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tv   News  Al Jazeera  May 20, 2022 12:00pm-12:31pm AST

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the longer that you fight them, the more that things changed studio be unspent take on al jazeera, used from al jazeera on the go and me tonight, out is there is only a mobile app. is that the you, this is where we dissects analyze and you have to find what's going on. i guess i feel that from algae, there is a mobile app available in your favorite app to get that for it and tap though made and you app him out of even need at you think of it. ah, a video shows the moments before al jazeera journalist showing a barclay was killed by israeli forces. ah,
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hello, i'm adrian again. this is al jazeera alive from dough home, also coming up ukraine's president followed him as zalinski says, the wash is offensive, has turned the east and don't bass region into hell. joe biden arrives in south korea on his 1st asia trip, as you, as president, looking to sell a new china strategy at his election. campaigning ends in australia, a rule change allows people with coven 19 to phone in the vote. ah, more than a week cultural colleague, selena barclay was killed by his worthy forces in the occupied west bank. new video is corroborating eye witness accounts. l 0 has obtained footed showing the last moments before sharon was shot in the head. it also shows there was no fighting at the time of that gun shots came from a position where israeli soldiers was stationed.
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oh people are seen fleeing to the opposite side of the street towards an area where it's really officials originally claimed that the shooting came from her. oh wow. i missed it. oh oh oh oh. 7 i live alagood double here, which i did on my god. the mobile phone video was taken by journalist who survived the attack much ahead. al sadi had accompanied shaheen on a simon that day and jeanine. he went back to the area and retraced our steps. mckesson ahem! said the cock woman to mother diana. we, i took a dorm from here. we began to walk towards the location where a colleague sharon was murdered as we continued to walk naturally and quietly. we
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stood here at this spot and myself and my colleagues woke up. no, no, it's m m. i know was what i know. did you stand in front of them? so the see you the tub? who? michelle, how doing? oh, yes, of course we did. they originally saw us coming from the beginning of the street and we stopped right here. we wore helmets and bulletproof precipice, and we also made sure to, we're here to all safety standard. my, my camera was with me and i put it here to record what was happening on the street and with the presence of the occupation forces. after a few seconds the shooting started today, and the 1st bullet hit this building. and i told my colleagues that they were shooting at us, being journalists or something we have to protect ourselves, had the thought, then been up. but well, where you exactly. when the 1st bullet was fired, we were in this spot will be now ukraine's president followed him as landscape says, washing forces of turn, don bass into
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a living hell. almost 3 months after invading washer is focusing its campaign in the east and south. this includes don bass and industrial hot land where moscow's supported separatist for years. so lensky says the region is now destroyed allen and on bicycle bunting. them in, don bash, the occupiers i trying to exert even more pressure. it's hel, dairy beads. and it's not an exaggeration. now look at the brutal and absolutely says this bombardment of several don yeske is out. there were 12 kill and dozens wounded in just one day. one was a deliberate and criminal attempt not to kill as many greens as possible. cisco are officers as a bag is in bad mood in eastern ukraine. they're not searching for survivors anymore. it's a search for the dead, 3 bodies or somewhere underneath this concrete to record. we're told a 2 year old boy was killed in this russian air strike. although allan is your
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favor, there's at least 3 bodies still under the rubble including kids. shirley makes her work very complicated. even the center of town was hit a fun. it's very difficult to work in such conditions. under the sound of constant artillery fire, they continue to work. the shock waves from the nearby artillery and rockets shake the already fragile building the crew for window. when it happened, the man covered the boy with his body. the child was in very bad condition. the head was injured, the older guy died. other people who was sitting on a bench had time to get into the basement, so they survived no fiddle with what we've just buried. my friend, he was 43 years old. we've just come from the cemetery and to morrow we bury members of my family is all this town of 70000 has in most of the population leave in the east the russian military have been gaining ground. no way in voc mode is safe and many people have become desensitized to the constant sound of artillery
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and shall fire. but unlike other lives cities, the emergency services here are really struggling to deal with the destruction and casualties as a result of this war. another strike on a residential building in the early hours of the morning, a missile hit directly in front of her ripping through the apartments. the mayor has told residents to evacuate. now they're in a rush to leave. scary and terrible. this woman says those that remain have a choice. evacuate from the town, or hope to survive the russian military onslaught. i said bag, i'll dedira bohaman dozens of ukrainian soldiers who defended the as of style still works and mario paul have arrived at a former penal colony in the russian controlled parts of dawn. asked 6 buses carrying the fighters left the port city late on thursday. russia says,
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but more than $1700.00 soldiers of the as of south steel plotted maria paul to have surrendered since monday. they held out against russian forces for nearly 3 months in the port city. joe biden was arrived in south korea to begin his 1st asia trip. as you, as president, your work to reassure allies about countering china's influence in the region and discuss deterrence is against north korea. but president biden also has domestic crushes on his mind. he'll visit a chip producing factory working to address a semiconductor shortage. that's helped fuel inflation lucko life that of soul. and to al jazeera is florence louis who is there for us for it took us through the significance of this visit while this is president biden's, 1st trip to asia since becoming president. and he's visiting south korea and then japan later on. now these countries are already firm allies of the us,
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but his visit is intended to strengthen these ties even further. and we could see that take the form of new business and technology deals and possibly an upgrade of existing security partnerships. that's important to note that just a week earlier, you as president biden hosted a, meet a summit with southeast asian leaders in the u. s. and analysts say that was part of an effort to prevent china's dominance in the in the pacific region. so these meetings taken together and is a signal that the u. s. puts this region as a top priority, and it also still sees china as a strategic challenge. and this message that you as wants to send with these visits really is to show its friends and its allies and also to china that the u. s. considers this region as important and that it's committed to this region and it wants the region to remain free and open. these are points. we've heard the biden administration make from time to time and he's 3rd started, his visit in south korea. and what does he hoping specifically to achieve their
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well dean utilization is going to be, i think, on the agenda as well. especially given that we've got reports that north korea could be planning a 7th nuclear test. so that's going to be something that he wants to discuss, or he'll be discussing with south korean precedent. but it's significant that his 1st visit will be to a samsung chip making plant. and you know, we've seen a global shortage of computer chips and these computed ships are needed in almost very many things in this digital age. and the shortage in ships supply has hampered availability of electronic appliances and vehicles. and that in turn has contributed to inflation. so what the u. s. president wants to do in hopes to the point he hopes to make is also he wants to be making a point that the u. s. needs to prevent these issues in supply chain disruption in
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the future. he wants to make a point that the u. s. ought to pass legislation that will help the u. s. boasted chip production in the u. s. and this will help insulated from future supply chain problems. and this plan that he's going to be touring, is expected to be a model for a plant that some so is planning to build in the u. s. now it's not just a wind for the u. s. it's also going to be a wind for south korea. it's already an important player in the chip making industry, but obviously it once a bigger market share and tie up smith in the us more plants more output could help it achieve fact. i'll 0 corollary reporting live over him. so many folks did to florence. will president biden's host unit? so y'all has only been the job for a week, but he's already up ended a long running tradition as rob mcbride reports now from so for the 1st time, large 2 groups of south koreans allowed into the blue house to see where all their
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presidents have lived and worked until now on the on hungry could not hung on them . there will be people for and against it. but as i come to see for myself, the compound is very spacious. as the official presidential residents, it's always had the tightest security. don't you know what to do? now, cameras are welcome in what is historically the heart of soul? this part of soul has traditionally been the seat of government. the blue house is located right next to a young book, palace home 2 generations of korean kings. moving the presidential office from here, i pens 600 years of tradition and causes major upheaval in the way the city works. that upheaval put off previous presidents from even attempting it, but not newcomer. you'd secure home in the care pre turner dimension. you're considering the inconvenience to the people and complete return of the blue house. i thought it would be right to make a prompt decision. it's not been easy. yoon moved his office to the defense
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ministry building in the far more congested young san area of the city and took over the official residence of the foreign minister to live in provoking widespread public criticism. it meant at the time of his inauguration, he had the lowest approval rating of any new president. but a week they say is a long time in politics. the congestion from presidential motorcade has not been as bad as residents feared. and some people near the new office even say it's good for business along what's wrong, while many more people from out of the town will come here and ill be good for the neighborhood. and there's a sense the blue house now belongs not to one incumbent president, but to all, even though it really feels like this large piece of land returns to the people out to get women on. i think the president is putting an end to authoritarian practices
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. there's never been anything like a civil right at the start of his term. you may have just found one of his 1st controversial decisions has already earned him a small place in history. rob mcbride al jazeera, so in the news i had already swamped at it, could get worse, the flooding effecting hundreds of thousands of people in india plus from russia with love. why not? everyone's son added with tchaikovsky. his wife at the cannes film festival. ah hello. the monsoon raised now re showing their hands across sir myanmar process of impass of indo china. it's a lot of cloud to showing up if we have seen some very heavy right. just pushing our pin to man, mark in excess of a $140.00 millimeters of rain here in 24 hours. there's that wet weather then and
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that's going to gather as we go on through the coming day. quite a rush of showers there. the seasonal range caused march of indo china as they should be. pretty wet weather there too into the philippines. the heat of the day downpours but we have got some quiet weather united just around southern part them lay peninsula into sumatra lively showers. there they are set to continue across sir parts of indonesia, a java seeing some wet weather for tom and a good spread of showers. then as we go on through sunday, still got some showers given cause for concern across eastern parts of australia. can see this area clouds. the lurking here are mass drawing and on shore breeze in into southeastern parts of queensland as well. and notice that cycling gina, that's very close to new caledonia that will bring some heavy rain in here. those showers just around eastern queenslanders. it go through saturday. these 2 systems do actually gather together. they will pull away on places, say we got some quiet weather coming to east in queensland. it has wetter,
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new sealant, a deadly hope that was eliminated from most of australia decades ago is killing young women in the most indigenous community. one of one. investigate on the algae there. frank assessments, what are the political risks banning russian or the gas for western leaders pull sanctions on russian energy exports. that's a recipe for social in depth analysis of the days headlines inside story on al jazeera. oh, the me.
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hello again. this is l 0. let's remind you of the main news this up here is obtained footage, showing that there was no fighting assigned that our colleague sherry and actually was killed by israeli forces in the occupied westbank. it also shows that gunshots came from a position, whereas really patrols was stationed. the israeli military says it's not opening a criminal investigation into her depth. ukraine. the president says the eastern don't pass region has been destroyed by russian forces describing it as hell. moscow shifted most of its focus to eastern and southern ukraine. job by miss arrived in south korea to get his 1st age of trip as us president. it was to reassure allies about countering china is influencing the region and discussed appearances against north korea. john henry tells us, born about president biden's asia trip and what we might expect from his china strategy for president joe biden, long distracted by global crises,
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is now turning his attention eastward to asia with a global pandemic in the war. and ukraine still raging. the us president embarks on his 1st trip to the region as president considerably later in his term than expected. he begins in sol in a show of solidarity with allies working to counter the regional dominance of china . the biden administration is not very different from the trumpet, administration and policy toward china. the rhetoric may not be as confrontational, but the policies have remain in the threats from china. both military and economic also remain the same. the u. s. government viewing channel like biden's has been evolving ever since president richard nixon made a visit there in 1970, to bite him who visited china as senator in 2001. and as vice president in 2011 has gone from seeing it as a partner to be liberalized through trade, to a sharp elbow, rival, china has an overall goal,
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and i don't criticize it for the goal, but they have an overall goal to become the leading country in the world, the wealthiest country in the world and the most powerful country, the world. as not going to happen on my watch, you very much, president trump spoke more fondly about wage the bitter trade war against the better my relationship with president. she is an extraordinary one. he's for china up to the us. but other than that, we love each other in so bite and will also press to work out the kinks in the global supply chain and work on north korea. the goal we're name which is in your past, and that is the team is here is ation of the so it's not going to happen then by traveling to tokyo for a meeting of the quadra lateral security dialogue, australia, india, japan, in the us focused on trade security, he's expected to emphasize that the region remains
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a top us priority. were committed to a future where the rules and norms that have made possible so much growth and prosperity and stability and pacific are upheld and strengthen us. a priority. the white house says, despite the war in pandemic that if consumed much of his presidency, john hindered al jazeera. heavy rain flooding of landslides are affecting the lives of 700000 people in northeastern india and farm stays at least 10 people have died of latest downpours. farmers say that most of the crops are gone. more rain is full cost and is expected to slow rescue efforts. i'll just here as probably the towel is in some who's our district is one of the worst affected districts. and what you can see behind me is basically patty fields that are now completely submerged in water. we're told that the situation is marginally better from a couple of days ago. so i don't know if it contin and that's a military boat that has been carrying relief,
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material back and forth. people are being rescued. they're also trying to retrieve dead bodies on the same time it's been really challenging because you know, this is a rural area on the developed of most people who are a pharmacy. they're not very well off. so, you know, getting that he getting them of course has been a bit of a challenge and even those who have made it, we spoke to some people who have been living in a release camp for nearly 5 or 6 days. and they say that while they do have some basic supplies that have been given to them, the barely scraping by the food is not enough and up the concerned that they've lost everything and may have to rebuild. again, you know, these people are still relatively better than the thousands in the state that are still stranded. there are districts that are still cut off. it's been difficult to get there because landslides have cut off, railings, roads are still blocked. so it's, it's been challenging and the predictions the weather forecasts are also not
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helping. they're expecting very heavy rainfall to continue welling to the weekend. all of which could complicate and hamper rescue operations. people have been salvaging what they can from hopes destroyed by fire in the philippines capital around 300 people were affected by the place at a residential compound, but emergency services had been no reports of injuries. finances took 2 and a half hours to bring the place under control. just a ramos horta says that he worked for closer ties with china. after being sworn in his esteem was president. the independence figure a nobel laureate, previously served as president prime minister and foreign minister, is an organization ceremony on friday, march 20 years of independence from indonesia. jessica washington, before south from jakarta. joe said almost hurt, gave a rather lengthy speech at his inauguration celebrations. overnight. it is important to note that it is not just his inauguration that team one less day or is
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team or is marking today, but also 20 years of independence. and so in his speech, he remarked on the progress that his country has made, making a note that in 190909 or 2000, the capital city of dealy was effectively reduced to rubble. and from that, they have built the nation up to a stage where it is now considered in his words, a peaceful, perhaps, and imperfect democracy, but a place that can be considered an oasis of peace and solidarity. some of the priorities that he outlined in his speech, including increasing regional ties, specifically with indonesia and astray, lee of the countries nearest neighbors. he went into specific detailing that he would like to increase regional ties with the closest parts of his trailer and the closest parts of indonesia with his nation. he also, and he has repeatedly remarked on the importance of gaining ozzy on membership for his country. at this stage is team will remain the only southeast asian country that has not yet been accepted into ozzy. and he also remarks that he would like to
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increase ties with other countries in asia, including china. last minute rule change will allow us to radians to vote with co australians with cobit 19 rather to vote by phone in elections on saturday. it follows legal friends on behalf of around $100000.00 people who feel that they miss out. the campaign has been a close race between the governing conservative coalition at its labor party challenger. sarah clark reports from sydney ah, on to 6 weeks of campaigning, the prime minister phil found this referee on saturday astronomer will decide if scott morrison is fit to keep the nation's top job. it's a choice between a government that has a strong economic plan that has ensured the destroyer is coming out of this pandemic, stronger than almost any advanced economy in the world to die. claim with the latest poll shows labor just ahead of the liberal national coalition. the key issues and this election, a climate change,
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the cost of living funding for aged care and national security. these are all issues that estrella has the opportunity to go forward in and create a better future if we say that opportunity. i believe a strategy is the greatest country on earth. the biggest challenge for the marson government is the rise of female independent field or a 22 high profile candidates known as the tales. a mix of political movements seen as blue and green. they funded by climate group and targeting safe seats held by the liberal party amended. i think they'll be very high and it is a high level of dissolution. we've major party politics in this country. people are . busy frustrated with one or other parties, various reasons. and these just become this dynamic that we want. individuals who represent our local communities, really 6000000 voters of electorate of 17000000, have already cast their ballots through postal or early in person voting. i'm very
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disappointed how close it is and that it seems as a lot of similarities between 80 major parties. and i find that quite frustrating and no much on offered or gone are the days where we had stifling. quite frankly, we just got a big room bunch of children in politics. if there is no clear majority on saturday after ballots, i counted the outcome of this election will be a hung parliament. that will main are the labor or the coalition must make an agree with the minor parties or independence in order to govern. analysts say that prospect is highly likely. i'd be surprised if on saturday night we know a clear winner from either of the major parties. i think we'll be looking for a cloud, but several days afterwards. the polls in australia open on saturday. sarah clark al jazeera sydney, australia, politicians in the u. s. state of oklahoma. the approved
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a bill banning abortion in almost all circumstances. once signed by the states republican governor, the procedure will be illegal from the moment of fertilization, exceptions include rape or cases of incest. anti abortion rights activists are expecting the supreme court to overturn a half century old ruling that would lead to more restrictions across the us. to core of this whole discussion is the protection of innocent life. should we wipe away or laws against murderer? and if somebody murders somebody else will say, well, you know, you, maybe you should have done that, but we don't want to do anything further cuz we don't want to be hateful. we don't want to be emotional. we don't want to be judge mental. no, an innocent life deserves protection. really for decades after one of the worst massacres in peruse history victims, families. finally getting some closure. peruvian authorities handed over the
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skeletal remains of those killed by the army. in 1985 soldiers rated the town during the height of that battle with a rebel group, killing 71 people, including 23 children, organized as of the camp film festival of band official washing delegations. but russian filmmakers who denounced the invasion of ukraine have been allowed to attend from can charlie angela ripples can, has slapped their own sanctions on russia, fighting official russian buyers, sellers and distributors from attending the festival and refusing to screen any films by russian directors. he support putin or had help from state funds. part of it or we should try to discern between the russians were taking risks to residue official line and denouncing what is happening. but obviously the position of the festival is to show absolute and negotiable support, the ukrainian people her carols, the brandy coffee, the russian director with
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a long history with the film festival. twice he was prevented from attending his film previous pending several months on the house arrest moscow, criticising the kremlin, lived in berlin, and had been vocal about his opposition to the war. the ukrainian film academy, a cooling, international boy called the russian cinema. he disagree with this new veneer can, through its cause, boy calling old russian culture is unbearable. russian culture has always promoted human values. the fragility of mankind and compassion towards those less fortunate . russian culture has always been anti war because war wants to destroy the values . i respect the morning to beth. his film to coffee's wife, is competing with the pond or prize ship. it has been criticized for receiving funding from sanctioned oligarch roman umbrella venture. the festival has also been russia journalists from attending, including film critic, adrena cas lady,
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editor and chief of an independent movie review website. she left russia in february and has no plans to return using her personal social media platforms to condemn the war. she was surprised to be disinvited to can. they didn't find any articles covering the situation in your brain, but i know, i don't know if can know the way she works, but it can use in the room. so do this because like my star will be here, wait in danger. it's not just the festival banding, some russian related project. some film companies have pulled titles. story russian acts as actors. you've clearly spoken out against the war. the question is, if culture is about building bridges, should all of them be bugged charlie on to that? i'll do their friends and colleagues of motor down as they were generally sharina
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or clay. i've spoken of her legacy and the dangers faced by palestinian reporters. it's in the special edition of talked to al jazeera. i was not the kind of person that can be forgotten. she's not the kind of person that should be forgotten. it's such a heavy burden that the immunity that the is early on is having no one and they're not being called accounting. no respect for that, no respect for the living, nothing. you do that with a few months every year. we lose journalists on posters now. they say the daughter of palestine, she was you could see the full program talked to al jazeera in the field. it as fast friday. at 1430 i was g m t o.

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