tv News Al Jazeera June 10, 2022 8:00am-8:30am AST
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reece, my african filmmakers from the democratic republic of congo, and wanda, there was never going to be letting an obstacle just stand in front of you. ye, please. what made you intimate connection between myself and drawn that dick is and matches, and set me africa direct on al jazeera, coveted beyond well taken without hesitation, brought and died for power deadlines. al, well, we live here, we make the rule, not them. they find an enemy and then they try and scare the people with people and power investigate exploded and questions. they used them to be of our around the globe on al jazeera. ah,
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donald trump was at the center of this come to spirit, say u. s. congressional committee outlines its findings into the january 6 attack on capitol hill. oh, the january 6 investigation shows new footage of riots are, is beating police and smashing their way into the capital. ah, you're watching l 0 light for my headquarters and self, i'm sorry, navigates, are also a heads. climate change in migration top the agenda, the summit of the americas that's been boycotted by many nations ukraine's president torn's millions of people could starve because of russia's blockade of its blocked c port. ah,
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ah, hello, a u. s. congressional committee has started public hearings on the 2021 capitol hill riots and former president donald trump's efforts to overturn his election loss. in the prime time, hearing its chair warns us democracy remains in danger following that attack. hydro castro reports from washington, d. c. o, this is what police saw on january 6th, 2021, when they were overwhelmed by a mob trying to overturn president donald trump's election defeat guy, capital police officer carol and edward was the 1st of many officers to be injured . there were officers on the ground. ah, you know, they were bleeding, they were throwing up. they were, you know, they had, i mean i saw friends with blood all over their faces. i was slipping in people's blood while riders vandalized the capital and threatened to kill members of
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congress. trump was watching it all unfold on tv from the white house. according to committee, investigators trump ignored please from advisors and trapped members of congress to pull off the riders the where of the rioters chance to hang mike pence. the president responded with this sentiment quote, maybe our supporters have the right idea. mike pence quote, deserves it. committee investigators also argued that a trump tweet in december was the impetus for far right groups to plan the insurrection, showing videotape depositions of riders, confirming their motives. he personally asked for us to come to the see that. and i thought for everything he's known for us, if it's the only thing he'd go after me, i'll do it all of us here today. then there was the ongoing effort led by trump to falsely claimed the election had been stolen. the committee showed video of then
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attorney general bill bar testifying that the claim was in fact a lie. i made it clear. i did not agree with the idea of saying the election was stolen and putting out the stuff which i told the president was bolt. and i, you know, i didn't want to be a part of it. investigator say trump didn't listen, but his daughter yvonne cut told them she did. i respect attorney general bar. so a accepted what he sent was sent, according to the committee chairman, taken as a whole, the riot and the efforts to overturn the election was nothing short of a coup attempt of 1st in american history. january 6 was the culmination of an attempted cou. a brazen attempt as one right to put it shortly after january 6 to overthrow the government. the republican leaders in congress remained
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the former president's defenders. in fact, it is the most political and least legitimate committee in american history. it is used congressional subpoenas to attack republicans violate due process, an infringe on the political speech, a private citizen. this was just the explosive beginning to a half dozen more public hearing scheduled for his mind. there promised a teacher more testimony from former trump aids who threatened to resign. and believe trump was too dangerous to leave by himself. in the waiting days at his presidency. jo, castro, al jazeera washington. reuters ipsos pole has reveal that more than half of us republicans believe the false claim that left when protest or is led to january 6 attack to try to make then president donald trump looked bad. 58 percent of republican say they believed most of the protesters were peaceful and law abiding.
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that's despite more than $100.00 police officers suffering injuries on the day. the poll also found almost 2 thirds of republicans believe the 2020 presidential election was stolen from trump. judges have dismissed more than 50 lawsuits challenging the election results. multiple reviews and audits have found no evidence of widespread fraud. richard painter is a professor at the university of minnesota law school and former chief ethics lawyer for president george w bush. he says the evidence presented by the committee shows the capital attack was well planned to overturn election results. message is that this was a clear, intentional, deliberate, well plan effort to overthrow the logic state government. the united states government, the government set forth in our constitution. we. ready elect the president every 4 years. and donald trump in his desperate desire to claim to power
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spread the rumor, the. busy false blame that somehow he had won an election that he had lost weight 1000000 votes. his own attorney general told him he lost the election. that was obvious, that is a back. and yet he sought to play the power and he instructed the justice department to issue opinions that the election, but somehow fraudulent attorney general bar resigned. and then president trump still insisted on trying to get those opinions. he pressured the military. he plan to use the military to intervene and hold the election again. he uh then a coordinated with his political operatives who staged the rally, which turned violent any incited of violent insurrection. this was a well planned effort over 22 and a half months to hold on to power, and this is the way democracies turned it a dictatorship. as also franco is
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a republican strategist and a former advisor to senator john mccain. he describes the hearings as political theater, and unconstitutional. this is the 1st time in our 246 here history, where you have one party in the speaker, a point, every member of the committee in a commission and exclude our only republican members, but deny them. the leader, the republican leader, the opportunity to name republicans only 2 anti trust republicans were willing to sit on the committee supporting 3 of us understand that the congress is very evenly divided over 200 republican members, oppose this commission is unconstitutional, illegitimate among them because of its constitution being just a really a kangaroo court, a soviet style kangaroo court were only one side of a story, was told, the claims go to the merits. i'm
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a lawyer. the claims are nothing to do with process. so we're concerned about rule of law and process. a process here is fly in a book. something is flawed. and if procedural in the procedure in court, the case is thrown out. so we have the kangaroo course, that's what the american people are seeing. this as being the case. so you're talking about that. you're also seeing 2 things are important tonight. the 1st is the republic. suppose the so called republican on the committee was 13 percent approval. and her state said the following were being selective were representing tonight that should be frightening to every american. there were witnesses that were on conservative media. today in the united states saying their point of view and their testimony under oath was never shown. nor was there any discussion of the protest. her who was unarmed that was shot by the police and her family. none of that. so this is a frightening one sided view for the next few weeks,
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the committee hearings will focus on several points of the investigation. monday session will focus on donald trump and his advisors knowing he lost the election. then on wednesday, it will examine trumps plans to replace the attorney general. so the department of justice would spread his stolen election claims. thursday will focus on trumps efforts to pressure his vice president mike pence to refuse to count electoral votes on january 6th than later in june. how trump summoned and directed supporters to march on the u. s. capital. a date for the final hearing is yet to be announced, but it will include moment by moment accounts of the riots as recalled by white house officials and other news out of the u. s. 3 people have been killed in one person is critically injured after the latest mass shooting. the gunmen opened fire to factory in the u. s. state of maryland. a shoot out between him and the state trooper ensued and both were injured. the suspects motive is not yet known. there have been more than $230.00 mash shooting so far this year in the us.
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the summit of the americas continues in los angeles. president joe biden said the region is one with unlimited potential, provided the countries work together. one area of corporation is climate change. rob rattles reports. this, that the summit of the americas us president joe biden has focused in part on global warming and clean energy. through our efforts to strengthen clean energy economy in the americas. we're committing to just not just the energy transition, but to make communities that have been historically marginalized, are able to share equally in the gains. the us unveiled a plan to cooperate and help fund caribbean countries, trying to strengthen their vulnerable infrastructure in the face of rising sea levels and more frequent and destructive storms and to move away from fossil fuel. our member states are heavily dependent on fossil fuels for our energy needs and
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other programs sets goals for boosting the regions, clean renewable energy sources for electricity. major economies like argentina and brazil have signed on ah, the president of park y spoke for many countries in latin america and the caribbean . think they are suffering from a climate crisis. they didn't help to create greenhouse gas emissions in paraguay are low. however, we have suffered greatly and we have suffered the effects over the last few years. this is seen in droughts, floods, fires, and crises when it comes to our water resources. we need specific commitments, especially from the countries who bear the most responsibility. biden is also pushing an initiative aimed at saving what's left of the amazon rain forest that could lead to awkward moments during his 1st one on one meeting with brazilian president j year. both general, who has encouraged more economic development in brazil's amazon basin. ah,
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as with any gathering of the powerful protesters also came a protester demanding protection of abortion rights in the us. stepped in front of biden's, motorcade, and was tackled by 2 secret service agents and taken into custody. migrants rights advocates demonstrated with a message for biden permit solutions. we demand that those solutions come forward. what happens when you have politicians and executives in a room is often that the people that are most directly impacted by their decisions are left out the number of migrant seeking to enter the us as well as countries like columbia. and sheila has reached record setting levels this year on friday, the summit. participants will sign a declaration on migration, but no comprehensive solution to the vast and complex problem is anticipated. migration is a thorny issue and dealing with it is made even more difficult by the number of
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empty seats at the table here, the leaders of water, molla honduras, mexico and other countries that are the homelands of many migrants have boycotted this summit. rob reynolds al jazeera los angeles still had on al jazeera, another blow to chances of reviving the iran of clear deal to ron plans to switch off more un monitoring equipment. as it's nuclear at its nuclear facilities. palestine foreign minister delivers new evidence to the international criminal court. part of the case submitted for the killing of al jazeera journalist, shedding a balk, ah, now if the wind picks up at this time of the year, seasonal wind blows out of the hot part of iraq for the south, you can imagine it might feel a bit like a blast for this,
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with temperatures staying that high, and i think that's not a bad description. if you standard it. 48 in doha, which is pretty high, 48 in q 8, which is seen 52 in the last couple of days. the whole area is hot. there's a heat wave warning for israel, for the next 24 hours or so. and the postilion territory. so the whole area is hot a little bit. some places hotter than other this pick. for example, garza 32 up to 34. the average is $29.00. you may not think it's much above the average, but you don't get much moving above the average. when is this hot anyway? there does cool down a little bit in the eastern med but this hot wind keeps blowing throughout saturday and probably sunday and you'll note it brings dust with it. so the eastern side, he can't possibly parts the way it stays hot, dusty and windy. now it is possibly slightly hotter in pakistan with the same potential forward dust blown up in the increasing wind. that's probably true for most of somalia, but some temporary good news,
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at least in mogadishu, that close closures has rained about half the months average in the last day. ah, the witness confusion, witness. clarity. witnessed family, witness friends, witness the beginning. witness. the end. witness, life. witness went out every day. the slang with invest in c. m and g investments lou
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ah, come on, the top stories on al jazeera, the sour, a congressional committee investigating last year as insurrection at capitol hill has been told the violence wasn't an accident. and the former president donald trump, bears responsibility for it in a prime time. hearing it's chair warns us democracy remains in danger. following the attack. oh, the committee aired violence previously unseen footage of writers beating police enforcing their way into the council. well, a deadlock over grain exports from ukrainian ports is threatening a global food crisis. moscow seize large parts of ukraine's coast, blocking farm exports. and now one of 2 russian back breakaway regions. the east
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sate, they'll soon start shipment by rail to russia. charles stratford reports from keith . another truck arrives at this farm in the cave reaching norton ukraine. thought the rush is on to empty. these silos of last year's harvest of made to make space for approximately 35000 tons of winter wheat. but much of this crop may go to waste because of what ukraine and many countries it exports to say is a russian c blockade. at least 20000000 tons of grain is already stuck in silos across the country, contributing to rising prices and what the u. n. says is a growing global food crisis, so this might have been moved out of the silos in order to make face for the winter . wheat harvey that is expected to start in about
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a month from now. a lot of this may have been taken to silos elsewhere, but a lot of it will begin journey to a port in new media attorney that can take up to 3 months. and the very complicated in day one root takes the grain by train from cube into moldova to avoid a coastal road that ukraine says, russian forces of shelled the train, then drops back into the odessa region of ukraine before being unloaded. a do romanian border on to barges in renee and ismael. it then hits down the river down you to the romanian black sea port of constantino analyst, se shortages and long overland export routes, a push the consumer price of grain up in recent months. producers have been hit even harder. there's not so much the cost of transport and logistics has increased 300 percent since before the war started. we are also looking at ways of getting the green out via the baltic sea record in through hungry. but it can also take up
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to 2 months before the trucks take the mays away, samples are analyzed at the quality control, the bar tree on the farm. the grains will be periodically inspected again in the coming weeks because much of it will have to be stored outside silos, where rod could set in after only a month. exporting by train from ukraine is complicated because the rail track gauge is different in neighboring poland and romania, russian forces withdrew from this area a few weeks ago. this wheat was planted before the war started. farmers work in the fields of maze and sunflowers despite the danger of mines, an unexploded ordnance vacant port number. it was very difficult because we were sewing during the invasion of our domestic market is very small. we have to sell it upon russia, which is also a major grain produces as western sanctions prevented from exporting to global
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markets, depriving it to billions of dollars of revenue and making the crisis even worse. moscow says it is open to a potential turkish and un plan to allow safe passage for ships to transport grain from ukrainian ports across the black sea and out to international markets by the boss for us. but russia says ukraine must d mind the sea root 1st. ukraine has so far, refused saying it won't leave ukrainian ports like a desa exposed to a potential russian attack from the sea. no agreed solution means ukraine could lose millions of dollars in revenue. and according to the un, more countries across africa and asia already suffering food shortages could potentially suffer even more stuff without a 0 q. the head of the international atomic energy agency says iran plans to disconnect 27 surveillance cameras. monitoring its sites to hahn is responding to criticism from the un watchdog for failing to explain uranium particles at some
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sites. victoria gating be reports. workers at an iranian nuclear site turned off to surveillance cameras on wednesday. it ran says it will disconnect more. the equipment is operated by the international atomic energy agency or i. e, a, it's director says hey ran is making a mistake. 27 cameras are being removed. this is, of course, a poses, a serious challenge to our ability to continue working there and to confirm the correctness or for your ass declaration. i'm going to have yet to rand says it action is in response to criticism from the i am the un nuclear watchdog says iran has failed to explain uranium particles at some of its sites. the latest dispute is a setback for those hoping to revive the 2015 nuclear deal. it was designed to
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limit terrans nuclear ambitions in exchange for sanctions relief bought in may 2018 them president donald trump withdrew the u. s. and began re imposing sanctions only ran the following year for may rainy and president hassan re honie told the remaining signatories, his government would reduce its commitments every 60 days until they own it. they're part of the deal. iran has since limited access to its nuclear sites. they can not expect you wrong. so full collab delivered beyond its commitments, you know, all safeguards related cameras on the commitments. but you, ron, are being operated on their, on their way. you, ron, is not something them. iran is only stopping those voluntary measures. they're supposed to be implemented under the nuclear bill. the i. e. a chief has described the situation as tents with negotiations at a low point and both sides blaming the other for a lack of progress, victoria gate, and be al jazeera, what the palestinian foreign minister has been at the international criminal court
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at the hague. he's been delivering the findings if an investigation into the killing a veteran journalist, shutting up or claire, the al jazeera correspondence was shot dead by is really forces last month while covering raids. and janine, in the occupied west bank, stefan has more from the hague. it's the 1st visit by the palestinian foreign minister to the new prosecutor of the international criminal court carton. crime. but the minister has been here many times before since 2015. he has been pressuring this court to what he says, stop the impunity by is for our very 1st time. the minister came here. he was accompanied by al jazeera journalist, serene or clay. now, 7 years later, he brings files with evidence of her killing. now nearly one month ago, evidence that shows according to the palestinian prosecutor that she was deliberately targeted by an israeli soldier. i also conveyed the hopes and expectations of the policy and people on the policy of victims who look up to the
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court as the last and only resource for justice and art and art. rightfully so. frustrated with the full skill impunity that israel israeli officials continue to enjoy, even when there is an ongoing investigation by the court. will the case of sherry and i will actually ever be here. of course, you know, we have already, you know, delivered the outcome of the investigation that we have done officially, you know, in the state of palestine. he has a requested, you know, a detailed information about the investigation itself. i will, you know, pass that request to the leadership to see, you know, how we are going to cooperate with that request in order for us not to give the court an excuse not to investigate or not to deal with this, sir. no, assassination. seriously, after years of judicial debate,
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the court decided last year that it does have jurisdiction to investigate war crimes committed against the palestinian people. an investigation started immediately, but so far no suspects have been named. the palestinian minister has now invited prosecute a car to visit the palestinian territories. hope that this will speed up the investigation. thousands of people have taken to the streets of bon osiris to protest against the worsening economic situation. inflation has had 58 percent. it's one of the highest rates in the world. 37 percent of the population lives in poverty. sir isabel has more from the demonstration. where here in the center of when a site is where thousands of thousands of people have taken to the streets to protest against the government of a mandate. this has generated major chaos. in the north side, as you can see, all the roads it is right in the center of when a fate is, are completely blocked by people. those who have come here to day are one to more
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government assistance to assist the poor. the government of a letter before and this is already spending millions to assist people who need distributing cash handouts, social programs, among other things. but those by marching to day are saying that it's not enough. argentina is right now struggling with a very high inflation rate around 6 percent every month. and people here are saying that that is affecting their purchasing power mostly to buy food. and that's why there are protesting here today. earlier this year, argentina reached an agreement with the international monetary fund and the i m. f announced this week that this country had reached all the major target in the 1st quarter. this is important to unlock more debt or more relief debt. for argentina, there is a major economic crisis right now with exchange rate controls with very high inflation, with very high poverty. and all of this are problems that so far the government has
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been unable to address 17 go for its have been suspended by the pga tour for choosing to participate in the controversial saudi back golf series and includes former world number one's on major champions. the tournament teed off near london on thursday. laura burton manley reports 6 time major winner phil mickelson swings into action. little he's one of the biggest names to join the new live golf tour. but with saudi arabia's sovereign wealth fund backing the series, the competition has been overshadowed by politics. there's not long after the players. t up, the pga tour announced it was suspending. michelson and 16 of the gulf of grip pga tour. commissioner j monahan said misstatement, their participation in the live gulf event is in violation of the tournament regulations. i've also worked really hard to contribute and try to build and add
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value to the tour during my time there. and i worked really hard to earn a lifetime exemption and i'm i, i, i don't want to give that up. i don't believe i should have to. reality is accused of grave human rights violations, including the murder of john. this is jamarcus shock. she and it's involvement in the war in yemen. so the new tour is offering huge prize money and critic see that as a move by saudi arabia to revise that image. and it has almost endless resources to do so. from nickerson has reportedly been offered $200000000.00 to join the break way event. and there is 25000000 dollars in prize money, a line that this week's tournament sponsoring more than is available at next week's us open next week with the plays involved,
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a facing tough questions for school. if any way you wouldn't play on a moral basis. if the money was right is only where you win play machine, those who pledge their loyalty to the pga tour. believe this is fractured the world of golf. oh yeah. i was speaking to a few people yesterday, and one of the comments was anything, any decision that you make in your life that is purely for money, usually doesn't end up going the right way to use. many gulf has make more money from sponsorship deals than they when on the late fee. so a key question may be, how those sponsors react, the live tor actually so far, no major sponsors have pulled the deal for you. but throughout the gulf world, everyone has way to see normally what happens next law about manly.
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