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tv   The Stream  Al Jazeera  June 3, 2022 10:30pm-11:01pm AST

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i missed his popularity. oh, so dividing the crowd were harry and megan. this was their 1st official appearance together. since quitting is working royal's in 2020. well, i'm sorry to say i'm not a fan of harry and megan. i think they're very, very, very disrespected when i loved it and i think they should have supported. i do have respect for megan. i think that she has done amazing things and perhaps it's a tiny bit, misunderstand probably in the minority. meanwhile, buckingham palace is clearly trying to pace things for queen elizabeth. she's also been ruled out of a trip to the horse races on saturday and increasingly frail, elderly woman, who on surprisingly, is finding for days of partying. just a bit much will reach helen's counter 0. ah
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quit look at the main stories now. ukrainian forces say they reclaims and territory the eastern city of savannah dani ask a 100 days after russia's invasion. the reports of st by street fighting in the city. if it fell, russia would hold all of the east enhanced province, which would be the biggest gain after pulling back from the capital. in march. present altamira, zalinski has praised ukrainian resistance and promised victory opposition groups in the democratic republic of congo, a calling for the government to cut diplomatic ties with her wanda. dozens of people have been protesting and can charter over wanders allege support. the armed rebel group and 23. this fighting congress forces in the east. one person has been shot dead during a demonstration in sudan. hundreds of people have been marking the 3rd anniversary of the heart to massacre and security forces moved in on pro democracy activists honoring 28 people were killed. the stream is coming out next,
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but we now leave you with memories of our colleagues shearing apple app. play ah, a phone, with an honest with me, most of the new book adults and we said at the home and i ya, today, a view to what he said to what the hell that the put up with all the de la, multi infinite media, obama possible booking for the, you know, you're the one i know a
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shooting abuto to look ah, a malaria were coming for ellen. gib wondering at them. well, one was got them. we got out here we go and keep the person on. you take the middle with
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with the bye back. i know you're a taking control of a malaria. you've met your match. thank you, backs today on the stream, tackling one of the world's oldest diseases. every minute a child dies from malaria. we're going to bring you some personal stories, look at the work that's being done to save lives and find out if it is possible to end the mosquito borne illness in a lifetime. youtube, you can join the conversation by the comment section. you can ask experts anything about malaria.
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we start with film director and major lobby. he directed the draw the line against malaria campaign video that you just saw, the very beginning of the show and explore a mountaineer out whom i know it is so good to have you, reggie and sarah. i have travelled all over the african continent and there had been times where i've been talking to a gas don't waiting for an interview at all. i'm so i'm going to be a bit late. i've got a bit of a malaria or i'll see you tomorrow, a little bit of malaria. it is not taken entirely seriously, sarah. i'm just going to share this with our audience. will you talk about on, on instagram, you took about being so proud to be as 0, malaria, ambassador that we can beat malaria. i have suffered from malaria countless times and i know that with the right resources in leadership, we will win this fight. i have never had malaria, sarah, what is it like chicago experience? oh wow. i grew up in festival. thank you for having me. i grew up in
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a malaria infected area. i had malaria countless times, so you get feverish. you get cold, you warm a headaches. but one of the memorable experiences that i had with malaria is my youngest sister getting so liberal malaria. i remember the adults in the house panicking and taking her to hospital and actually left a permanent, almost the disability on her face and to are added to it. so i normally can be devastating. she wasn't in school for almost 6 months. oh, here. wow. and i know would be faked out of, of malaria on children and women, especially when i got in touch with the malaria 0 malaria a team. i got excited to be part of it because it will, it be assured me that it is possible to entity non lifetime and has my excitement re part of it and get involved because it's not only affecting children, it's affecting women who are the back. all right, every society on the continent,
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sorry, let me just bring my tea into the conversation. where did he recognize that? that attitude about that a little bit of malaria and till something happened to you last year? tell us the story. what happened to you? i mean, definitely again, thanks for having me as well. yeah. you know, a lot of people take malaria for granted or you know, around the world, you know, nigeria especially in ghana and just left africa and africa in general. it's something that is how many people yeah. malaria and they get over it. but you know, for me, i hadn't had that growing up so i caught it for the 1st time. last year. i took it from ghana to lay and you know, i was hospitalized for a couple of days in the lay. medical, you know, let me can i show, i'm going to show you and your new hospital, but i'm not, i'm not going to play the south because you'll groaning. so that sometimes me come here to in. this is, i love the even though you were so sick you instagram just on your thick bed. we've
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got josie playing in the background for you. how are you feeling at this moment with malaria? oh, you know, i was seriously just thankful for life at that point because there was, you know, a few days where i was feeling really, you know, i was quite isolated and just getting at my where so i was just thankful. and you know, again, knowing that so many people die and so many children die like one child, every minute of malaria is prevented. wanting, credible. i just hope that we can continue working towards malaria. what i love about both of you is that you are part of a team of people who are advocating for we have to take malaria seriously. and if we have the resources, we can be malaria maggi, there's a whole draw the line against malaria campaign and you put together so many well known names. i'm going to share your space your time making are with them because
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they, again, they emphasize why we need to beat malaria. let's take a look. i'm over 6 i is and i, and you've had a personal experience with malaria. it was super of and kind of really made me appreciate what people are going through and they say every 60 seconds her child dies for malaria. that's totally preventable. maria felt that everything was her then that i qualified what i wanted to know, jumped on to synch up, might going to go on until, but they were not able to travel with us on malaria. i had malaria, it was really, really hard at the fibro. keep them going for 24 hours for 3 days in a row, close, and really phone. i've been on the global machines and malaria after losing my cousin. i am biased thing that malaria is not something i'm able to have the dying father with this film. i read all young people to be inspired and you know, understand that they are the ones who can lead to change all about you guys on both mattie and sarah. both nodding as are watching now. other comb,
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team advocates talking about malaria. sorry you are an explorer, you are a mountaineer from the heights of your career. what are you able to bring to the movement? i think it's a voice. i suddenly found myself on the 16th of may 2019 with a voice and an art decided to use it for good. and what excites me about the possibility of ending malaria is the opportunity that africa has. we have the youngest population in the world. how are we going to make sure that we are set them up as leaders of tomorrow as well? and i think that he, eradicating malaria today gives them an optimal position to actually leave the world. so i'm excited to be part of their small mendham exciting to lend a small voice to make it possible in a way a metal you bought your talent as a director to malaria malaria campaign. have a look here on my laptop. and let's take a look of it,
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who i dare to play for tea with david beckham, you're doing pretty well. the y'all's getting the celebs to weeny advocate, the beating malaria. what did you get out of this film? what are you hoping? the other thing everybody will get out of oh, you know, i just thought the, you know, it brings more awareness to, to malaria and to, you know, the, the place that people are going through and how we can all work towards, you know, our generation, especially this new young generation worked towards ending missouri. um we have the tools um, you know, we have the boys. we have social media. yeah. we have so many different outlets. so we can, you know, spread the message. so, you know, with this film and, you know, with the voices of our, other, in a malaria ambassadors and champions, you're all of us coming together and, you know, trying to amplify this message as much as possible. you know, so we can kill this deadly loose and rattle on,
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sorry. actual so much. sorry. go ahead. you have to laugh. well, yeah, i just wanted to add you can i be passionate about what mandela said. he said, the power is in your hands, are nobody's going to come to and rescue us. we each have a responsibility to end malaria. so every voice comes and we can draw the line and we can in malaria. and it's exciting to be part of that by sopa spending. tyra and matching, thank you for joining us on the screen. thank you. let's take a closer look at the science issues behind eradicating malaria. as a global and strategist, the most incredible legacy that i can pass on to my children and grandchildren is not be what lydia guard addition might be hung up. believe you an article because of that learning is equally valid. do i live video solutions who fight hundreds of enemies? it doesn't. lydia is not just a single disease. it is equally valid to under thought different scenarios, ask for shuttle guides on quality, gl environmental and economic injustice and inequalities.
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why is it so difficult to and malaria? thought andrea bossman is director of the w chose global malaria program and thought to faith as yet is chad, the malaria immunology and facts. nobody department and imperial college london. they have answers, doctors say get to see you doctor bay festival. i'm just gonna remind people where across the world, we still have prevalence in malaria. if you have a look on my laptop, doctor faith, you already know this, but for our audience. so we go from south america through the african continent, and then all the way through to pap and new guinea. and you can look at this area, you just got, oh, it's the tropics. what is so difficult not to faith about just eradicating malaria . it used to be in a more parts of the world, but now it is stuck in that band of the tropics, particularly in africa, was the problem. the problem,
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the problem. thank you for having me on your show. the problem in those in the truck kicks is really the climate. the climate is favorable and conducive to mosquitoes. and so it's difficult to eradicate malaria because the climate supports the mosquitoes that transmit the parasite. that's why it's still there. don't andrea when we talk about malaria, when we're trying to encourage people to take it seriously. we often use statistic about how many children die from malaria. what is it about young people and malaria that makes them so vulnerable? yeah, the children there unfortunately have not been exposed when they start to grow to these said deadly but a site and they phase. unfortunately, the old so several out there disease like no more near that the a monitor ation which are also very common in the place where there is malaria. so,
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by getting a very early, may not relation, sometimes even 10 or 20 per night. they is suffered and we lose a lot of children. it's very young age. and this is very, really unacceptable because we have today that means to prevent the death from malaria thought to faith and dots. and i, at, we have a lot of people who are watching right now on youtube, who say that they've, they've had malaria. but i'm going to share with you a few of the thoughts as well. ah, cachimba. since the in uganda the illness has increased this season. have you seen that thought to face? are you seeing a bigger increase in learning more people being impacted? and yes, so what we've, what's happened is that because of cov, it interventions have services are broken down. and the interventions for malaria control have been interrupted. and so yes,
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we have seen more debts because of because of cove it and, and malaria is going up. and in fact, malaria has been going up for a few years. and in the sense that although we have many control tools there, the effect that they've had seems to have flattened out. and so malaria is still very much a present problem. dr. andrea at please go ahead, go fast, and i'm going to go to the chief 2nd because joshua wants to say something to you. go ahead and read. yeah. unfortunately not only the measures have been interrupted. people also had where afraid to go to. they had said this is they were afraid to also be in contact with other covered cases and not only so the badness, distribution, madison distributions where they are partly affected, but also people were afraid to go to the health services. and we have
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a still more than half of the people which don't get the essential bed nets that they need or they don't get a rapid test or an effective medicines when they are sick. and this is really very, very bad because with less than $1.00 we can save a life in malaria. on like in this, i'm just gonna bring in, joshua joshua, he just talks about collaborative effort that we need people to get together to talk about malaria. and, and to find resources, you say says that it involves educating everybody and also producing more mosquito nets. this feels like then the, the miller. and i remember when i visited nigeria and i was a little girl and i was my grandma and he's been mad mosquito nets. are we still at the mosquito next stage fight? yes, mosquito nets are still very good for preventing for reducing transmission.
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they're impregnated, they've got some drug on the bed. net so that when mosquitoes land on the bed net, they're zapped and they're killed and they protect. they protect children and they protect adults from malaria. so yes, bed notes are still really important and should be used where possible. i'm thinking about cov, it and, and i know he talks about, covered in the impact it had on the momentum that was have being had the treating malaria. there 2 ways to look at co because it slowed down the way that we are tackling malaria. but he also gave us a template for how a huge region and the well can get together, find the resources if they want to. if they find an illness important enough and solvent issue very quickly face, you start and drive you pick up. i couldn't agree. more coverage taught us that people we can come together as a global society and put in the results as required to solve an urgent
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problem. and, you know, developing a vaccine for malaria, it's not as simple as it is for cove. it because of my way of malaria. parasite is much more complex, but with good funding and gord resources and commitment, political will funding resources about money i. we just feel good about money that you just need for money at the issue and then we read to kate malaria. cough the world. yeah, i think the science has been the ally a big mover of the advance that we had with covered that they are study, vaccine and development has been extraordinary the development of test that new medicines and clearly the society as a whole is seeing a covey as a major threat to the whole globe,
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which we don't have yet for malaria. malaria still affects a lot children, children's in the remote order laid as a with don't have unfortunately, a voice said, the parents, i live in communities, reach out a little isolated and they have less voice than to make it malaria as a big gun, a political commitment for, for the fight globally, so that, that there's something that the economy doesn't lead their way. and, and clearly we should take some of the good lessons from the fight against called it. so i know you mentioned the vaccine for malaria, which is the biggest news for malaria last year. i'm not sure that every 40 saw that news or it kind of was bad because we were so focused on cove it at the time. here's a headline. i want to share with you scientists, hale stoic, malaria vaccine approval. but point to chinese,
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ahead yet start with 1st unpacking this vaccine. what are we looking at? this is your life what he had thought to faith. so i'm going to put up on the screen so people will understand what it is that we're talking about. this new vaccine that was revealed last year. it is caught ah, t s s o must great. thank did i say that, right? yes, he did. all right, recommended for use for children from last year and it provides about 30 percent reduction in severe malaria. so now that we've all understood vaccine so much better because of app panoramic, i look at 30 percent and say that's not really a vaccine. is it built to face? yes and no. yes, because the other way one can look at it is to say that for every 10 people that have malaria,
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the vaccine will prevent severe illness in 3. so if it was saving those 3. absolutely, however, is it good enough? would you like to say more? yes, and so i think that we have to take the vaccine as it is and it's going to have an impact when you think about the millions who have malaria, we will save hundreds of thousands by vis vaccine. but should we stop working on it? no, we continue to try and improve it so that we can improve that efficacy to what we have for the covert vaccine, 90 percent, and over. i'm sorry, would you be out to explain how the vaccine works for us? the vaccine is helping the body to eliminate the blood forms of the parasites, and it's called a leaky vaccine is not,
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doesn't give full protection, but it can reduce the number of acute illness, the number of severe anemia, the number also of c, v forms. and therefore prevents that. it is currently being looked in 3 counties on a large scale. and the potential is really to save tens of thousands of lives in africa you should be use with are the metals that are working very well, like access to diagnosis and treatment and use of insect decided neds. so delta 5, i'm thinking about this vaccine, that 3 out of 10 people, it will really help reduce the seriousness of malaria. so it's a thought it will save lives. is it being produced or over? i showed that that part of the globe all over the tropics, so everybody can access it right now. because when i showed you that headline, there was a problem, there. is this one of the problems,
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the availability of the vaccine? this is absolutely one of the problems that one of the challenges is who will manufacture the maxine who will pay for the vaccine in western countries when there's an illness, for example, coven governments step up and they are prepared to pay for the vaccine. and so the manufacturer, as a willing to put in the investment required to produce the vaccine. unfortunately for malaria, this isn't the case. we do not have guarantees of who will buy the vaccine, and this is where because african floods, let's be candid up because why, why do we not? no, not going to say why isn't it, but he's a mediately one child, he's dying every minute. our african governments need to step up to, to pay for the rack. seems that's what needs to happen. thought andre, is this a conundrum that we're going to get stuck new we, we have a way of saving life from malaria,
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but we don't have the money to produce the vaccine. that's unethical. surely. yeah . at the moment, the garvey, which is one of the funding mechanism that to fund the vaccine for many countries, have mobilized 160000000 to allow the initial production and the scale of the vaccine. there is a plan already by the end of the 2022 to extend the use of the vaccine in the 3 countries which have been at the moment using that in only pilot areas. and progressively, the company is going to expand the production. but still, we will have probably from 3 to 5 years, a situation where the demand will be settled, much higher than the available supply. does that make history?
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absolutely. i think we in africa, we feel the pain of malaria, as we've seen in the program. we are the ones that suffer all the nomic losses that malaria brings. and here we have a potential solution and we're not able to roll it out. i think it's an acceptable, it's weird is a bit, a sweet part of the program in that there is a way to save so many lives, but there isn't a way to get those resources yet. do you remember we asked the very beginning of the show? is it possible to eradicate malaria in our lifetimes? those to face? is it i'm a strong believer that it absolutely is. it requires a commitment, it requires resources, that requires determination. but if you can imagine that people are soon booking holidays to go to the moon, how is it that we can't prevent children from, from,
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from dying from mosquito bite mosquito borne disease? i think it's probably event dot andrea in our lifetimes, a radical malaria gone nowhere existing in the world possible. yeah, their vision is to have a world 3 of malaria. and while it's still difficult to put a date for these, so i think there will be so much investment in transformative towards, in mobilizing it is also mobilizing the community that that is going to be achievable. so go to hattie dot andrea 2nd happy doctor faith. maggie and sar as well. he kicked off the program, your questions, your comments in the you chief section as well, and be careful. don't keep getting malaria out there. i know i see what you've been writing on. the chip comments come here on my laptop because this is the call to action. if you are interested in malaria, how to eradicate how to stay safe and keep yourself safe as well. delta 0 malaria
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dot or had 0 malaria dot org. thanks the comments and questions. i really appreciate them. have a great weekend. i see you next week. take ah ah. and
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on the streets of greece, anti immigrant violence is on the rise, the road you have to go from over the country and this and that this is of, from foss, ism and increasingly migrant. farm workers are victims of vicious beatings. javiar slum is helping the pakistani community to find a voice. the stories we don't often hear told by the people who live them undocumented and under attack. this is europe on al jazeera. as the final 3 places at the feet, the will cut or decide it will light from the playoffs will gather reaction from across the globe. the seems. best school council 2022. the world qualifies. special coverage on al jazeera in from mother to daughter, an ancient croft kept alive by a bustling matriarchy ah,
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from start to finish. all traditions intertwined with new designs, making this families place unique and to new z as rich tapestry. the threat on a da 0 what happens in. 1 has implications all around the world to make these stories resonate requires talking to everyday people. the mayor of the city announced that new doing away with the current view. that was, that was to get everybody off. it's international perspective with the human touch zooming way in, and then pulling back out again. ah, allow i mariam to mozy mountain with a quick main stories now and. and ukraine forces that say they are conducting intense assault operation.

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