tv [untitled] December 15, 2021 12:30am-1:01am AST
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to nations watching al jazeera life from london much more still ahead. a post mortem on an nfl player who's shot dead 6 people in april is found. he had a brain disease linked to concussion sustained on the field. santa will have that story in sports. ah. a warm serge of air. hello everyone. that's for the united kingdom in to the low countries central portions of europe as well. we've got a bit more thicker cloud cover there. so that's put in a bit of a cap on those temperatures. but enjoy it while you can. here's the 3 day forecast for london. this temperature is fall to below average. by the time we had towards the end of the week, want to take you where most of the action is right now. round the g and the eastern met a lot of activity here. really soggy weather pattern is wall,
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so is stumble is going to be locked into this rainy pattern for the next few days. wendy on wednesday could see those gus, but 40 to 50 kilometers per hour, was found. we go, things are fairly column across the balkans. italy temperature is a bit lower here belgrade, just a high of 2 degrees, and we have that activity around those eastern shores of the black sea. next stop, iberia and things are drying out nicely here across northern areas of spain, the southwest to france, where we have seen as some pretty extreme flooding. a high of 15 degrees in lisbon . on wednesday, we're going to in this weather report in north africa. right now we're in a stretching all the way from l jurors right through to cairo. temperature is our below average, and we got that winds coming off the mediterranean. so that's limiting your temperature, that sure weather up the seal later. ah, if america held up a mirror to itself, what would it see in a sense race is the story of america. what's working and what's not. a lot of
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people are only talking about that. it wasn't at the top of the agenda if america can handle multiple challenges on multiple fronts, we need to go back to school. the bottom line on al jazeera award winning documentary is from around the world. on al jazeera inculcated culture of knowledge, openness and pluralism. world wide eyed to reward merits and excellence and encourage creativity. the shape, tomato, ward for translation and international understanding was found to promote translation and honor translators, and acknowledged the road and strengthening the bonds of friendship and co operation between arab islamic and wild coaches. lou lou
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ah watching the news ally from london, our main stories now. well, the elf organisation is criticised wealthy nations offering vaccine boosters to their citizens while millions of people around the world a yet to have their 1st dose. the husband of the exiled barrage in opposition titusville on a chicken of sky or has been sentenced to 18 years in prison or hate to canoe ski was found guilty of organizing mass on rest and inciting, social hatred. governor of the or state of kentucky says it could take a week to know exactly how many people were killed off to friday's tornadoes. so far east 88 people are known to have died. now malta is become
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the 1st european country to allow limited cultivation and possession of cannabis for personal use. following a vote in parliament, the law allows adults to possess up to 7 grams of cannabis and grow up to 4 plants . smoking cannabis in public or main against the law. and there are fines of up to around $600.00 if anyone's court consuming the drug in front of the child. the legislation back by the prime minister's labor party faced fears, criticism from the center. right opposition. medical associations and the church we're talking the now is i'm been ichi, the member of multis parliament. he promoted the bill. he is also the countries minister for equality research and innovation. he joins us from very act. are you at all concerned about your perhaps the perception that the government might be encouraging the use of recreational drugs were what we did,
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it was a measure of harm reduction in the response to the realities we have around us. you know, we meet people all the time and up critically criminalized because they make it personal use of it. and we decided that we have to stop. this criminalization of people who are not criminals, but us well of that all choice design decide to make, use. busy of candidates, of course as a government. busy we incentivize, and we tell people to make healthier choices. but if an adult decides to make use of canup is for his own personal use, then we should be provided with a safe and the regular a route from where he can or she can obtain the can. that is, i think that goes far into providing dignity and the better future for people who until low are criminalizes day after day. can i ask how wide spread the use of
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cannabis in your country? in the honesty, it's very hard to have an actual figure because cannabis use is a criminal offense right now. it has been marginally de penalized in. ready 2015, but by and large it is a very serious offense to grow plus at home or to have a number of grams in your possession. so people simply refuse to answer when asked whether they make use of or not. but we know for a fact that the union is quite widespread, and we believe that the best way for us to take it this issue is not by criminalizing people who usually lead a very respectful life. they have good jobs, they, they, they contribute to society. but instead of criminalizing them, we should offer them a context of harm reduction, where we provide a safe and rigorous route from the,
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from where they can obtain to can. and when you speak about the people that might be functioning in society and as a responsible citizens in jobs, but also thinking bit of kind of best at home at when you think criminalizing them, you mean, i mean how, how are they? i mean, are they penalized at the moment or do they just they're getting ready to carry on whatever they're doing and the privacy of their own homes. right. so and the ford dealer was changed the people were criminal because of 2 main reasons for the whole . and what they were doing, it is against the law that you have perfectly reasonable law abiding citizens will simply do not want to break the law, but they have no other choice but to break the law. and they commit to the legality . and secondly, wet and this is the worst part, and we are sending people to the black markets talking a novice illegally. so the war against drugs in reality has ended up being
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a warrant against people making use of cannabis against people, them sex. and so you end up with stories of people who are successful in their lives. whoa, get arranged to court because they had, i don't know, 6 grams of kind of the sort of 3 plants at home. and they end up with, with, with a prison centers on the, on the, on the documentation which ends up harming their future prospects. not only at work but also in their families and to had to put a stop to this. and the best way, how to put a stop to this is by creating this safe and regularize the environment which i mentioned before. and i believe that this measure of harm reduction will be, will be a fruitful exercise. also, because we're going to create an authority which will regulate and what kinds really thing of that regulation. i just ask you, what is the quantity of kind of best like on the black market?
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well, i'm told that you know, that you had worst case of people going to buy a can notice in the black market and they get up with synthetic chemicals, which is very, very hard. and sometimes you have traffickers who told people listen, i don't, that's kind of this. why don't you buy something? yes. and we have cases of people who are younger than 18 years old. go to buy kind of this from drug trafficker, drug trafficker doesn't get the age of that person and he ends up giving either campus or other drugs to those miners. this s, as with the reform we are doing, this will stop. thank you very much minister for quality research and innovation, and bonnie g joining us there from from walter's parliament. thank you. thank you so much. now to reco temperatures have been reported in the arctic circle in more
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worrying evidence of climate change. first was the horses. they ever known there with 38 degrees celsius, recorded in a rush in town, in june last year. that's 18 degrees higher than the monthly average was followed by the warmest ever arctic autumn. us. scientists have also reported the 1st ever rainfall at summit station high on the greenland ice sheet, where it's so called the precipitation usually falls, only a snow. the amount of thick sea ice which helps regulate sea and air temperatures was the 2nd lowest since records began. signed to say a growing population of beavers could be a problem because building dams can help for permafrost, although would zel k as an environmental professor, an author, and also the founder and president of the institute for governance and sustainable development. he says, this is a problem for the whole world. what happens in the arctic does not stay in the arctic. there are tele connections from that part of the world throughout the global weather system. and the arctic is right now losing its reflective sea
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ice. and that is adding a tremendous amount of additional solar radiation to the global weather system. when we lose the rest of that c eyes, which is a great white shield reflecting heat back into safe and the space safely, we'll add the equivalent of 25 years worth of warming. and that will destabilize the entire global systems. concerns about possible russian invasion of ukraine haven't gone away, but water supply could be the next flash point between the 2 countries. for decades, north crimea canal and southern ukraine supply crimea with more than 80 percent of its water. but that stopped in 2014 after russia onyx the peninsula. that means the region is now facing a di, a water shortage made worse by an influx of troops. and as charles stratford
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reports from colon, chuck, ukraine says the tops will only be opened when russia leaves. bland is flat, and bleak, as you look towards crimea. the peninsula onyx by russia in 2014. this is ukrainian government control territory. villages are now almost deserted. nearby is the north crimea canal, which used to be the peninsulas, main source of water. when russian forces invaded activists built a sandbag dam to try and stop the water flow and force the russians out. ukrainian government then built this dam closer to russian control territory before russia antics crimea in 2014. this canal provided up to 85 percent of the peninsula as water needs. as you can see now, it's virtually empty. ukraine says it will only release the water when russia's occupation ends. a russian military post is visible on the horizon less than
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a kilometer away. moscow is transporting water from mainland russia over the coach, straight bridge, and digging wells. but rationing has reportedly got worse since the arrival of tens of thousands of additional russian troops in recent months. on the sphere, the russian army may be planning to push nor to take control of the canals, pulse of the denise river. the canal is hugely important to crimea. it boggles the mind to think that the russians, when they illegally annexed crimea, they didn't think about how they would service the territory, especially with water putin's main objective. and if he were to go for another line, grab would be to create that land bridge between russia and crimea, because it is so difficult to service the territory without that land access. and that, of course, would mean, for example, taking over key port cities like commodity all poll. so that's
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a huge strategic land, grub, crumbling signposts, or reminder of life before the collapse of the soviet union is past soviet built industrial plant is in russian controlled territory. many ukrainians used to work there, but left when the russian military arrived 70 year old revolved as relatives on the peninsula. she hasn't seen them for 6 years. it is literally cooked over delivered asa as a war can separate a child from its mother. it can be so difficult to cross to crimea, the young but jobless on this side because he can't work at the plant anymore. my deceased husband was there, my son worked there, we could afford neath and decent fuller. all the changed when the crimea was closed . the kremlin denies its planning to invade the ukrainian mainland, but securing water. if a crime is estimated, 2400000 people,
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the majority of whom are russian means that may change, shall stop at al jazeera colon shook suddenly cried. all the century out of british troops stole that treasure. people of nigeria is benign, city have a reason to celebrate 2 works of art, none as benign bronzes are heading home and they've received a royal welcome. under chappelle hassle with signing on behalf of his people, the traditional ruler of the kingdom of beneath puts pen to paper to write a historic wow. ah, you know, with this model which we removed from his brothers in nigeria as president mohammed bihari has issued a directive to his government. oh ah,
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a bronze cochroll and a king's bust. the 2 works of art whose return is being celebrated. they once decorated beneath palace commissioned by ancient kings to remember their predecessors. the city was attacked and the palace ransacked in 18. 97. the king had refused to recognise britons claim on west africa, while 2 items are being returned. 900 pieces remain in the british museum in london, and the people have been in city or waiting for their return. andrew chappelle al jazeera, coming out this news al, we've got all your sports with santa thank you, mary. i'm yes, so we're live from our, our cup studio here in bo, how we'll have the latest from the tournament. and it's an $80000000.00 settlement that has been reached between the victims opened, disgraced at a former dr. larry nasa and usa domestics
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whole lou for well, that will cover to own the p 5 called the tournament a doubling up as a may don't warm up event 40 cal woke up next year on a home with glen to full news for you including a $380000000.00 settlement as the increase between vixen self disgrace, the former dr. allowing a saw and usa gymnastics. and wal, mad to say knighthood plays our stock at home with the bid to extend their lead at
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the top of the criminal. one of the most high profile sexual assault cases in sports have come to a close. us gymnast fix has agreed to pay $380000000.00 to victims of a disgrace to a format team. dr. larry nasa. leah harding hassle 1st housed here through gymnast train their entire lives to make it to the olympics. that's a champion right there. now, many american champions say they will spend the rest of bears recovering from the sexual abuse they endured to get there and no longer a victim. i'm a survivor usa gymnastics, and the u. s. olympics committee have agreed to pay $380000000.00 to victims of former gymnastics team. dr. larry nasser reform. in september, many of the sports most high profile gymnast testified to a senate committee saying the sports organizing body and the f. b. i didn't do
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enough to protect them. they asked if he used gloves. i said no, he never did. they asked of this treatment ever helped me? i said no, it never did. this treatment was a 100 percent abuse and never gave me any relief. i then told the f b i about tokyo, the day he gave me a sleeping pill for the plane ride to then work on me later that night. that evening i was naked, completely alone with him on top of me, molesting me for hours. not a problem, some o miles olympic champion simone biles, is the last of nascar's victims to still be competing for that. this mout hosting, i don't mean to pry, but it's, it's, it's hard coming here for an organization in having them fill those so many times. and we know we had one gold, we've done everything that they asked us for even when we didn't want to. and they couldn't do one damn job. you had one job, you literally had one job,
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any protector. and it is really sad because now every time i go to the doctor or training i get worked on, it's like, i don't want to get worked on in a statement. the president of the sports organizing body said usa gymnastics is deeply sorry for the trauma and pain that survivors have endured as a result of this organizations, actions, and inactions. ah, while these athletes are known for defying gravity, they've also been praised for flying high. despite efforts to bring them down, we are hurting al jazeera post mortem on former nfl player. phillip adams has found that he had a chronic, a brain disease when he shot dead 6 people in april. this year. adam's brain was donated for research. and on tuesday, the doctor said that he had stage 2, c t. e. when he died, it's common among fell plays,
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who suffer or passive head trauma on the field, and can lead to paranoia aggression. and although before this, before the san francisco 49 is going back, killed himself a day after the shooting. in south carolina, on april the 7th back 1st stop and car may have been good enough to beat to its hamilton to the formula one wall championship. but his body almost let him down. there happened one, his 1st ever war title after his fresh ties allowed him to get past hamilton in controversial circumstances. that's been says that he had to battle terrible crime as well as the brit. so i was of course, fighting him in defending, and i just felt like my muscle just like dancing together, coming together and it almost became like penance. ball, you know, it was like, it was terrible. it's like the worst experience you can have in terms of, you know, your call muscle, just dying on you. english by the league is facing
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a record number of coven 19 cases. 42 plays and staff half tested positive in the past week. 90 to cities, matched against leads, went ahead on tuesday while the rivals man united had to cancel their game ad rented city went one mill up to phil photon and they couldn't stop scoring kevin to burn with this 5th. a goal here. it's coming up to full time and manchester and it's 7 mill. ah. so close to half a 1000000 tickets have been sold at the fi fi, our cub katara is hosting the torment. as the country steps up, its preparations for next years will come on wednesday. cut up lay algeria in the semi final elia we spoke to a former scotland strike a anti grey. he told
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a far as smell that he's decade and cut off. had told him a lot about the football culture. well, the 1st thing is that a lot of people who don't level no cutoff thought i said hasn't got football culture in or they seem to forget that that q effie foundation association was formed in 1960 had been playing football. well, can i fit well here for over 60 years? so that in itself is as is enough to say. and i think i agree with everyone who said that every region in the world should be entitled to course the will come. and this will be the 1st woke up in the out of region as deserving of one in facility. so my commission is going to be an unbelievable woke up for footballers. i hope the funds make it equally as good, but i think it's a football when you're coming to cats after woke up, you read for something special and they will find that we could saudi people here of justice passionate about the football. sometimes even morsel that anyone, anybody else of the woke and what about the team that has her football team? how do you think they'll do what the walk?
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i think they'll do well. i mean, i've been really impressed. i have to say because 2 years ago or watched them when the asian cup and it was fantastic atmosphere in the city was, was just amazing. and i was able to watch the games. sadly, because i be doing premier league during data cup. i've not been able to see much of the guys, but that in this every fatal play against algeria, that will be tough. a really tough game and, and algeria will be the tough say the played so far, but they've got some really good players. and then when he doesn't know about, it gets out, he won't get a surprise. i think that she a, because i think the come in with confidence going to play and the confederations captain america, and then playing all these friends in europe as i've been doing over the last couple of years or so, i think will give the guys great experience and a psych covenant to the woke up there be absolutely ready for it. now you just missed out on me. don't know. well during your career and you are a scotland team, i'm are playing are in a playoff against the ukraine. do you think they'll get through? i think we can beat you clean without home and,
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and i think we can beat them. i think the atmosphere at hand and will be absolutely sensational. i'm. i'm pretty, i'm, i'm hoping my fingers crossed everything. scores matter. we have enough ability to get through and what a long overdue coming back to look up 1990. alas, woke up my country was, was an as far too long for a country like scotland not to be in the world. i have a teams that have already qualified. who are you most excited valley? oh, you know that isn't, i don't think i understand the national site. there's some really good national sites and i think as about 8 will probably feel we can win it. you know, the big boys in, you know, actually germany, england will think france, belgium, you know, but the, know, standing you and then you have to throw in argentina, brazil, countries like that. and then you think, wow, who is outstanding will no one is really outstanding. so i think what we're going to get next year as an unbelievably competitive woke up and i really could threw up an unusual, went out and hope it does. sasha, where it says, announced his retirement from the game. the striker joined barcelona this year
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after 10 seasons with manchester city. the 33 year old a has struggled with injuries and health problems. a girl was taken to hospital in october off to experiencing chest pains. but linelle myth is still going strong. an artist in his home ton of rosario has celebrated messes korea with a 69 and mito mural on the side of an apartment building. messy, played junior football for niels old boys, a club based in the city. and that's always what for now i had you back to my am in london. thanks very much santa let's it was and he's out but much more coming up in a couple of minutes time. i'll have a full but i send for you because hes also our website out there a dot com and get the latest on all of our top stories and comment analysis that takes you behind the headlines as well. and i bring you all the latest on that to headline story, of course, the sprite of the, on the chrome very,
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to political developments here in the u. k. i for now. ah ah and with the latest news, as it breaks, governments in the region are using security forces to clamp down on protests instead of protecting their countries against armed attacks with detailed coverage in the absence of any hard data on how widespread overland, velma covariances, scientists are urging caution from around the world. political observers argue his government has letty dismantling of democratic institutions.
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a move in hebron boys breathe and fly pigeons. but in this occupied palestinian city boys are also closely watched by really forces at times shot on and often arrested. a delicately told tale filmed over 5 years of a coming of age in a place where even a child's imagination is heavily restricted for the skies above hebron. a witness documentary on a chest 0. in the next episode of fries nick kong joined 3 pieces on a voyage through the widow sea to highlights the importance of protecting these fragile antarctic ecosystem against an expanding list of manmade threats. beneath the surface of this magnificent desolation is just tv with life. reason, so the remote is water and salt, tick sanctuary, or now to
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a 0. a diverse range of stories from across the globe. from the perspective of and networks journalists on al jazeera. ah, if we end in equity, we end the pandemic. global. healthily does take aim of wealthy nations vaccinating people for a 3rd time while all me call on the con spreads and millions left without that fuss jap. ah, i'm mariam. noisy in london watching al jazeera, also coming up on the program. i feel devastated by it. doesn't mean that i'm going to cry the whole day long.
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