
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areas. we're looking at about 8 areas, 8 regions here, where would you take me? what would you show me? just to give us an indication of how that, how serious things. all right, now yes, i'm looking at the map and the worse we have are on as addition the money around and $6.00 to $7.00 counties that are currently under water. but the, the 3 most hid or area that are, that are currently, are impacted by, by flood is junk listed. unity stayed an up a night, or a flight in this area are much more intense than the other area in south sudan. so in this area is seen due to flight on community have been displaced from their current villages. as you see in they've lost their houses and they've lost their farm land and they have been forced to move to a higher grounds where they are currently living. there temporarily. oh,
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but when you look at it dumb being in that area, they're actually coming on. they're interacting with, with the hosp community. and here, looking at them at the house community, there have been a little bit of tension and conflict between ah, the displaced people and also the hoss community. also in where they have to space, have you seen, ah, they are, they're completely lost their livelihood. they left off without carrying anything with them there they have no food, their blood at this to our health services and here without anybody that is there to help them out it's, it's about life and death for, for, for business. basically more you sent us some pictures, i'm going to get his decent show and how with us. so i'm going to show you the pictures, you know the pictures, but also explain to audience what they are seeing. because when you took that people displays, you kind of have to see them and understand who they are. you can't just talk about them as if they're statistics. and you help connect us with this story. and that
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little report that we showed from her room, you of right there with her room making sure we were getting the right story and getting the facts right. who we seeing here? what is this family doing? where are they? is auto it, sir. uh, from ben to you unity state, i had a chance to go in october, october. no, those are 2 mothers are having malnourished children. and they were trying to, to seek help because they, they had displaced from a flooding area and they came all the way to bent you, which it was already started being flooded. and it's, and the tuition department within to your hospital. yeah, i want this picture. i mean, i see the mud, i see the water, but i can't quite work out what is going on here. actually we had a tour around in bent you with the governor and it was
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a water. they just broke. busy and by the time they were walking, and then it had broken completely well before i passed, or before i crossed the water lake. and those are just like on most our own laker, 7 men. they were trying to do it manually, are using only the eggs and then the. busy you can see now did the wood and the tree is they're trying to remove it from, from the ground down there and ask how many meters deep. and they told me it's like 2 meters deep. and they had to do it like with their bare hands. and there is no one to come for a hell. actually they were, they were with the female mia. they were trying to fix the water dogs to lock the flooding waters to submerge even a been to your site. yeah. one more picture here. and again, i'm trying to imagine how campus this water and how is this impacting everyday life . tell us what we're seeing here. this one from my last visit with the pedal,
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english theme and all fun. got it. so just by the. busy river site where people and they're just selling the fish, it's a fish market you will find on the fish. i need swear, all the fishermen household them. they're also sold. yes. they decided just to find the way for survivor and just to sell fish. and in to drive along did a beside over there. yeah. let me just bring it as of now that we've got all of our audio sorted out. chelsea, thank you for your patience on the secretary ministry of environment and for st. jude herself sedan. that is where joseph is coming to us from. this is your, this, this is what you do. this is where your job is focused on the environment for a strange land. making sure that that se, and succeeds as a country, as far as the environment policy is concerned. how waiting all year for floods of this scale. this is not the 1st one. this is the 3rd one in just a few. yes,
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joseph. yeah, truly. yeah. what's happening right now? oh, it was staging. i. oh, it's entry at the moment that frequency. what is what it inputs of climate change is really you give me another 3 years. and so as a government, do, honestly i wish i knew the building. right. you know, but it's a, it's not an issue or some other issue, other aggression matter on meeting or what is happening at the
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moment that he's out of management. and now it's a really bad agreement that people need to be held oh, mentally. but getting read though. okay, does he, i'm going to pause there for a moment because it's very difficult to hear you and understand the cell service that you have right now. it's really patchy so apologies for interrupting you. we will keep trying to come back to you, so we hear you loud and clear a meg marathon. i want to bring in a new voice into this conversation. and often when there's a disaster crisis, people are looking to the government for support for guidance. let me just bring in here one e, michael, when michael is looking to the government for help and support. and i'm wondering if that is the best approach here is if learning situation in sausalito
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newsletter because getting a thousands or people who. ready displays a showtime luggage lug basic necessities for life, including the situation israel or. ready was, or the c panel been attended to by the government wants to do is possible. they need to easily settlement with these people because some of them already stuck and it don't know where they should go to. the issue of course, is government coming on the bus upwards on how to deal with these issues or will fly lean plant climate change. that obviously i'm going to put this to a joseph as well as soon as we can get a clear life, a man beneath on is that asking too much of a very young country just celebrating its pens, anniversary?
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us not asking too much, and i think the role of the government is basically trying to look into the well being of their people, regardless how small or how new the country is. because this is the responsibility that has been trusted and entrusted on them. and they need to live on that. i know climate change, the global issue and saw that and being one of the least developed country and sasan as well. the country is facing a lot of political issues at the moment, but that doesn't take out from the responsibility of the government. considering that the actually putting 40 percent of our national of our budget on to into security sector. all we're asking is that take, even though it 10 we've been 20 percent of that and our channel that into rescue the people who are currently affected because you know, these communities are there and how they are or communities and they can stand alone without the help of the government, so i totally agree with our whining,
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michael, that government need to do even little things by just going ahead off the displace people go and talk to the crew, the hoss community. right. so that arrangement is done between the 2 communities to allow this communities to be able to, to just to settle. so it is the responsibility of the government area. i spoke to michael genius and his here on twitter. but i, i wanted to share the phrase that he told us on the stream. joseph, and who said this is a wakeup call for south st. dan that they really need to have a climate crisis policy in place. these are some pictures that he's on twitter, that who shad i'm you can see how disruptive these floods are to people's lives. joseph, wake up call for sarah. go ahead. as i said,
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be used to have to last but if frequency of being what if he's not affecting it because of climate change? b, as a government has come up around $10.00 to $1000000.00 as an emergency. i know that but now out of the 10 states, we have 7 states that are on the water. and as i said earlier, but i met change is the one causing all of these. and as the impact of climate change, we expect the international community to come up with us as a country adept the impact of climate change this last not for as a loan, but
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a lot of places like canada, new york at flags. but they have the capacity because they're economically well of us. and it is because of the clean gases that is developed country as emitted into the atmosphere. that's why we are currently experiencing the impacts of climate change. so government, yes, we are doing our past. but that day, but we wouldn't be able to help us. so we need emotional support in order to get funds, what us to adapt to be moved to hire an order. so who might recall it just said that people get out there like yes. so i think i totally
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agree with, you know, but at the same time, i think my concern here is that as much as thought that the government doesn't have capacity in terms of funding to be able to address aisha climate change. they need to be the one that i taking lead right, in terms of risk queuing, humanitarian crisis, because now and up on most of these is actually being done by humanitarian atkinson you an agency. so don, removing 1010000000. isn't it completely? nothing compared to where, what we know now of course we are getting, we mean resources from our oil and it just the fact that the problem yes on. that's and you need to know that our situation as a country we get it makes from super bowl depending on percent of me depends on oil and appraisal oil climate that's left us with nothing.
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so at the moment it is a crisis that we have not made. is that correct? is that a change from the influx of climate change? we have known that out of the i guess if you report to well, has one done. 3 by 1.2 degrees. and it is one of these guys, if you i know you are sharing a sack site, cold hard facts here it is well known the global south, the developing world has not created the most common emissions. it's the develop. well that has done so, but that is not where sampson's dad is. right now. you cannot keep quoting that fat to right. because it's a deal. you have maybe 4 states. you a couple weakens county underwater right now. so what is the adaptation? what is the mitigation? i think that is what the citizens are south. did that i would like to hear from you at this particular time near some pick up. go ahead. anyway, let me complete what i wanted to say. i completely understand that, of course,
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that what we are facing is it's not our duty right. we are basically it's brendan baker, climate change that has been awesome. but that doesn't necessarily mean that we're going to leave our house and expect outsiders to come and say that, ok, because we cost it. now we're coming in to come and solve your problem. of course, if we need to unify right, what i'm saying is we need a unified are on now. we have on now and we have our m, n a nissan. and joseph only, just because the quality of the audio between you too, does not allow a robust discussion without it being quite difficult to hear it. so i'm just going to put a pause on that for a moment. i want to go back to the reporting that mara helped her. i'm a tasa to do, and at this point i feel we go we, we make a full circle,
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round back to the people who are suffering in the flooding. what impact is it? having on them, and particularly when we're talking about food nutrition, how are they getting food? how are they farming his harrow matessa one more time malnutrition rates are increasing as flooding effects, food supplies, all animal that we depend on that global hello. hello. how is that under the water, little vegetable? also, we get the disease of lot, humanitarian aid has also been affected. this used to be our food distribution point where we were distributing for the 2 over 27000 people here in oregon duck with this upward from the world food program. but now because of the flooding, we are now unable to utilize this location. right now a help us out here. i'm getting lots of questions on you chip. you're the
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journalist in our conversation today. can you help me out with some of these questions? dominic wants to say, how about building a dam in a sewer? could that stop the issues of the flooding a practical solution? the issue, the issue is so there are no for media itself on how government also can chip in with media. and to is spread awareness about the floods, what is floods. and now what is climate change? people didn't know about that and they don't know even how to help themselves in terms of, by the time there would be like such situation now they are into and the other thing is there is no one managing that eva. busy yvonne i because we don't have bands, it's not been and it's just there. and that's why every year, like when we have a heavy rains that the water is just goes all the way to this one p areas. that's why people drowning regularly and all the areas like disappearing on their map
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itself. you see, and even the other areas that most of the areas that are affected, honestly, they don't have any network coverage. that's like how, how can they then understand or how can they get warnings about their there will be heavy rain this month or next week or tomorrow like that for instance, at so yeah then, and that's what they say. i'm going to give you another question. i give this question to you, nathan, and i've got another one for joseph as well to ben johnson. thank you. more about johnston, us. we need clear mitigation an adaptation policies and strategies because these plots keep coming every decade in south that south. it has only have one decade, so the flood or the other nissan, i'll set briefly and then i've got another question for joseph. yes. and does written, i think this is where my point is. i think of course, are we need to command the little government is doing under all the humanitarian
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classes doing, but we need to move away from just emergency risk reduction. we need to move into a mid term to long term our adaptation programs. and these, when i agree with our, with, with africa, not they have napa, these not perhaps incredible projects is, are long term projects that is talking about building dikes. it's about talking about building dams. that whole flat water. ah, and also charlie, a manmade channel, that can i should channel some of these water to some of the areas that are experiencing drugs. so we, we need to start thinking about just emergency. yes, we need to help the commute that are being affected. but this is not sustainable, we need to come up with sustainable means that we, we start or, you know, we start managing this and then as well, we need to put in policies. and i heard these not or is going to be converted into policy. this is good, but we have a lot of beautiful programming paper at the moment that need to be implemented. and
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i think is where the role of government they need to spearhead is and then mobilize all the resources and all the stakeholders to, to, to build this. and just to give an example currently actually, private sector have started doing something credible. and just week ago, there was a project i'm constructed by a r c, where they build a 180 kilometer di that is running all the way from board to malika. and these diag basically has started helping some of the community because is blocking some of the water, and these are some of the project we need to start seeing. so that this light issue is so going forward. joseph, this question for you briefly from russia con, you might have a good case for south, dan did not create climate change, but you're suffering from it. a shot us. what is the international community doing to serve south see dad as they are the main actors for global warming,
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tangible benefits funding help from the global nov. what are you getting? we're getting that who is in glasgow? it. hello, this is what we were promised when i'm with $1000000000.00. yeah. leave that in from any painting. and after now, dead developed countries. i have not realized that amount. they said they would be able to a, the debate, been anything. yes, government. we have all the strategies to add up input, why mitchie? and from on next year's budget, we are going to incorporate all of those strategies. and i was an hour and a b. c. require that out. $100000000.00 way. no, but i don't need to get them to flip
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a government, we'd be able to raise 20 and then i mean 80000000000 will be probably dimensional. they've been climate fine in addition to joseph. so if you're getting peanuts and sal sedan is on its own right, so you have another plan, correct? again, if you're getting p not sal sedan is going to be on its own, you have to work out your own resilience. how you're going to mitigate this climate crisis and also adapt for the future. and then mom it goes, it's not much so much as i mean with us. sweet. we are right at the end of the chef . i appreciate your, your patience with the audio audience. thank you more, i thank you nathan. thank you joseph. and we show you where you can find them here
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on my laptop. this is joseph on line. this is myra, and this is lost on the follow that you'll get the latest from south sudan and the fighting crisis as well. thanks for watching everybody. i see you next time. ah. the philippines, inspiring to restore, fight in vaccine. i think one equally denied and the wrong one i wanna investigate on out europe. this is al jazeera, it's november the 15th day, one of the new era and television news. if you have known that, that was the scale of bloodshed would you have still going to go to miss all landed about a 100 meters away from us. we're on the front line, but it's on the right time. we have a call that isn't on a very,
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really coming our way. i was just over here gag by the police. on purpose with 4 zeroes offices in garza, are housed in that building and the temper has come down. little before in human history has a months per steam environment. the arctic didn't such peril. they just said it's time for a different approach. one that is going to challenge the way you thing. we're ditching a sound bites and we're digging into the issue from international politics to the global pandemic and everything in between. join me if i take on the lars dismantle
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the misconceptions and debate the contradictions upfront with me. mark lamont hill on al jazeera. ah. ready us, i, dan devise its 1st case of all me crohn in a traveler from south africa. ah, hello, i am emily anguish. this is al jazeera live from doha. also coming up the women's tennis association, suspends all tournaments in china. i've been to send to play a punch y warnings of a worsening humanitarian crisis. the un says it will made over $40000000000.00 in aid next year. and the debate that's divided the u. s.
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3 is the supreme court. he's arguments on abortion one.

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