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tv   News  Al Jazeera  May 21, 2022 12:00pm-12:31pm AST

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musson has collected objects he finds along the coast, ah enough to fill his museum enough to break a guiness wild redcoat, armed with a story for every object, he's become an environmental activist, uninspired artists, under voice for the plight of countless micro, ah, my chinese, you such are on al jazeera when the stand, the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter where you call hand well, but you can use in current to pass that matter to years. ah, mourners gather for the funeral of a teenage boy killed during an israeli rate in the occupied west back. ah,
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oh, i'm adrian said again. this is al jazeera alive from dough, also coming up. while speaking of confronting north korean threats, the u. s. and south korean president, south of the country help with its cove at 19 outbreak. 13 coming to an end awful election, but opinion polls suggest will end the decade of conservative government in australia. plus, it's difficult to find a street in her pain that hasn't been hit by gunfire or tank shells or mortar rounds. we report from a pin, one of many ukrainian cities and towns struggling to rebuild after russian occupation. ah, a funerals been held for a 17 year old palestinian boy was shot and killed by his worthy forces in the occupied westbank. palestinian factions of called a general strike to mourn. i'm jot out fired. another teenager was seriously injured during the rate on that refugee camp in jeanine. it happened in the same
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area where israeli forces killed al jazeera journalist to be and i will i play last week. and the channel continues to demand the rapid, independent and transparent investigation into her death serene was shot in the head by israeli forces. while on assignment, on the day of her funeral israeli forces stormed the procession and started beating mourners, causing pull barrows to almost drop her casket. that didn't stop thousands of palestinians from marching through occupied east jerusalem to take part in her funeral and burial. members of the international community of condemned her killing and continue to call for an investigation obliquely, was with al jazeera for 25 years, covering the story of the israeli occupation. she was known as the voice of palestine. amnesty international secretary general has condemned israel's decision not to investigate the modem and a tweet act escalade said it's an additional violation of children's rights to life at a clear violation of israel's obligation under international law one again,
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amongst many, this is what repression and domination looked like some lives simply don't matter. of the u. s. government. meanwhile, repeating its demands for a full investigation. al jazeera, heidi joe castro, reports from washington. this was an audio breathing given by the state department spokesman ned price in which he was asked to react to the israeli military's decision not to open a criminal investigation into sharina killing. he didn't really react where he did instead was reiterate the u. s. position at that the calls for an independent, thorough and transparent investigation that he said must include accountability. now, who is the investigating party all these details? again, those were a questions that remained unanswered, but indeed, since the killing of sherry now going on 9 days, there has been wide spread international condemnation and calls for
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a thorough and independent investigation officer. as enron con, is following developments from outside damascus gauge unoccupied. east jerusalem, he's with us now. what lives iran? what more we know about this shooting of the teenager in jeanine overnight. will that happen in the very early hours of saturday morning in recent weeks, the israeli army is intensified nighttime raids into a boat. the town of jeanine and the refugee camp, where i'm jet fired, was killed. he was at i'm so sorry we appear to have lost the the signal to iran con, there are in occupancy charisma. we'll try to get back to him a little later if we come in the meantime, we will move on. u. s. president joe biden says that he's willing to meet north korea's leader kim jong on that if he's serious about talks, fibers in. so for meetings with south korea's president unit, so young,
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they've discussed how to count of north korea's threats after a series of new miss. alt us this year. it's by this 1st trip to asia. since taking office today, the prison unit i committed to strengthen in our close engagement and work together to take on challenges original security. including addressing the threat posed by the democratic people's republic of korea. by further strengthening our deterrence posture, the working tory, to complete the nuclear ization of the prince of the korean peninsula, county shooting. if north korea is ready to the nuclear eyes, we will be able to help their economy and the lives of north korean civilians. the risk of the corona virus that we are experiencing at the moment requires humanitarian support for north korea done. if they positivity, consider these actions and are ready to de nuclear arise. that will be the 1st law power. so i was here as florence louis is that florence,
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they talked about deeper security ties. but what will that mean in practice? while they were quite explicit about what they mean, it means they will expand. they were looking at expanding the scope and the scale of combined military exercises. these are 2 countries that already hold military exercises on quite a regular basis. and south korea is also a country that host us a military basis. so they're looking at expanding that they're also looking at and han think sanctions against north korea, them both sides. we're also talking about cooperating to face cybersecurity threats from north korea. and they will also very keen to stress that they are not closing the door on talks with north korea. they want it to come to the negotiating table too, because the ultimate goal really is about the nuclear is asian of the korean peninsula . but it has to be said that there wasn't much of an incentive that's being offered by the us in south korea, in persuading north korea to come to the negotiating table. they also spoke about
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helping north korea with its cobit 19 outbreak. yes. nor craze. experiencing a very severe cove at 19 out. right. we don't really have the figures at the moment because no, chris simply doesn't have the test kits to even even be able to say how many people have been infected with cove at 19. and this is the country where the population is unvaccinated, the country where the majority of the population malnourished, which means they would be more susceptible to diseases. it has a very inadequate health care system. they lack basic equipment. they like facilities, they lack medicine. so it really will not be able to cope if there is a huge outbreak of corona virus and from all accounts, it is quite a severe and serious situation in north korea. north korea, however, has rejected offers of help of assistance from south korea from the us from the un . it is rejected offers of vaccines. so it's possible that this may represent
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a new diplomatic front. it may be and a new diplomatic opening for countries to persuade north korea to come to the go shaping table. but it also presents something else. it could potentially mean humanitarian crisis looming on the border of south korea. and it could also mean the emergence of a more deadly variant of the corona virus. so this is something that south korea and the us hoping to be able to tackle. and that's why they're saying to north korea, we're ready to offer help if you want it. sort of through reporting live from sole and south korea. many thanks to de florence. kim jong and says that north career is starting to bring its coven 19 outbreak under control. even though a further 220000 people are reported to have what have been called the fever symptoms, kim told a beating of the ruling party. the progress is being made to slow the number of infections and hinted at lifting some restrictions. in order to relieve concerns
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over the economy, i mean there are thousands more karone of ours cases a day in china's capital, but it's resisting a city wide lockdown. instead. it's heavily policing parts of beijing and forcing lockdown and spraying disinfectant. china's biggest city, shanghai is emerging from it's strict shopped down, which lasted weeks now to where strata is election voting has ended on the east coast on us under an hour left now on the west. conservative prime minister scott morrison is hoping to defy opinion poll suggesting that he'll lose as he did at the last election center left lay belinda anthony albany. is it urged australians to give his party a chance to address climate change armed the soaring cost of living? sarah clark, his life for us now in sydney. any indications yet of which way to go. sarah? no has yet we've got some very early figures coming through, but no clear indication of clear picture. although which way the selection will
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guide of the polls have suggested the whole way through the campaign. now that labor was ahead of the coalition, the coalition being the liberal, a national party that leads are held by live a didn't happen to marrow as we entered election day. but we do know that 9000000 people voted ahead of election day. that suit placed vital, pre holding boots. i, we've got the final of both now done across the east coast. and as you mentioned, the west coast are the 3 hours behind us. it's about 70 m here. so a couple more hours left out. the lie. but basically the labor does my time, this election, i tiny bit of an edge, but we do have this extra kind of angle where we've got a new element, a spinner in the works. you could say way, we've got the swathe of 22 hot, very hot point fault independence in a female independence. and they are targeting some of these key liberal seats, including the light to the treasure. josh fraud and berg in victoria that these are these, this group, the been funded by donations from
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a climate group dot com at 200. and they can pack campaigning very heavily on those issues. they believe a week from the spot martin government, that's climate change. agenda equity and integrity. so where everyone's watching that and some pulses suggested that they could take a huge amount of the vote. but as i said, labor is still ahead. we may not know i lecture result tonight. voting will stop at midnight in australia, but we may not know it because it's just so tight. at the my little to polls indicated eighty's taught and neither side the coalition or labour have a claim majority at the end of the evening after the voting stopped. so that the, the counting stops, i should say, we may also face the risk of having a hung palm. and then that's where our, the label or the coalition will have to negotiate. and trying to form an agreement with either the minor parties or the independence. would it be fair to say that the key issue in the selection to voters is the cost of living
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cost of living has been very high profile throughout the campaign. the coalition campaign heavily on economic management, which is what i always do, they painted a picture of anthony albanese as being weak on the economic front and inexperience . but climate change also was very about was a high priority that the biggest national survey of voters in australia a found that one 3rd of people believe that climate change was the most important issue. other areas we had of course we got funding friday came out covered, ranked in there, but tom and so the way the government handle it and national security of course. uh, but up, as i mentioned it's, it's tight. we could fight is hung parliament. but the really key interesting element in the selection is these independents, and if they do match, you get a few seats that they may be able to try and form a government if we have without a sod label or the coalition. at the end of the day, we may not see the results for days, fingers crossed, we get some indication tonight. sir clark reporting live there from sidney for the
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moment ceremony. thanks and teach. still to come after the weather. oh, it's been described as a ration from the ruins. the centuries, a mosque being rebuilt in iraq, making a powerful statement. we look at some of the gritty work by women filmmakers. the, the big prize of can, ah, hello, the monsoon range really have set him with a vengeance across in china and me and my last a cloud sharing up towards men mother and an 89 millimeters of frame in 24 hours. that intense a wet weather will continue here as we go through sunday. see how it slides across the golf thailand into cambodia into vietnam in some very live shows,
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could cause some flooding here. some disruptive range. anywhere from that bad from northern, the philippines, all the way back to was the by have been gold further south. it is a little more usual. we have got the usual showers there for malaysia, more heavy downpours coming into indonesia. so we have a quite a spot in between there, just around borneo. not too bad there, but still some showers therefore smarter. still some showers lingering across eastern parts of australia, but it should improve over the next couple of days. that big, massive platter upper trough, fair on shore braced bringing some very wet weather in. notice of sure. they're just over to was new caledonia from cyclone a. gina continues to rumble away. he will grassy pull away the showers. their cars at east side was also pulling away things tied in quarters. he go through the next few days as where to where the come get the western australia making his way through the bite. ah,
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ah, with blue ah, hello again. this is al jazeera. let's remind you of the main news. the south. a funeral spin held for a 17 year old palestinian hoyt who was shot and killed by his ready forces of the
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occupied west bank. it happened at jeanine where al jazeera journalists, trevino, r clay was killed last week. u. s. president joe biden says that he's willing to meet north korea's kim jong and for security talks if he serious items in. so for meetings with the south korean count about units, so pure voting is due to end of the next few hours in australia. opinion polls suggest that the opposition labor party will and nearly a decade of conservative government, heavy rain flooding, a bland slides, bringing more havoc to ne, on the india. in some states, at least 14 people have died. in the latest of course. hold on 700000 people who are affected, but many don't want to leave the flooded homes of zeros pumping. the towel is that o homes are partially sub marsh and the roads are under water. this is not gonna district, it's the was affected area in a storm in dallas, ne, in fact,
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nearly half the population that has been affected across the lives over here. now, many of the residents here have decided to stay. but even though evacuations and rescue efforts are underway across the street, many are using rocks, but mostly we've seen people are just roll up their pants and weird to the water to get their daily supplies. in some parts of the street, the water is wide up to the waist. now across the state about 70000 people are in relief camps. many have been there for about a week, which is when the rain started, climate exports say the climate change is to blame for this. extreme weather. flooding is not uncommon. in some heavy rains are an annual a fe, what's different this time is that the rains have come early and a more intense than earlier, and explore that extreme, where the scenarios like these could become more common at the planet warms farther
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and has died. another 40 have been injured 10 of them seriously after an apparent tornado. at several times in the west of germany, railroad transport was disrupted. throughout the region. russia says that it's in full control of ukraine's pummeled port city of maria pole . that would be president vladimir putin's biggest victory since the war began almost 3 months ago. the last remaining soldiers defending b as of style still works. a set of surrendered on friday, ukraine's president says they were ordered to lay down their weapons. lee, at the issue, year to day, the defenders received a clear signal from the military command that they can get out and save their lives . docile jibari has more from moscow on what's likely to happen to the fighters. these are the last remaining ukrainian fighters in the as of style steel plant. now they are prisoners of war. they survived russia's onslaught for more than 2 months
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in the steel plant. their future is now unknown. their surrender brings a much needed victory for russian forces in the strategically important port, city of mary opal, the ministry of defense as reported to precedents of russia on the end of the operation. and the complete liberation of the as of style industrial complexes and of the city of maria polka from ukrainian fighters. the kremlin says those who surrendered will be treated in line with international norms. some russian lawmakers have demanded they be tried for war crimes. and one said they should face the death penalty. sir gay, chicago announced his forces alongside russian back separatists will soon claim full control over the logan's christian eastern ukraine. but on a victory that's long overdue for his forces. forces the defense minister wants to expand. he revealed plans for 12 more military units to be added
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to the military districts in western russia in response to finland and sweden applying to join nato. that expansion needs more man power, and the russian lawmakers may have the solution. the say demo on friday said it's considering a bill that would allow russians over the age of 40 and foreigners. over the age of 30, to sign up for the military, the website of the russian parliament, lower house, the state duma said the move would enable the military to utilize the skills of older professionals. familiar with the use of high precision weapons and military equipment. as what russia calls its special military operation near the 3 month mark, there is no indication from either side of an end to the conflict door such a bari al jazeera moscow. some of the worst st battles of the war were around ukraine's capital. attacking epin north of cave was part of russia's failed attempt
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to encircle the city. now it's back in ukrainian control, and people are trying to move on the same bus ravi reports in the little circle in i cannot express it. she says, feelings of anger, feelings of hatred, feelings of deep contempt for the russian soldiers who brought death to her hometown. when you pull initial couldn't get to like a former kindergarten teacher, nina. yar mccovie lost her lifelong home in the invasion, sheltering in her children's summer school and her pin. she now listens for any news of the war. but as to paley supper hardly russians with their boots trampled on all our happiness, peoples lives, peoples, hope everything. they troubled everything in one minute as a passport and some medicine precious few necessities. all she was able to take her
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house now a crime scene, or that she had in this world bomb to rebel in the winter, her room was the warmest. that's why she chose it. a lifetime of memories, a lifetime of belongings. she doesn't want any of it. back, send it to the russians, she says. so it may weigh on their conscience. we do not do that and can we believe that our people are dead crushed with tanks? how can we ever forgive them for us? never know one not for a 100 years or the call me what was left standing in the city is being fixed. one man said all he wants is to make repairs. so life can return to normal amount of money. but what was broken in a matter of months, in some cases, mere hours will take years to rebuild. it's difficult to find
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a street nor pain that hasn't been hit by gunfire or tank shells or mortar rounds. and so many absolutely devastated buildings are now a grim reminder that the russians were here. not even houses of worship were spared . and even the most civilian of spaces became targets in this war. which it will surely voice said sadly, vice chloe is. my heart is drenched in blood and tears. that is all i have in my soul. and when you bought it, it was all tillery maybe windows were hates, and roads were hit. the roof of the kindergarten was burned. my son's class was in that building. the kindergarten doesn't exist now. why should i be happy? why did this happen? it's sad, a lot of people who i know were killed even now as the war moves away from towns around heave as life begins to return to
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a new kind of normal ukrainians piecing their lives back together, say they never thought russia would actually invade. they still can't believe it happened and they still don't understand why. then basra b o to 0 or pit us. josh has blocked whitehouse plans lift cove restrictions on people seeking asylum on the southern border. the measure allows authorities to quickly expel most of those who arrived from mexico to prevent the spread of corona virus. medical experts say the restrictions are no longer necessary. the white house says it disagrees with the court ruling will comply while it appeals. because even when i bid on say, we do hope the law of change a bit in favor of migrant. it's time for that. and there are many of us who come here out of necessity and you do good. you have any hard being whatever happens with the law. we just want this opportunity to pay back. the opportunity will be given. i think i know any 5 years after i fall was defeated in mosul. launch parts
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of the city, still lion ruins. but archeologists of honor the mosque that dates back centuries as a summer, been jumping reports. iraqis are now rebuilding one of the cities. well known landmarks are the alluring mosque in most iraq, 2nd largest city is isis declared, it's so called caliphate in 2014 famous for its leaning merit or al, had by his local people called it. it's been regarded as an icon for nearly 900 years leveled in the fight, soldiers and local people reject allegations by isolated the tower and mos but destroyed by bombs dropped by the us. led coalition. now, piece by piece, brick by brick. iraqis are putting it back together, european charities and unesco aimed to fully restore the monuments by next year. them in difficulties that we found at the beginning of the project while we remove that would move about $5600.00 tons of bubbles and also about the living. these,
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all of them was put inside of the difficulties was to, to restore them to get as much as possible from that sort of pieces and to clean it documented and updated and saved it in a safety way. 6 meters below the surface appear hall and the blue ocean rooms. after debris and explosives were cleared, archaeologists have discovered what they believed to be the original mask, built alongside the men or it. one official described it as a rear re of hope from the ruins, but this is only one part of morsels destroyed or the city. it will take an estimated $100000000000.00 to reconstruct then every provinces, public spaces and heritage sites. but people here are still waiting for some of that money to arrive for they can restart their lives. and while they wait for promises made by donors in their government to materialize, young people are reclaiming mostly public spaces. this is what the central library of mostly university looked like after i still fighters were targeted there,
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but students and staff risked their lives to rescue books, even pages. and now the building is back with reminders of its recent past that are now our display sections for discussions and computers for researchers. doctor se still wants help from academics and international libraries are for most of the 1000000 items, including books, manuscripts, and research. papers were destroyed secret and john looked over. his entertain us, of the idea was not just to restore it, but also to make it contemporary and not just a book repository, but a minute of knowledge kind. the aim to target all sections of society while concentrating on to youth won't. so everyone can benefit from the resources or something. yeah. or hopes, the big mosque and his city will soon be rebuilt. and these children who remembered the horrors of war for people who lived together in peace in the future, sama driving down the 0 muscle organizers of the can film festival have promised to work towards greater gender parity in the awards,
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including the top prize upon door. but this year, only 5 of the 21 movies in contention are directed by women from can charlie angela reports. i think tale of male friendship against the backdrop of the italian out. the mountains is a stunning film, co directed by belgium, charlotte van denise. o one decade continence and is what is the $21.00 film competing for the palm dual prize? we approach it as a love story because friendship is love. and the families important mother, father, your ancestors also can you escape where you come from? can you do it differently? what's your destiny? can you escape her destiny than denise co directed with her husband's feelings on grown again and spoke about what she learned from the process. be able to say no to people when it's necessary and to invite them in and be generous when there's
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a time for it. but just to remain really focused. because that's the heart of what you're doing. and. and yeah, often filmmaking is just a lot of things at the same time and go in the history of can only 2 women have won the palm dual prize, the best director, a no protest for the festival to sign agenda piracy pledge. 2018 is a problem, not just for the festival, but for the film industry at large. this year, only 25 percent of the film submitted for consideration were directed by women, still a records the can. rodeo is a french film about a girl breaking into a male dominated world set in the suburbs of border. it follows a group of working class kids pursuing that passion for illegal done by to them. the 1st time director role spent 4 years investigating the motor cross scene, she says she wanted to create a character. we rarely see on screen. she is a to in, polite to, to say, hello, i'm julie. how are you know,
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she's leg by breaking the world in, get into the group i legs, items female character, female direct is like quiver all the under miss offering fresh voices in cinema. the films were snapped up even before being screened and can proving the audience appetite is already there. charlie angela al jazeera can boeing's, starlight capture has talked to the instructional space station. it's a win for the u. s. aerospace company. after years of failures and full stops, the capture journey was a test flight without a crew of the next phase is likely to involve nasa astro perspective over to lee adjusted. ah, it is good to have you with us. hello adrian for the good to hear it though all the headlines and al jazeera of fuels for the hell.

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