tv News Al Jazeera June 11, 2022 8:00am-8:31am AST
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inside story on al jazeera, we know what's happening in our region. we know how to get to places that others cannot. i wouldn't just put on here guy. by that, put he the only purpose i did 0 had the time in it programming. go live on the on the go live, the were another boy that may not be me. cream is happening in fires. i said, i'm going on with the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. i care about helping you with engaging with the rest of the world. we're really didn't take you into a play. you might not visit otherwise and feel as if you were there. ah .
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the u. s. unveils upon to address the migration crisis across the americas at a summit mark by boycott. ah, you're watching al jazeera alive from the headquarters, and del heim daddy obligates also coming up. the u. k. government gets the go ahead to deport asylum seekers to romando. one month after the killing of al jazeera journalist shooting off play. we look at how her death has united palestinians and rising petrol and food prices in the us push inflation to its highest level in 40 years. ah, hello 20 countries at the summit of the americas have announced the los angeles declaration on migration. it creates incentives for nations in the western hemisphere to take it more migrants,
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but with leaders either uninvited or boycotting the event. it's not clear how effective the measures will be, or bernal's reports from los angeles. across the western hemisphere, millions are on the move, fleeing poverty, crime, repression and climate change. this was the focus of the final day of the summit of the americas. with this declaration, we're transforming our approach to managing migration in the americas. each of us, each of us is signing up to commitments that recognize the challenges we all share . the los angeles declaration on migration includes burden sharing with countries at central and south america agreed to streamline the path for migrants to resettle . the u. s. is putting up more than $300000000.00 to finance the effort. countries have agreed to absorb higher numbers of refugees and temporary workers. for example, mexico will integrate 20000 refugees into its workforce. the u. s. will resettle
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$20000.00 refugees next year. a small number given the enormity of the problem. migration is a humanitarian crisis and a political problem for president joe biden, but it's not only the us that is grappling with the surging human tide in columbia morris. you, me the own up on dodge on me unit. let me get on this in columbia. we have received 1800000 venezuela migrants brothers and sisters that have fled the worst oppression . and we have received them without being a rich country. the u. s. pledge to improve its efficiency and fairness in processing people arriving at its borders and will lead a law enforcement effort targeting human trafficking gains. if you pray on desperate and vulnerable migrants for profit, we are coming for you. we are coming after you. no one expects these measures to stop migration. the reasons are many causes are deep and the pressures are strong.
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o, e at dr. animals, we an insecurity. my country currently is subject to great insecurity. there are armed groups that are stealing, raping, killing, and kidnapping. be it haitians are foreign cities by these criminal activities, they have prevented free circulation of people and goods in the country. the declaration is unlikely to satisfy everyone despite the smiles and the handshakes relations in the americas are acrimonious, but it is a step forward and given the controversies disagreements and no shows that of mark this summit, it is perhaps more than many may have hoped for. rob reynolds al jazeera los angeles, the u. k. government has been given the green light to proceed with a controversial plan to send asylum seekers arriving in the country to wander. a british judge rejected arguments from charities and human rights groups that the policy was unlawful and i think baba has more from the court a defeat for opponents of the government's rwanda program,
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at least in the short term. the u. k. hi, court says next tuesday's flight to porting the 1st group of asylum seekers. took a gully can go ahead. pro refugee groups had argued the policy was unlawful, and they were backed in court on friday by the you and refugee agency, the you and hcr. she outlined the hopelessness of the judicial system. i grew under, it doesn't have facilities that doesn't have lawyers, it doesn't have interpreters, it simply doesn't have the capacity to deal with this. but of course, that is not the issue of the fact is that rwanda is unsafe at a place where any opposition to the county government is often locked up or we don't want to see refugees locked up. we want to see refugees look off the safely. but the judge here said it was important, the home office be able to implement immigration control decisions. he's allowed the groups to appeal vote. that's going to happen on monday, all along the governments. except it's that they would be legal challenges to its plan while insisting it would soon be sending people to rwanda. but it's still
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possible. it could face a white, a judicial review, including in to whether a wonder in fact, is a safe country to send vulnerable people. the u. k. in rwanda announced the agreement back in april. the 1st stages involved a payment of more than $150000000.00 to the rwandan government. the british government hopes the scheme will deter people from crossing the english channel from france in small boats. last year 28000 people made the dangerous journey. say for this year, more than $10000.00 people have done so. but expert doubt that the rwanda scheme will change much. you take government has already been into the range of what had been described as hostile environment policies toward my guns and assigning seekers . and he said now that people come across the board, and on the contrary, reducing the goals for, for cleaning upside them, increases the document you go for now, the flanks to run the account in theory,
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begin in the next few weeks, opponents of the rwanda scheme will try to convince the court that the entire policy is unlawful. the dean barbara al jazeera london, the ukrainian officials are made. another plea for heavy weapons from the west as the eastern city of sierra on yes continues to come under russian fire. the ukrainian military says there is no chance of holding the city without the delivery of weapons that have been promised by the west. it's the focus of moscow's advance, and one of the bloodiest flashpoints in the war with up to $200.00 ukrainian soldiers being killed each day. done the money. and if somebody acquainted currently it's more common this area, but it all started here. 5 grad missiles landed on the skull. it's difficult for us . the house has been down. the shells were flying them up. some boom boom boiler needed grease,
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a bomb hit our house. it fell for the roof penetrated the ceiling in the hall. it's now lying there. somebody needs to take a look at in case of explodes, that there are warnings that a cholera outbreak in the southern city your pole could claim thousands of lives, corpses left to rot on the streets. unbroken. sanitation systems are being blamed for the outbreaks. the cities mayor is urging international agencies to establish humanitarian corridors, to allow remaining civilians to leave. the port city was bombarded by russian forces for weeks before it was captured. russia and china have opened a new cross border bridge in the far east to boost bilateral trade. russia transport minister says the bridge will help push annual trade to more than 1000000 tons of goods. china is a major buyer, fresh and natural resources and cultural products. moscow is seeking beijing's health as it faces sweeping western sanctions following its invasion of ukraine. saturday marks, one munson city in
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a barclay was shot in the heads by is really forces while she was on assignment and jeanine al jazeera media network continues to demand a rapid, independent, and transparent investigation. and to the killing a fits journalist in the occupied west bank shitty and was with al jazeera for 25 years, covering the story of the israeli occupation. she was known as the voice of palestine . and in one con reports from grandma. she is being honored and remembered in more ways than 11 month one from the killing of al jazeera german, the sharina barkley and coles were an investigation into her death. continue to be ignored by these railings. the u. s. state department has said it was an open independent israeli investigation, despite the fact sharina was an american citizen. oh, but investigation or not. it hasn't dim the impact about blood. but she was born hours after serene block lay was killed by israeli soldiers after sharina
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death. there was never any doubt what her parents wanted to kill the new born sharyn abu, our claim ron was born at mid day on may. the 11th. unless the hood and they can sit in a wallclear, we called her should in a blackly in order to honor her. i was in the hospital the night before. before i entered the operation room, my husband told me she had been killed and he wanted to call our daughter that i was shocked and sad. should him what's going on? we were going to court our baby elma, but we didn't hesitate to change the name at 2 weeks old, she's already seen israeli settlers attack a village while she won't remember this attack is likely she will see many incursions like this in her life. the kind of witness that sharina journalist would seek out and report on what and she was doing just that in jeanine when she was shot in the head on may 11th by israeli soldiers. ah, on the day the funeral israeli falls and storm the procession and started to beat
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mourners, causing pall bearers to navy. drop her casket that didn't stop thousands of palestinians from marching through occupied easter, useless to take part in a funeral. and bearing this is present university, the most prestigious educational institution in palestine. this is where sharin helped the next generation of journalists, her losses at the campus. hard. the university is announced a number of ways to honor and remember her, including the shriek of walk like scholarship. one of the best female journalist sharon is an example that needs to remain a life for the students in order to continue learning from and inspiring from from gaza to the occupied westbank across palestine. shrink killing is not only shocked to be united palestinians here and abroad in grief. this is sharina ob office office is now
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a temporary showing to her. almost every day people are coming into this office with floral arrangements and some have to say very touching artwork. but this isn't about her being a journalist, this is much more than that. there's a now common saying about sharina bach lake that she was a daughter of palestine. america. how does her ramallah still had on al jazeera, ah, gone, are the sounds of the animals, the birds in 6th, the live in the forest will look at the magnitude of destruction in the columbia, amazon, because of deforestation, and demand the arrest of a suspended member of india's governing party after comments about the prophet muhammad ah, with our key weights,
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temperatures have been in the fifty's the last 5 days. it's been very hot. and the wind blowing down from kuwait, his dagger, he started to pick up the dust of already sitting outside. so sat is not particularly pretty picture hot, dry and dusty is fairly typical this time the throughout the arabian peninsula, not through iraq back to will sometimes as far west as the measuring coast, which is the case at the moment though it is cooling down here for example, the focusing gouter is 34 on saturday, but it comes down to about 27th. the wind direction, changes in the wind, picks up to some degree. now i said this is going to get hot and dusty, but the heat's going to be temper to some degree because it has it come across the water doe house. $48.00 degrees goes down to $42.00, so it's dusty still hot but not as hot. if you like, but it's very typical for this time, the year, the hall of africa, particularly somali, has seen some rain recent. they could see a bit more line of light is blue. it's not much i know, but it's something that few shows up in the easiest human highlands. mostly that
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rain and trough graph greece further west towards the gulf of guinea in southern africa. take the south have cuz been very quiet recently. looks lovely. cake towns at 24 degrees. that is about to change, the forecast the weekend looks pretty good. but afterwards, think of what a windy from the west. ah ah. coveted beyond well taken without hesitation. fought and died for power lines our world. 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 investigators exposed it and questions they used and abused of our around the globe on al jazeera. ah
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ah, ah. hello again. the soft stories on al jazeera, the sour 20 countries at the summit of the americas have announced the los angeles declaration on migration. it creates incentives for nations to take in more migrants. several countries in the region have been experiencing record levels of migration in recent months. the u. k. high court has approved a controversial government plan to send asylum seekers to rwanda. but human rights groups are appealing the ruling. the 1st flight with 30 migrants is scheduled to leave on monday. the u. s. secretary of defense as china is increasingly engaged in destabilizing military activity near taiwan. lloyd austin was speaking
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of the shangri la dialogue and singapore, a meeting of security officials from around the world. it comes a day after austin met with china's defense minister, who said that beijing won't hesitate to start a war. if taiwan declares independence, we see growing coercion from beijing, we really witnessed a steady increase in provocative and destabilizing military activity near taiwan. and that includes peel a aircraft flying near taiwan in record numbers in recent months, and nearly on a daily basis. and we remain focused on maintaining peace stability and the status quo. a cost across the taiwan strait. but the p. r c's moves threatened to undermine security of stability and prosperity and oprah schubert last spring. and jessica washington, who's joining us from singapore. so to what extent of that china us relations
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really been a focus of the summit? jessica, whoa, that's exactly right. we see the us china relations and the key focus of the shangri la dialogue, which is the leading security summit in the asia pacific to get some analysis regarding china's foreign policy approach at defense. i'm joined now by you soon from the student center. she's the director of the china program, and thank you so much for joining us. we really appreciate your time. any thoughts on the u. s. secretary of defense, lloyd austin's address a few messages directly aimed at china. what do you think the response to those messages would be? well, as they were attacking you certainly do not appreciate the what they will perceive as a tag on the chinese position in the region. and also in china's foreign policy on defense policy in the region. so it will be very curious to see what the chinese
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defense minister will say tomorrow, but that's all was what was interesting was also the presentations and the speeches . but other ministers that we have seen her a 2nd to our speech and a lease to buy the donation, to pass minister. and he was saying about there's an h away and you as well show operating asia. you asked me respectful observation, wasn't the chinese like that my say very much because it goes, you live with the chinese positions at asia, asian facia, and he was, wants to play a role asia and then used to obey the rules that are made by the asian countries so that the job, the 2nd jobs thing, my son a lot about the national order, especially the movies, all for the chinese. the question is, who's, who's all there. so you, there is indeed an asian rule that asian way at asia order. and i think the issue as for who is position is justified here is do subjects with very interesting
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points. and a lot of discussion from us about this concept of maintaining the status quo. you've said that the status quo is a rather delicate concept. could you explain that while we're talking about a spence cold with or yeah, well said is cool regarding tie one of our to he matter because it's subject to interpretation because we know that if with how he's probably got a lot of them, how will these people do not believe that how one is a part of china, but her, the previous discussion with the previous definition to choose that people on the 2 sides of the grade. believe there's one china that was regard to that school. so the school has changed to what has been changing for the past to 40 years. so for the past 2 years, but we did. the question is how come to respond to that change? and whether we come back to the military, confrontational manner over the past,
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over this conference, there has been a lot of talk about managing competition from beijing's perspective. how do you believe that they view that competition can be managed? or in fact, do they want to manage competition would be less engaging. that's fully accepted the framing of us china relations as a primarily compact with just yet. because i think china would like to believe that there are too many things that he wasn't trying to put the corporate adequate help with power coming cooperation apparently works in china's paper. they want to have this friendly or does pop to the environment. well, the competition or the competitive message is very, very much in direct them. so that works in china's favor, but now we have, you was very open. explain that our relationship is primarily competitive. so saying the chinese are having a difficult time absorbing that message and also adapt the message because while the chinese accepted the competitive framing,
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does that mean that all the issues for cooperation, for the past several decades are now gone? what's lab the is china has to deal with the united states and also u. s. r lies basically had all and i think that's the position beijing is not willing to take. just finally, we have some key events on china's domestic calendar. the 20th national congress with how it is, how do those domestic events effect, china's foreign policy approach. there's a long term, the fact that there's a short term as in the short term, the fact is more salient currently, because with major domestic political events going on in china. as in type agents, natural preference is for the external environment to be stable. and that's easy to understand that what you are having political cycles domestically, you want the external environment to be as stable as possible so that you can deal with your domestic complex 1st. so which means it,
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i think what this here for the money to china's foreign policy has actually been hired moderates because they don't want to create trouble. they want $200.00 and they want to get over their political cycle. first. the question is, is that sustainable? what's, what kind of foreign policy are we looking? probably tied off for the 25 income was the office. you didn't pay any he, sir term and eat the experience of the past 10 years. as a president, i will say it is more likely for china to be assertive and evo aggressive again, rather than to continue on this current, moderate pass, because by next here at the my city, politics of the political cycle and the pressure will be gone in thank you so much for those very interesting insights and very important questions raised also, as you mentioned, to morrow is the final day of the shangri la dialogue, where we will hear from general way from huh. where we, he will have
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a response to make his response to the comments made by the u. s. secretary of defense, lloyd austin. all right, thank you so much. jessica washington reporting from singapore kohls for the arrest . the former spokeswoman for india's governing b. j. p. are growing louder for faster as of march on the streets and a number of countries demanding action of poor sharma was suspended on sunday. after making comments about the prophet muhammad, but many consider offensive victoria gate and b reports in various cities from the deli oh, to low. who to deco? did you call to? yeah, i was in worship as gathered up to friday, prays to voice that opposition to comments made by an indian politician. yet i'm not real protesting as an indian woman made bad comments about the character of our beloved prophet, muhammad, so we ought. yes. nepal sharma is the target of their anger. the former spokeswoman
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for india's governing b. j. p. made comments about the prophet mohammed during a tv debate that many say would derogatory protest is want her arrested for hate speech. we don't numbers, i'm hear you about a gabriella. one ball only one police complaint has been laws against no poor sharma. and despite that, she has not been arrested let if she should be arrested as soon as possible and stringent action should be taken against her. sharma has been suspended while the parties media head in new delhi levine. qu margin dow has been expelled. he's also accused of making insulting remarks. the b j. p says it strongly denounces insults against any religion sect to ideology, but the backlash is growing. the prime minister of india, a should thumb or an address the nation, i would say a particularly the 200000000 muslims. and i tried to assure them that they will, the advice and freedoms will be protected in india as guaranteed by the
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constitution. countries in the gulf region including cattle and iran, have summoned india's envoys and demanded a public apology. but these protest is wont more. they want to po sharma, arrested, charged, and prosecuted. the comments they say are offensive to islam, victoria, gate, and be al jazeera. the one is warning of a full blown humanitarian emergency in sri lanka, as a group say, nearly 6000000 people need urgent help. there were protests against the economic crisis which are seen sir lincoln's inter months of electricity blackouts, as well as shortages of food fuel on medicine inflation and the u. s. has had a 40 year high. it's being driven by the rising cost of food on petrol. the federal reserve is expected to hike interest rates again next week. particle haine reports from washington d. c. inflation and america is beginning to bite. now the highest, it's been in 40 years. prices rising 8.6 percent over the year through may. and it
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isn't just about numbers, it's about sacrifice. it's rough. i mean, everybody is so high. isn't taking all your money in. just have to sit down and eat less, but it means americans paychecks simply don't go as far as they used to flying costs . 37 percent more rent. that's up almost 7 percent. and food is across the board. more expensive. the price of chicken up 5 percent in a year. you might find picking $1.00 price for the same weight and they go back in the higher, you know, behind the biggest increase by far gas, it is up by almost 50 percent in just a year. according to gas buddy, that the website, the track cost, the average gallon of gas in the u. s. is $5.00 the highest, it has ever been. there are numerous reasons for the rising prices. a spike in food
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and energy costs resulting from russia's invasion of ukraine is one prudent price i consider in america hard. but other prices are rising because of the ongoing supply chain issues triggered by the coven pandemic. there's too much demand, not enough supply. and a shortage of transportation capacity. president joe biden is also blaming company consolidation for many of the increases, there are 99 major ocean line shipping companies that ship from asia. in the united states. 9, they form 3 consortium. these companies have raised their prices by as much as 1000 percent. congress is poised to pass a bill that would give us regulators more power over the shipping companies. but that likely won't have an immediate impact. and next week, the federal reserve is poised to raise interest rates again, meaning debt will be that much more expensive for americans and when interest rates
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keep rising, people feel, well, credit is bus easy to access, harder to buy a home. that's also, you know, a negative, but these are the sorts of things that have to happen. as you say, the central bank needs to take action. it is taking action in attempt to stabilize the u. s. economy with americans pain. a heavy price paddle have al jazeera washington, hundreds of thousands of factors of protected jungle in columbia. the amazon rain forest is being destroyed every year. trees are being burned or cut down to make space for cattle, ranching, mining and drugs growing operations. and the 1st of 2 reports al jazeera, as other thunder petty flies over the amazon to assess the damage an illegal road cuts through what used to be priest, the rain forest. around the cemetery of centuries, old trees reduced to dust. look, those are big patches and most likely for cocoa fields or cattle ranching, which will definitely disconnect this area with data runs and
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n g o that protects the colombian amazon. he brought us on a 5 hour long flight across 5 national parks and supposedly protected indigent plane up. none are intact. criminal hands are grabbing land and burning trees for intensive agriculture, kettle ranging your coca farming, la magnitude elaine, the magnitude and the intensity of the destruction that we are able to see over 5 national parks on the most bio diverse area of colombia in the middle of the fragile transition between the andes and the amazon is a warning call not only for columbia, but for humanity as a whole. the colombian amazon, this last over a 1000000 actors of rain forests in the last 5 years. and the area larger than the island of cyprus, rodrigo says, a complex web of interest are to blame, pre medicate, all i knew. first of all, this has to do with the international conglomerate. interested in cheap land for the world agro commodities market. more than
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a 1000000 heads of cattle have been introduced in this area, surrounding the cheery be kept a national park alone. that is because it is also a way to launder money from drug trafficking and illegal mining. the level of deforestation accelerated up to the government, signed a piece deal with 5 rebels in 2006 today. huge ranches extend for as far as the i can see. one of the 1st things we notice as you walk through the spurn patches of the jungle is the silence. gone are the sounds of the animals, the birds, the in 6 that live in the forest. all that amazing biodiversity turned into ashes. long and president divan duke had pledged to cut deforestation by half by the end of august and virtually optimistic promise. and yet the military until the for a station initiative and new laws targeting dose, causing environmental devastation, are starting to pay dividend.
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