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

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lucidly went after the poor people logging and not the master. if we did, we also had an outdated legal framework because believe it or not, grabbing land wasn't a crime here, but under pressure internationally, things have started to change in recent months. a major land grabber and to local mirrors were ready for the changes that offer a glimmer of hope that things could improve before it's too late for all alison that i'm just some quizzes and well, in the 2nd report from amazon, we visit a community working to conserve the most sensitive and important areas of the way forest by supporting other ways to make money in the region. and you can catch that on staff say, here on al jazeera course, you can find much more about the stories where falling on our website. plenty of video and contacts and experts analysis right there, and you can find it all a w, w, w dot al jazeera dot com. ah,
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reminder of our top stories on al jazeera, the u. k. high court has ruled the british government can go ahead with its plan to send asylum seekers to wanda. the court rejected arguments from charities in human rights groups, policies, unlawful 1st rights from the u. k. 21. the shed jobs for next week, protest is in india, pakistan, and bangladesh are demanding the rest of the form a spokeswoman for india, the governing party, the b. j. p. the poor sharma was suspended on sunday to making comments about the prophet mohammed that many consider offensive sharma a high profile figure in india, often representing the b j. p. and televised debates, inflation him the u. s. has hit a new 40 year high consumer price is jumped 8.6 percent in may compared to the same time last year. so in cost of petrol has been blamed and driven by high demand and persistence supply shortages. the federal reserve is expected to respond with an
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interest rate rise. next week. you can find out more of course, on our website by all the stories that were falling, but the stream is next. ask me if anyone will be held accountable for the killing of al jazeera journalist sharing plate, but by ah abuse with another one in the future. i don't need to be a from with them. i need to be honest with you. most of the new you also knew so that the home and a view to what we so to what the hell that the put up with a lot of information.
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yet. obama, the possible booking for the you know, the whole one. i don't want to deal with that and then i will see, bobby house. i don't want a shooting abuto to the ah. 3 shootings killing is the story. the same story. she was telling the
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difference is that this time the war knew the victim. we are not being killed because of what we do. but because of who we are, we are not being killed by mistake. but as part of a grand design a made to make sure we all understand, no one is safe so that we all live with fear in our hearts and surrender. that was palestinian american diplomat re atman, sewell speaking at the united nations 2 weeks ago during the lever smarts, one month since the murder of out as they were journey issuing apple. i play by israeli forces at the time there was international outrage and condemnation, but he'll be held accountable for her death down the stream. we continue to honor
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the life of our colleague as we point the latest efforts to secure justice for surely. ah, let's meet your panel. hello, lena? yes. when anita. so get to have you on the stream to day, lena, please introduce yourself to have you as around the world. hi everyone, i'm lean, barclay, i'm she rains nice yet to hear you. hello. yes. well, welcome to the strain, tell our audience who you are and what you day. hi everyone and my name again. nuclear han, and i'm a london based staff writer for the atlantic. thanks for being with us and a familiar face. if you watch out your news all the time, need a welcome back to the stream. leave you my the audience, who you are on what you day. my name is niga berry and i'm alger 0. corresponded to be occupied. yes. all right, so audience, you have seen the line up, they have expertise in this tragic area of justice. pushing apple play. what would
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you like to ask them? you can ask them anything. comment section is right, heavy part of today's show, lena? this last month. wow, it went so fast what it's been like for you and your family 1st and foremost, thank you for having me on the show. oh, it's still. it's so difficult to comprehend that it's been a month and we still haven't processed that. this is the reality that we know i will no longer see shooting on tv, reporting that i will no longer be spending a my weekend with shooting. it's been very tough to say the least. it's been a difficult tragedy. that was the last, not just to our family, but to the entire nation, to the entire world. oh, we've received overwhelming amount of support and love from everyone. not just
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palestinians, but people from all over the world. and that just goes on to show that shooting was loved by everyone shooting was the people's person. she entered everyone's home through this tell a through t v screen. and the same way that she carried the stories of older people, how she brought it to life, older stories of the palestinians. we saw on the day of her funeral, how the palestinians carried her on their, on their shoulders. and that has been comforting to our family, the support, but we will continue to carry her legacy and to continue keep her memory alive. you know, i just had a look for your twitter feed to see how the last month it gone for you. and this is a beautiful picture here, have a look here on my laptop, so i don't want you to miss this that you posted. i hadn't had the heart or the
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courage to post a picture from the feel. he is one of my favorite pictures from that day. i'm just going to scroll down so everybody can see it. tell us why this picture, se, specialty oh, where do i began? i mean the, the picture, the flags, the people, and just the paintings on the walls of the, of the catholic church, just symbolizes to me, was very, it was very special. it's very difficult to express it than to put it into words. but it just shows how everyone was there for shooting, and everyone did their best to be at the church despite the restrictions, despite the difficulties they face. and that picture in a way speaks to me. so it's very emotional, has some spiritual sense to it. but other than that, it was the palestinian flags and just her her,
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her call fan being carried out to me was very symbolic. it just shows how the people were carrying her from the moment she left the hospital to the moment. she was at the, at the church and having the post in flags raised high in the church also was very emotional. and it was a powerful image to say the least. i want to bring in need at the head of al jazeera is america's bureau. because the moment that we heard about the tragic merger of shooting, how does it that needs to be accountability? this is one of our own. the expectations were very high. this is the head of our sales americas bureau as speaking on may the 26th i believe. take a look at the 0 position is crystal clear. shaheen are blacklist. life matters and so does
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a transparent and independent investigation of her killing and of the serious violation of her funeral by these radio security forces. there are other crystal clear issues for a network. one shit in a black roller was killed by an israeli bullet. and in cold blood, while she was doing her job to the network has the evidence and the witnesses to support that position and it, at some point, we have to start looking at well, which investigations have been carried out. what are people looking into? what do we need to know from a news perspective? what's new in the past month? before i answer your question for me, i want to say that one of the shootings, legacies is this over here, all women, part of her legacy. she was someone we so growing up, reporting on the news and there's a saying that goes,
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you can't be what you can see. and we saw sitting on camera highly respected on the front lines covering the stories in danger, in difficult positions, so that empower this old. and every time i hopped out to myself, i remember her, especially more still as to she was killed. she has been a driving force that's changing so many things so many lives in palestine and we see the out poor of love by so many people. just a few days ago we were in geneva covering a story. and a 10 year old girl came to me and john is about our producer and she was like, are you sisters of shitty? and i posted that my instagram and people were saying, you know, we are all the stories of should we all feel like she was a member of our family? and this is why people want accountability. this is why the palestinian authority has asked the icpc to hold an investigation into this specific case to pursue the killers. now we know that the past,
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the foreign minister was today meeting with the eyes to see the prosecutor can urging to prosecute killers when it comes to the murder offsetting. now we don't know yet if the icpc is going to be looking into this case specifically, we know that an investigation has been opened last year after the court prosecutor from it's been to the, at the time pack you've been to, the has said that there is a potential crimes that have been committed into the war crimes that have been potentially competent to pass the territory. but ever since then, we haven't seen them at push or advanced cases, which is why we've seen the past in, in put them in there. now what people want is because she's also an american citizen. they want you surgery mean in the once an investigation into the case. whether they believe that the u. s. is going to care more about one citizen than it cares about its relationship with israel. people have so many doubts about that. yeah, when you got to come in here,
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let me just share something with you. these are 2 senators on my laptop, they sent a letter all over the world journalist pursue truth and accountability at great personal risk. press freedom is a core american value, and we cannot accept impunity when jolissa killed in the line of duty goes on. but it's really interesting that we have a democratic senator and a republican senator. those are 2 senators coming together saying this is not enough. we need accountability. what else are you seeing? how has the u. s. reacting there has been criticism. yes, certainly. you know, i think that letter, written by kind of drawn all softened mitt romney is indicative of just how much the court this is struck with american lawmakers in addition to their letter. there is also another letter signed by more than 50 lawmakers calling for the us to really push for and in the independent and transparent investigation into sri and i closed. so clearly i think us lawmakers even now that letter only came out this
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week despite the fact that we're approaching the month anniversary of her kil, like they're not letting up. this is something that still really, you know, kind of top of mind. and i think that's really important because so far we've seen that the by didn't administration has declined to open its own probe into this investigation. it said that it really wants the israelis and palestinians to do that. but as i argue to my piece, i think that the u. s. has an opportunity and frankly, a responsibility here, as you noted, korean was an american citizen. and you know, the u. s. the state department has set itself, they know higher priority than to that of its citizens abroad to the, to their safety and their security. so there is an opportunity here, and while it may be certainly long overdue, i think many people have argued that i would argue that it's also not too late. and that letter was sent to sexually blanket sexual states for the united states. i want to bring in here, omar dad, who is pretty analyst,
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he's so really passionate about palestinian rights. and this is what he told us a few hours earlier. mean i haven't listen and i love to get your reaction. is omar festival lack of accountability from the united states for israel. the atrocities is nothing new for literally decades. israel has been committing unspeakable war crimes against palestinians. and the u. s. has not just been silent. they've actually been funding these really military with billions and weaponry. and now we're just seeing how far this lack of accountability goes. that even when these really military kills an internationally recognized journalist and a us citizen, divided administration is merely pretending to care about human rights and uttering platitudes of concern. while refusing to actually do anything. our political culture in the us of putting politics above human beings is what needs to change
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or yes, i definitely agree with 0 mar, said, i mean not israel for decades has enjoy impunity. and if it wasn't for that shootings f could have been avoided, sol does so as all other palestinians who have been killed and the u. s. as a super, as a superpower does have the, the authority, it does have the influence and the power to actually influence it has the ability to make a change. and that wants to, i mean it's funds as the omar said, billions of dollars into it, into israel's military. and it's the same military that kill chilean. so there needs to be accountability. the u. s. government needs to carry out an investigation where it's actually hold israel accountable for shootings, assassination and, and also just the same will come to the st. this will continue happening if there
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is no accountability. and we're hoping that uh, we move past statements of condemnation statements or regrets and actually see concrete action being taken place. at the end of the day, the u. s. has a responsibility because she didn't was an american citizen. and she was a human being. she was a journalist and oh yeah, what is it? we're not asking for more. i salute literally. so right now i want to remind our audience, what's your secretary of state? lincoln said recently when journalist pressed him for what is the us going to do about this naturalized american citizen? this is what he told those journalists. and then ladies, i want you to respond to some of the you to questions and comments that are coming through very briefly before we move on as take a look at lincoln. i saw your review
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with i deplore the loss of, of serene. she was a remarkable journalist, an american citizen, as you will know. and there too, we are determined to follow the facts and get to the true fact or whatever. no, not here, but no, i'm sorry with respect to we've not yet been established. we're looking for another, not that we were looking for an independent, credible investigation. when that investigation happens, we will follow the facts. we're really late. it's, it's, it's straightforward is that that is not yet happened, but it's something that we very much want to see up. so guess i have questions from our audience who, watching right now needed? we will handle this one. next, be honest, israel will never be held accountable countable because the world allows them to get away with the murders that they have been committing for decades. this is a hard one to put to just go ahead. yeah, this is like boston and say that she is not the 1st victim and richard and then
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she's not going to be the last. there's a lot of frustration. there's a lot of anger and people seeing that their lives do not matter. just because they're palestinians, even when we see in the case of shooting well known, well respected working in prestige is channel, have an american or has it has an american citizenship. and still, she still judged her lives is judged based on her identity. she is a palestinian, so we don't expect to see accountability, but this doesn't mean that palestinians want to keep asking for. it won't keep pushing for accepting it as a status quo is a problem. accepting that be israeli army can just shoot and can palestinians without any accountability that shouldn't be able to continue. and this is part of shitty and message. she was covering the stories of palestinians,
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one story at the time. she was very focused on the human element. she was reporting the story behind the numbers in the news because she wanted the people to know that these are not just numbers. we are human beings with lives each and every one men so much that their families into their communities. and she wanted the world to pay attention to book pressure and israel, we're seeing what's happening now between russia and ukraine. we're seeing how the world is looking at the ukrainians as people on the patient. but we don't see them looking at palestinians with the seeing eye. this part of the message of shitty. this is why shes been recording the news for more than 2 decades. and we'll continue pushing for that message would continue carrying the mantle for shaheen and for others who are still living under more than 55 year old occupation yazmin. i'm going to put this thought to you from alex alex's watching right now. briefly
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if you, if you could, why has antony blinkin made and about face? and he's now calling for an independent investigation of sharina murder. thought she asked me briefly. yeah, i mean, i think when it comes to antony lincoln in the u. s. s. response, you know, they said time and again that they believe that the israelis have the wherewithal to conduct their own destination. that they believe that the israelis and palestinians should work together. but i think what we've seen so far is that that kind of investigation isn't forthcoming. and also just at this rate not possible for, for the part of the israelis, they've ruled out a criminal probe. but frankly, you know, a lot of critics have made the point that israel frankly doesn't have the track record to, to investigate itself in this matter or the incentive to do so. likewise with the palestinians need to, to the israelis point, however, they have noted that they can't conduct a criminal inquiry unless they get the bullet. that was, that was taken from charade or that killed terrain. and the palestinian authority
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refuses to him not over cuz they don't trust the israelis to conduct an investigation. so the u. s. is in effect calling for a solution that simply doesn't exist. and thus there is a vacuum and i think what, what they haven't come around to is this notion that actually dis back. you can really only be filled by the u. s. government. because the only other government that has an obligation to show you is the american government. so we start to draw the adult from an organization called bits and them. and it's a reality check for what the past months has been like in palestine. and this is what told us earlier since 914 in for tuesday, each really military and police, the allies and systematic against 1st along with punitive take crater is a cornerstone needs for the past and for genes in order to end the violence. you
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must mental israel of apartheid need. it has the feeling in palestine changed in the past month. are people thinking about showing death as a some kind of milestone that something has to change, even though over the many years that they're almost resigned to well, how can that be accountability? how can there be justice you know, for someone to be reporting on the news to become the news, it makes an impact on people specifically that they loved her, that they felt like she was close to them, were seeing her being honored. you know, we go travel across the occupied west langley see a picture of her even when people meet us in the street, they tell us how much they loved her. they remember her, they want to be an accountability. we've seen a funeral that united so many palestinians thousands and thousands of them and she was carrying the palestinian flags,
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all of the sim. those have been translated into the ground to palestinian. they're also raising their flags. they believed that they lost someone who was uniting them, who were so important. and let me also add that people even didn't know how much she meant to them. like i had friends who were like, we know her, but we didn't expect to cry that much. she was part of our childhood. so all of that momentum is making people want to keep pursuing justice. we want to keep talking about shipping and whether we're going to get to a place where we get accountability. now, that's a big question, but what would they want the world to know is that they're going to keep pushing for accountability, not just for the soldier who killed her, but for the one who gave him the orders. this is part of what the i see can prosecute against what palestinians want is. accountability for the whole system
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that allows palestinians to still be living under amended 3 occupation. i want to bring in my heart nasser who just really reinforces what you needed. and yasmin and lena have been telling us about shaheen, and that is the incredible impact that she made on the world. such a big impact that i let my hair pick up from this point. he's really taught us. i am a united nation. the department of global communications welcomed a proposal from the permanent observer of the state of palestine to the united nations to rename a training program managers to the should in our play training program for listening broadcasters and journalists. the renaming is symbolic way of honoring should, ins, legacy and testament to her bravery and courage. the 2nd general
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was appalled by her killing and has called for an independent investigation. and for those who are responsible to be held accountable enough, people keep coming up to you. people are inviting you to different places around the world to really honor your aunt sharing. but i just want to give a little bit of time in a shout to talk about sharing your auntie and how you're thinking about her to day . yeah, i mean, i as me as me that said i, i never ever thought that she would be the breaking news. i never thought i would be wake up to the day where i see a shooting in the headlines, shooting and breaking. you know, she's been, she's been killed as an aunt on the other hand, she was, she was such a, she was the cool aunt. she was compassionate. she was found to be around. her sense of humor was definitely my favorite. and she was also
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a school within herself. i mean, i learned a lot from her li just were dr. let me, i always say that someone's got a great sense of humor. but tell us about actually, since he came, what still cracks you up to this day? and it just did the, the funny story. she would tell us, i just our moments. nothing specific but just spending an entire day watching netflix watching shows. uh huh. it's just a little things, it's hard to pinpoint them, but she had a fun personality. she was always happy. she was she always, she loved life. she always enjoyed the little things, the simplicity of life. these are the things that i will definitely mess. thank you. so much for telling us about your on and remembering that it's not just a political story,
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it's not about just investigations. it's not even just about her legacy, but about your auntie. shaheen. abu i play. thank you so much, leaner for sharing your expertise, your family connection with us. and yasmin, anita as we marked the one month anniversary, did sharing apple at play out 0 is veteran journalist was murdered. thanks so much for being part of the show. i see next time take ah, ah,
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a jew on al jazeera as watches invasion, bring the coaches the 100 day. we bring you the latest from on the ground and the wars global employer. and you 3 part series describes the struggle for the return of african art, plundered by colonialism, and still housed in european museums. today. the g 7 m, nato, hold key summits with the water ukraine on the growing global food and the cost of living crises. this much to discuss is the influence of far right. politics grows. the big picture examines francis struggle to live up to the self proclaimed ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity. the men's world help qualifies. i'm male biting opportunity for countries to secure their support for caught our 2020 to june on al jazeera. when you're from a neighbourhood known as a hot bed of radicalism,
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