tv [untitled] December 5, 2021 1:30am-2:01am AST
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slip says port complete darkness to antarctica. the i. c continent. usually experiences. continual daylight from around mid october until early april. but the eclipse for rare darkness, for a few minutes, for a total eclipse to take place the sun moon, and the earth must all be in a direct line. a partial eclipse could also be seen in other parts of the southern hemisphere. ah, in our reminder of the top stories on al jazeera, those who being counted in began b as presidential election. it's being seen as the past of the transition to democracy incumbent president obama barrow is seeking another term, but faces 5 rifles. i think the address is more now from the capital been june. the tunnel was really, really impressive. talk to our gumby importer. he will tell you that this election
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is very important and significant in many respect resources for somebody bought it . in course to clerk for 30 years with lots of freedom of choice, lots of freedom of expression. they were in fact fears of things going wrong during the completing period. nothing like that happened on election day. there are few incidents not violent incident anyway, but we are waiting to see exactly what happens to morrow when be election results, obstructive security forces, and molly have been sent to the scene of an ambush in which at least 31 people were killed on friday. women and children were aboard a truck which gunmen sprayed with bullets, and then set on fire near the town of maki. no one has claimed responsibility for the attack. friends present a manuel ma crawl is in saudi arabia where he is joined. the phone call that's been hailed as an important 1st step towards resolving a rift between saudi arabia and lebanon. a crime met crown prince ma. hm had been seldman and the leaders spoke with lebanon's prime minister. now g, but me, kathy,
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the world health organization says no, that's from the army. con variant of the corona virus have been reported so far. governments around the world are stepping up their inoculation efforts. and at least one person has died, a plus thousands have been injured in the erection of mount scenario, which is the tallest volcano. on the indonesian island of java, huge clouds of smoke and ash have covered areas in the east of a province. authorities are carrying out evacuation efforts with some people, reportedly trapped them, buildings, a major road and bridge connecting the island with nearby cities have been damaged . those are the top stories that stay with us. earth rise, learning to live together is coming up. next, more news in half an hour, but by oh, because she to says he will bring a new form of capitalism. what does this mean?
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we bring you the stories and developments for to rapidly changing the world. we live in less than one percent. a full vaccines have gone to poor countries. why is counting the cost on al jazeera ah, the relationship between humans and animals have always been one with elements of conflicts. but as the number of people on the planet continues to grow, it's becoming increasingly strange and unbalanced. with a wealth human population approaching an extraordinary 8000000000, sprawling settlements and activities are encroaching on animal habitats. more than ever. scientists estimate humans
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a driving species extinction at around $1000.00 times the natural rate largely due to habitat loss and climate change. we urgently need to find better ways to live together on a shad planets. i'm julie at pace and i'm here in brisbane australia to say how a team of scientists and volunteers a helping quality to survive the oven jungle. and i'm russell beard and bangladesh for the locals. the learning to coexist with tiger neighbor, wayne sand was one time to over 1000000 qualities, the way, the relentless pace of human expansion. the numbers have dropped by almost 80 percent since 1990. 1 of them, human population is still growing and a 1000 people away, and that number is only set to grow, putting for the precious on surrounding land line without immediate intervention while as with facing extinction. but a group of local residents and experts are trying to reverse this trend
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the lash land that hugs australia's east coast is one of the most desirable places for human settlement. but it's also prime koala habitat. as a result, increasing numbers of these marsupials are being forced to live within the city. john hanger is a wildlife fit and founding member of the qual, a research network. you brought me to this an area that i would have thought could possibly have wallace been so busy. why? why this area? this part really illustrates, i guess, in a really good, why of hell? the threats of urban kuala sufficing, like get killed on the roads because often like cross and knowing when the difficult to see and drive is just don't see them. so they'll often get killed on this road. in fact, the throat is saw really a hotspot on the desk in the area. certainly when they're good on the royal lawns, with a busy raw one with trains running every couple minutes are supposed to significant
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injury and death obviously. and so there's really a whole rhinoceros learned supposed to in this sort of in local experts like john a committed to protecting the koala before it's too late. but with a population scattered throughout the city, the 1st step to saving them is monitoring them. john and his team have been intensely studying a population in the modern bay region of prison. today they're tracking by radio, a pre tag, koala, named sonny with the guys are heading up the tree. now. would it be quiet to catch her capture koala? like and then check it out. the health check later on.
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a currently listed as under threat. if nothing is done, they could be extinct in less than 50 years. the seriousness of the situation isn't lost on some local residents who are trying to tackle habitat erosion. ah, ah, i wonder, i have a nice to really to what are you guys doing here today? i was just making sure this little as dyke had a marker in. so we know into water accounting quality trees here being a eucalyptus? yes. there are 200 spaces of co of, of euclid's in queens. then the quality is only 22. so we have be very specific about what we planned and why. how important is this work for the quality model? incredibly important because this area will never be clear for any sort of development. so we're surrounded, even though you can't see it with high density urban development. so if we can
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increase the carrying capacity of the site for a while, as it will encourage them to move it to here, which is much lighter for them. so now they just one co are like an 8 upwards of $500.00 leaves per day. moving from tree to tree. so they browse basically all because you can, it's a fairly nutrient pool energy wise, right? all right, so how many more trees if you'd like to do half your thing of 3 or 4? either the planting trees provides one solution for protecting the corolla. but as urban as asian continues, roads and railway lines will inevitably expand, putting these animals in harm's way. currently up to 300 coils killed by vehicles he h u, but amazing up with that, john again, he wants me to say an intervention which is making a difference at a railway line. so essentially a water drainage, calvin, but there are few additions. there's a post and rile to help the wildlife get off the ground. how do they know to use is
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called it all, i guess initially they don't know juliet by the familiar with the habitat as it was . and when we put these impacts in and change the landscape, they have to learn to use it. but the essential features really are that we, we put a koala prevents along the raw corridor and that ensures that they don't go on to the ro corridor and get killed. and if they do work their way along the fence, ultimately dalinda funding one or more of these culverts. and so with a bit of exploration now along elephant go through to get an idea of how effective they are, john and the team, and put up the notion sensitive cameras in this lucia range of wildlife using the codes including the counselors. so he is a tall and going into a group of talbot who explored talbot, but didn't go through it. and then we've got a group of kangaroos using a possum,
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another to all around a different tolben. and then tommy at the other sod. it's one of echo hollows helping, while as navigate the urban jungle is essential to boosting their numbers. but the most significant factor in ensuring their survival is disease prevention. here from i'm back at the clinic with sunny the captain comalla is ready for his checkout sunny excellence. that amy robins is about to give sunny a sedative. this is just a settle in, so he can get his injection here. waller and co author security thinking something about to happen, but he don't know yet. mm hm. oh god, what, good boy, what a brave little boy. i am checking yet and the color of the gums and making sure he's got good ah refill time, which is her sense of how good blood pressure is. and i have
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a look at the bladder lists. obviously, a big important thing for media. so it causes this start us, so that causes inflammation of the the blood war. why guess chlamydia has reached epidemic proportions amongst coil is in australia, agreement with over half the population infected. if left untreated, it can cause infertility, blindness, and dead wife than average kenway. his blood is looking pretty healthy there. sunny is in the clear, tell me about the significance of, you know, any testing for chlamydia and, and the most may project disease has been sharing that if you can control that one factor that you can actually turn around to calling populations. and so by going in there and during the treatment and the vaccination against committee, out of actually gonna turn that constellation around in on the dreams, of course. now nice phenomena would never have been cut a big significant project allows for 3 valuable scientifically. and i would kind of
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roll in my mind. he's waiting ela yet he's making on. and really before letting the koala recuperate, amy fits another, tried to cala she with it's now time for sunny to be released at john's study side. they've had some amazing with the fact i guess the weekend, not any my the individuals healthy, but the population is on a growth trajectory. now that was on quite a downward decline towards extinction. and so now we're, we're getting around a bit 20 percent right there on, on, which is just rounding, turn around. so maybe gratifying
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that why lou lou as a global population continues to grow cities as brawling father moreland as needed to grow food. more infrastructure is being built through fragile ecosystems. take roads, rampage, road building over the last century has divided the earth into 600000 fragments. over half of these are less than one square kilometer to small to support significant wildlife populations. with 25000000 kilometers of new road expected by
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2050. the struggle for animals to survive in the face of development will only get harder resolving these kinds of conservation conflicts as far from simple the solutions that work best around the world or the one where local people have the ownership of the process of finding the solution people need to be able to value the species that they are close to and by value, i mean perhaps culturally or spiritually. they want to have the species around. it requires inputs from all sorts of different areas of expertise. it's not a matter of just for biologist. we need social scientists, economists, people who will know how to work with poor communities. they all have to work together to figure out how to solve these conflicts. ah, just a century ago, there were thought to be over
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a $100000.00 tigers prowling ages swamps and jungles. but now numbers if declined by a staggering 98 percent. i'm heading to the sun, the been mangold forest in western bangladesh. is one of the last remaining havens for the bengal tiger. there's often conflict with local villages while so depend on the forest for survival of come to me, a network of volunteers and conservationists were coming together to try to stop the violence. save the tiger in the process. all right, bangladesh is population has doubled from 80 to a 160000000 in just 40 years, forcing humans into what was once exclusively to tigers, to ring out for me, then, i mean, you can feel the thought of are there over the positive for it right up against the budget. ah,
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here in mon law, just on the edge of the national park, there really do seem to be people everywhere. to talk to mentioned that this area is home to tigers, to. but it is, can us with the conflict comes a conservationist, my boob alarm runs tiger t. a network of volunteers dedicated to changing attitudes and reducing human tiger violence. how many targets do you have here in his underwent? we have one on the thief with the history gl got to about 2 to 3 tigers, killing by the local villagers every year. but the total population's estimate, it just around a $102.00 to $3.00, starts to sound like of a big number, but $30.00 to $50.00 human kill every year. and her. wow, aaron is a 15 year on for just a little number, 13 off the a year. this is not
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a little number. i mean like one a week. can you talk to us about that into face? like how are they coming into contact with people here and what's the result? insomnia diaz. ah, it's dawn. i have that my child. caesar geographical barrier in between forest and village is in that part of from the other one. ah, yeah, tiger that comes out on the folds into the building. ah, schuman tiger interaction here is fraught with violence and see it. ah, i'm on my way to a village, right on the frontier of a conflict. ah, so that it's the you can see there that such
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a been forest right there. and there's nothing between the how you have it and the human habitat. you can understand how scary it must be because everywhere you look is lifestyle. and they, they build these fences but it just made of those sticks. a light gauze here, many of not just seen tigers from a far if i direct encounters with the local fisherman as a story to tell can you talk to us a bit about your experience here with a tiger, with a monday for wasn't fully live. i think the one with oh wow, oh my goodness, i can see that little puncture marks with what was he thinking when you were on the ground? did you think? did you think you were going to die at that point of it?
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a shot that go together, so keep on. yes god lucy walter, but it was with so behind escaped with his life. but those who don't leave behind families to fend for themselves. i've been told around a 1000 women known as tiger widows in this region. i'm here to meet a lady called rita who lost her husband through a tiger attack 20 years ago. we know that the son, the been forrest, this is maybe just 100 yards away. and did you think of leaving us as a luck? and as i get it going up on that, i that, that, that, that, that, that, that is i will call that i been asking a, my dad's a name. a monday was a on that i'm a day i laid on monday. whatever.
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like many people here greeted praise to bon b b before entering the forest to collect wood or honey. she's agreed to take me to meet it. ah, so from the dishes, others in loosen country losing an indecent been pantheistic lit in any good particular god is here to protect the people against attacks from the tiger. but it seems to me that bobby's help might not be enough. the fact is that the tiger's habitat is shrinking while the humans is expanding, picking one against the other with disastrous results. as the predator at the top of the food chain, the tigers role in the sundance ecosystem is pivotal. if it becomes extinct. the
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whole system will collapse to prevent unnecessary killings. my boob and his team of pioneered an education program for local villages is aim is to change attitudes towards targets. i'm here in a community center, enjoying money, where the tiger scouts are having a lesson. and what to do when a tiger into starch, ha, ha, ha. ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. can, can i see how many people here have seen a tiger? my digital. oh, really? oh, and so why can you tell me, why is it important to come here and learn about saving the tires? why this is, it was, you know, as a back to so he won't even use the one that brand new thing with any kids in the
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system. what? oh it's amy said maybe no, he wasn't so in about an hour that a bargain media with that age mother back in back with our guys come on in. so what this is, the idea is that this is a pledge to say the tiger i guess. so we're not finding our name in blood book and some kind rather high pink eye, 5 feet high, fired. well done, guys doing good work outside the center, the community tiger response team of assembled toner, t, convince a bunch of people. there is a good idea to start taking a while target number one motivating factor for them to saving the tigers. because if they can save tiger from the world be saved and they're likely, would we be unsure if the, if i get my salary from, isn't it about it about because i'm running
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a lot better. this isn't the do. might the pledge here, let me see. and know you have some, elaine, great, let's go with this may look a little unorthodox, but tigers are naturally solitary hunters. only a turkey isolate to prey being surrounded by a group of chaotic orange colors, making strange noises. be enough to scare them away. and as long as there's an escape route, tiger will use it. that's amazing. and did you say there was 40 tigers that had been managed? he said, yeah, so as that basically 40 targets that you've ushered back into the, into the forest. and so if it wasn't, if it wasn't for you guys and doing what you're doing here and changing the kind of attitude, you think it's fair to say that those fourty tigers might be killed,
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might be killed. both might be killed by the water bill is yours. right. i so it looks like getting ready to move out. and i think the guys are going to go into a probably more of a training session with doesn't have to take his take is the case or a . 1 prison that that the looking in like with aberration. so if 10 years ago, a tiger came in here and he met you lot. would you have killed in 10 years
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and actually get on the last day again, but yeah, go to a cute girl and i did today from a project from us just to monitor monitor, monitor, hello, what's up, john? my, she didn't, i think i got it back down with them. but here, can you tell us about the 1st time that you did you taste of a target with the tea? the local a ticket from that would have to do that. one is how come with ballistic targeted while the much hard to do a lot of trouble of them on the bottom of my mobility buckets. it was very literally this lady with offense at the same for all you do you feel the same with somebody get you on the way. yeah. you know, just saying that because the cameras and thanks for taking me. i'll give you your stick back. i feel very safer and you guys don't go. thanks so much. thank you. thank you. oh, okay,
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listen. i feel safer with these guys are and even though we know there's wild tigers right there, but they're all positive about what they're doing. and you know, maybe if in future communities or other countries can follow their example, maybe there's hopeful natalia, thank you. as the tears guys is just is to even with a growing human population and shrinking wilderness, the are ways that people and wildlife can co exist in india, mobile phone technology is being used to warn workers of elephants passing through t plantations when that spotted and s m. s a lot is sent to everyone in the area preventing surprise encounters and in contest on local, see used to post snow leopard. now protect them in return for
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a lucrative business in snow. leopard friendly products. further encroachment is inevitable. but if communities can learn to live alongside the animal neighbors than it is possible to minimize the impact. ringback joined the debates, non exempt worlds, refugees have come from a common impacted country. the climate emergency is putting more pressure on services across the world and amplify your voice. it's not really the future 8. now, this is not our responsibility. if people log concrete is completed, we cannot lose hope. we know what to do and we have the tools to do to get the master bill or pay for the stream on al jazeera. from the al jazeera london broadcast center to people in thoughtful conversation, large cannot be easily erased by the superpower with no host and no
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limitations. what mattered in all to was to be radical. how can the thing that's radical be for sale? part one of the highway and a nice couple is not about wanting to sell a lot of the message in the studio b unscripted on al jazeera. weavers are trying out greasing land is shrinking, and some roots long used by wildlife for migration have been blocked by human settlements. to deal with all this, kenya needs more money for conservation. and with the koran of ours, pandemic keeping many visitors awake revenue from tours. im isn't enough here at the outset national park, an annual ceremony has been launched the whole pressure than individuals pay $5000.00 to name an elephant. the aim this year is to raise $1000000.00, much of it for conservation initiatives. informed
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opinion. there was a need for avi, our lead federal government take action to really facilitate aid to take right in depth analysis of the data global headlines inside story on al jazeera, ah, ah, the gambia counts votes costa's marbles after a presidential election seems attested democracy in the west african country. ah, hello, i'm adrian. and again, this is al 0 alive from doha, also coming up, visiting saudi arabia, the french president says that he'll work with gulf countries to resolve the diplomatic crisis with lebanon. south africa works the scale of vaccinations as the only common delta variance drive of.
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