tv News Al Jazeera May 21, 2022 5:00pm-5:31pm AST
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oh, we have to market and we could do this experiment. and if biodiversity could increase just a little bit, that wouldn't be worth doing. had any idea that it would become a magnet, always incredibly rare species. they are asking for women to get 50 percent representation in the constituent assembly here, getting these people to pick up the collect, the segregated say the re saying this is extremely important. so is that they provide the city why don't we? we need to take america to trying to bring people together trying to deal with people who can look beyond lou
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this really is labor policy pulls, often upset to end a decade, a conservative rule, but fails to win a parliamentary majority. ah, i'm money inside. this is out, is there a life? and i've also coming up a funeral is hell, 14 i to kill during the latest israeli raid in the occupied west bank. the u. s. and south korea agree to strengthen the defense relationship to counter north korea's nuclear ambitions. and causing controversy. wimbledon organizers hit back off to the grand slam tournaments penalized for banning players from russian. valerie ah, we begin in all where to be albany. they have just won the 1st labor policy
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election. victory in almost a decade is defeated. the incumbent, conservative prime minister, scott morrison. however, an overall parliamentary majority isn't yet session. morrison, in the sense, right, coalition had faced mounting pressure for the handling of cost of living pressures . the pandemic and climate change. tonight, the astrology and people have voted for change. yeah. i am humbled buddies, victory. i know i'm honored to be given the opportunity to serve as the 31st prime minister of a try. yeah, and scott morrison also conceded defeat. i've always believed in australian and their judgment. and i've always been prepared to accept their verdicts. and tonight i have delivered their burdick and i congratulate anthony
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avenue in the labor party and i wish him and his government all the very best. now there are many but still accounts that is true. and there are many pre paul's and post those that will still come in. but i believe it's very important that this country has certainty. scott, a sarah clog hayes live in sydney for a sarah say it does look like the people have voted for change. they have and we've had a jubilant anthony albanese. he said to become the 31st prime minister of australia . he's on the stand on the stage as we speak. and his speech is very much trying to push a united message. the key word being together, he said he's noted that the, yeah, the voters won't change on some of those key issues that united, the cost of living climate change was a key decision. okay. a key campaign issue. throughout the campaign, people wanted change, voters were frustrated and disillusioned with what was on alpha for both parties
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and anthony ataleasy. and he said he will make changes and he will act on the the vote, his a decisions i want to vote his wants. now he wants to move swiftly with his a big sworn in a. he's already said that he wants to attend the court making with his foreign affairs minister on tuesday. so the only thing we don't know at the moment is whether or not as you mentioned, at whether or not they have a clear majority because voting continues at the moment, meet not here in australia. and she said counting continues counting stop now at midnight. and it will resume to morrow morning and there's still a number of undecided seats. so we get to work at if he has a k majority or whether or not he faces australia, faces a hung parliament. and you have to negotiate or form a government with the help of some of those independence and the minor parties and the grains and the key. one of the major elements or changes we've seen in this election, has been that the political landscape changed with the inclusion of a number of independence. in this election we saw 22 female high profile candidates
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targeting some of these blue ribbon safe, affluent liberal party seats, and they've won. we've got the likes of josh fraud and burg, who's the treasurer and 2 young at dana victoria. he's fighting to fate. he's a popular member of the coalition government. so if say not just inclusion over the election of these independence, we've also seen the liberal party lose seats at to the grain. so we've seen a major shift. and what we do know is we've got a new labor party government and we have a new prime minister and i believe he'll be looking to to move swiftly that to be sworn amy and he for that sarah clark that 1st live in said ne, a ceo's been hell for a 17 year old palestinian shot dead by sally forces in the occupied. westbank is increased tension as it followed. a raid and jeanine were out. is there a serene under our clay was killed last week. among connor puss ah, mourners berry, i'm just fed and promised to take revenge for his killing islamic to had claimed 17
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year old as one of his members. wow. he was killed by israeli forces in jeanine refugee camp in the early hours of saturday. oh, these really army is intensified night raids in jeanine in recent weeks since the beginning of the year 20 palestinians had been killed in the camp and the town of the town is also where al jazeera joan, the sharina barclay was shot in the head and killed by these were ayame. she was on assignment and wearing a helmet invest, clearly marking her as a journalist. but israel is refusing to launch a criminal investigation. and now 57 american politicians have signed a letter demanding the f b. i to investigate. republican congressman andre carson tweeted the killing about as a reporter and fellow american sharina. blacklight was not only a tragedy, it was an affront to press freedom and to all americans, adding, we need answers and accountability from these really government, agnes calamari of amnesty international tweeted. it's the additional violation of
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sharon's right to life and a clear violation of israel's obligation under international law. one amongst many, she goes on to say this is what repression and domination look like. some lives simply don't matter. oh is really forces storm the procession and started beating mourners, causing pallbearers to almost drop her casket. ah, that didn't stop thousands of palestinians marching through occupants, jerusalem to take part in a funeral. and during israel has tremendous support within the u. s. and that's the reason why they've been able to so far, resist pressure on opening an investigation into, sorry, and blacklist death. however, with international voice is growing louder, how much longer they can resist. that pressure remains to be seen around can out 0, occupied eastern islam. here as president joe biden says, he is willing to meet north korea as kim john and for talks on security if he's serious. biden is insulting meetings with his south korean counts part units of
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your as part of the 1st trip to asia. since he took office last year, florence reports from so on the ground in south korea, a mixed response to us precedent. jo biden's visit these demonstrators welcomed him . seeing this as an opportunity to present a united front against north korea. that follows reports leader kim jong and maybe about to conduct a 7th nuclear weapons test. but here, activists concerned about an arms race, a calling for peace. when the 2 precedents met at a summit on saturday, security was high on the agenda. j. i. i heard corey r o r r
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e they discussed enhancing sanctions and expanding the scope of combined military exercises. biden also said he's not opposed to meeting him, john good. if he sincere both president june and president biden also said they were ready to help north korea deal with an outbreak of coated 19 o, leaving an era where the economy, security, and security is there gonna me disruption in the supply chain caused by changes in the international security order is directory related to the lives of our people. but analysts say that may not be enough to bring north korea to the negotiating table. kim's, our resume appears to be determined to develop, ah, the military, our capability to make sure that north korea will be armed, to have a sufficient capability to hold. you ask for suzanna civilian populations in south
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korea and in japan as hostages. although countering china's dominance in the region was not explicitly mentioned, the biden administration has ain't no secret of the fact. it views china as a strategic challenge in tokyo on monday, president biden will unveil the in the pacific economic framework. its members will include south korea and japan. analysts say the u. s. is reasserting itself in the region. yes, off the former president, donald trump pulled out of the trans pacific on the ship trade pac. however, china sees that agreement as an attempt to marginalize it. a chinese foreign ministry spokesman criticized the u. s. on friday, saying it should do more to contribute to people in the region. instead of creating divisions, florence louis al jazeera sole. the russia says it's destroyed a large batch of weapons and military equipment delivered to ukraine by its western
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allies. it says it carried out a missile strike near railway station in the tow mirror, which is west of the capital. keep russia also said it struck fuel storage facilities near or desa in the south. or really, you are 50 of the armed forces of the russian federation continued the special military operation in ukraine. high precision, long range, sea bass missiles near the moline railway station, and shut me region, have destroyed a large batch of weapons and military equipment delivered from the us and european countries for a grouping of ukrainian troops. and don bass. russian air base missiles near odessa, desa port plans have destroyed fuel storage is intended for ukrainian nationalists armored vehicles while ukraine's president has again, spoken of ways to end. the war that he says will only bring more cottage the longer drags on. below that ms. lewinsky says he is still open to talks, but elise, russia is an interested e,
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but i'm now daughter squad. the victory will be difficult. it will be bloody, but it's and will be in diplomacy. i'm very convinced of this. there are things that we can't bring to an end sitting at the negotiation table. that's how it is, because we would like to get everything back and russia doesn't want to give back anything. some of the west street bottles of ukraine's more were around its capital . attacking the pin north of cave was part of russia's failed attempt to circle the city. now it's back in ukrainian control. people have been trying to move on. same bus raphi reports if it is equal who is? i cannot express it. she says, feelings of anger, feelings, of hatred and feelings, of deep contempt for the russian soldiers who brought death to her hometown. when you pull that initial couldn't get to like a form, a kindergarten teacher, nina ya, mccovie lost her lifelong home and the invasion sheltering and
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a children's summer school and her pin. she now listens for any news of the war, but is to be really supper. hardly russians with their boots, trampled on all our happiness, peoples lives, peoples, hope everything. they troubled everything in one minute. a passport and some medicine. precious few necessities. all she was able to take her 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 include you. doesn't come. you believe that our people are dead crushed with tanks
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. how can we ever forgive them for us? never know one, not for a 100 years of economy. 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 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 in wilson voice said sadly vice chloe says, my heart is drenched in blood and tears. that is all i have in my soul. and when
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you bond bad, it was, our tillery may be 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 here. as life begins to return to 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 still ahead on al jazeera ah, twisted and torn apart the destructive power of a series of tornadoes in germany. and white, thousands of migrants will have to wait longer to formerly claim asylum in the
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united states. ah, ah, i, we still got some very heavy rain pushing across southern parts of china, even though there may you front just pulling off shore for a time. so something of a break, but you can see that just sympathetic line of cloud which rolls this way back into the south of china and pop as we go through the next few day. so sunday, more breakdown, pause coming through here where to well, just moving across the yes. southern japanese islands, largely dry fir, the main islands but still want to shout into northern and central parts of honju up to war. cekada dry, warm and sunny across the korean peninsula. sol at 27 celsius and rising, we'll see similar temperatures, they're debating chances. some went to weather here,
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southern parts of china say more of those heavy showers, journey up with a heavy shower. see the monster trough, of course, making its way now across in the china, into myanmar some heavy rain coming back into northern parts of the philippines. usual scattering showers across malaysia and indonesia place to say things looking better across india over the next day or so. a significant drop in the intense rainfalls would be seen across that northeast corner. it will be some showers there for bangladesh. little more in the way of cloud and showers toward northwestern parts of india, tempering the heat and a similar situation. the pakistan ah, the stage is set and it's time for a different approach. one that is going to challenge the way you think was wor, inevitable. i didn't want to started to please do it. they're not doing the right thing. let's leave simplicity to the headlines. join me, if i take on the line, this man with the misconceptions and debate the contradiction, do we have
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a real democracy here in the united states? there's not a clue that's a radical insurgency, mark lamond hill. and it's time to get up front right here on out 0. lou. lou, welcome back to watching al jazeera reminder of our top stories this hour is in australia of ended nearly a decade of conservative government, the labor leader onto the album easy defeated, the incumbent, conservative prime minister, marston, overall majority in parliament isn't such a funeral has been held for a 17 year old palestinian shot and killed by his ready forces in new york on west
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back happened in jeanine, where al jazeera jones should be in a block layer was killed last week. and u. s. president joe biden says he's willing to meet north korea's kim john security . if he's serious violence, insult meetings with his south korean counterpart units, appeal heavy, rain flooding and land slides a further devastating areas in eastern india. in some states, at least 14 people have died in the latest down course. more than 700000 have been affected. many don't want to leave their homes, have natal has more than a gone on if the worst hit places. homes are partially submerged, and the roads are under water. this is no gall district. it's the worst affected area in a psalm in jaws, ne, in fact, nearly half the population that has been affected across the state lives over, you know, many of the residents here have decided to stay put,
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even though evacuations and rescue efforts are underway across the street many are using rocks, but mostly we've seen people just roll up their pines and we're 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 camp. 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 x y, z. that extreme where the scenarios like these could become more common as the planet warms farther. unfair storms of killed at least 30 people in the eastern behalf states. heavy rain, strong winds and lightning have hit 16 districts and recent days,
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rescue work is ongoing. a storm that swept through germany has generated 3 tornadoes, destroying homes and knocking out power. one person has been killed and many injured, lay haunting reports. this isn't the mid west of the united states. this is northern germany. debris swirling caught on camera and posted on line. the violet weather generated 3 major tornadoes. this one touching down and lifts up . oh, the storm so also brought rain hail and strong gusts of wind. the basements of hundreds of homes were flooded and left over debris stopped. many people from leaving this church lost its steeple. it's remnants now blocking the junction of a road. the severe weather disrupted traffic and uprooted trees that topple under
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rail tracks and roads. rescue services to point all available resources. germany usually experiences several tornadoes a year as colder air from the north clashes with a warmer air from the south. but not all leave this kind of destruction in its weak . leah harding al jazeera wimbledon organizers say they won't back down despite the prestigious tournament being stripped off ranking points. tennis governing bodies made the decision after wimbledon ban competitors from russia and bought a race gee to eat ukraine wool. in a statement, wimbledon says that we remain unwilling to accept success, all participation at wimbledon, being used to benefit the propaganda machine of the russian regime. we therefore wish to state our deep disappointment, the decisions taken by the a t p, the w t a and the itf in removing ranking points for the championships. let's go
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to nadeem baba in london. so took us through the reaction at all at the all england law tennis club or yeah, just before i get to that, to point out that the, your ranking points are being removed also from the junior and the wheelchair tournaments here at wimbledon. so the club, the all england lawn tennis club put out a statement on friday, really pushing back against the removal of those ranking points. they said that it was a deeply disappointing and they say that they're in discussions with other grandson tournaments to see what might be done. the club said, or the move was disproportionate in the context of quote, the exceptional and extreme circumstances. and that it was damaging to all players who compete on the tour women and had all along said that really had no option but to ban russian and bell russian players under guidelines from the u. k. government
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. well, for its part, the atp hazard said that that is not quite right. and the atp has said that it took them at the, the move with great regret and reluctance. but it said that unilateral decisions of this nature, such as women's ban, if on a dressed set, a danger, a damaging precedent for the rest of the tour. so the message from those organizations, the atp, the w t a and the international attorneys federation is that they're protecting the system and the general rights of the players. so how is this going to affect the players? sorry, could you repeat the question, how will this affect the players, nadine? yeah, will of the c a v you are weld number one, novak
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a joke of ich has expressed his discontent with the pan. he hasn't commented on the latest move. the ban rules out the participation of denial, medford f, a rushes world number 2 as well as last year. semi finalist here from boucher arena, sab olenka now and the the, the move now to remove ranking points means that chalk of it's will lose is number one status. and he can't defend the 2000 points that he earned by winning hit or last year. and rough elena dal is another player who said that he doesn't think the ban is fair, but there is a, a range of opinions amongst professional players, an expert to saying that for the moment it's unlikely that i'll be some kind of concerted action like a boycott. of wimbledon. thank you for that. nadine bob of office in london. a us judge has blocked plans to left an immigration policy that prevents migrants
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from seeking asylum in the u. s. the policy known as title 42 was issued to prevent the spread of koran of ours. medical experts say it's no longer needed culture lopez, her young has more. many of these migrants have been waiting and the one of mexico for years hoping to seek asylum in the us, but along with thousands of others still have to wait longer. and a federal judge has extended an immigration policy known as title $42.00, which blocks most of them from claiming asylum. that's why we've been waiting for so long for years. with title 42 in place. we're not allowed to request asylum. god willing, we can find a solution because returning to our countries isn't really an option. the policy introduced under donald trump's administration allows the government to expel migrants from the us to prevent the spread of hope at 19 president joe biden was you to lift the measure on monday, but a coalition of 24 states sued and one sentiment. and you look at the,
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we understand title 42 exists due to sanitary measures. that's why we're here today with proof of vaccination and our covert tests. we don't have the virus. so i don't think it's fair to apply this order against us. more than 230000 migrants cross the border between mexico and the us in april alone. without title 42 us official say the numbers could search to 18000 migrants a day or 2. so let's see. i thought the city is at full capacity right now. the shelters are overcrowded, and there are many people who've been waiting for a long time. there's a significant haitian population, families, and many pregnant women with families. there's a lot of uncertainty and a lot of frustration. it's a problem for buying and whose approval ratings are low. republicans are also focusing on the issue ahead of the mid term elections in november. human rights group say the crisis is being politicized by both sides. the justice department
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says a will appeal to decision. in the meantime, thousands of migrants will be forced to wait yet again. katia lopez with a young al jazeera, the world health organizations held an emergency meeting on the spread of monkey pokes these cases up and confirmed in 11 countries. the disease was 1st identify in monkeys and central and west africa and humans and typically spreads 3 place contacts, causing body stores and fever. the bars is traceable and no deaths have been reported. organizers of the come film festival have promised to work with great agenda piracy in the was including the top prize, the palm dual. but this year, only 5 of the $21.00 movies in contention on directed by women from camps. tale angela report. an epic tale of male friendship against the backdrop of the italian out. the 8 mountains is the stunning film. co directed by belgian charlotte divan.
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denise. oh, was your band decade continent. and is what is $21.00 competing for the palm do price. 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 felix? i'm 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 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 palms. will prize the best director
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a no protest for the festival to sign agenda piracy pledge in 2018. this 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 dirt by reading to the 1st time director role spent 4 years investigating the motor cross scene. she says she wanted to create a carrot to be rarely see on screen. she's the 2 in polite to to say that, hello, i'm julie. how are you know, she is leg by breaking the world in, get into the group. i like violence or female character. female directors like quiver all xander nice offering fresh choices in cinema films with nap top.
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