tv News Al Jazeera June 14, 2022 5:00am-5:31am AST
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culture to slash learn to create new yet areas we have to change to sculpture. i'm one of the fortunate ones who can leave and establish i, but all the people and on that majority these illegal m, as we're talking about as good, hardworking people that want to live the american dream, like our ancestors. these were hands or refugees are terrified that they may be forced to return to me, and mark ah, now jazeera, with every oh, a
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piece of attached reality. donald trump's attorney general describes how the former president clung to outlandish and dangerous theories before the capital attack. ah, i'm carry johnston. this is al jazeera la from dough are also coming up pro moscow, separatists talent ukrainian forces to surrender or die off to russia, destroys the doest bridge out of an eastern city, new scrutiny around the secretive world of artificial intelligence. after a google system is described as being self aware and australia beat peru in a penalties rather to confirm a place at the foot will well come in. cat ah, former us attorney general william bar has described that watching donald trump become detached from reality or refusing to accept his 2020 election loss. he and
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the former presidents family members had been among the latest test to be heard by the committee investigating last year's at capitol hill riot. hi, the joe castro report. start from washington dc. the january 6th committee open public hearing number 2, with a focus on election night 2020 inside the white house, where donald trump and his advisors watched the election returns with increasing worry the foreigners decision to ask is calling arizona for joe biden. that is a big get for the biden campaign that shifts the atmosphere. the attitude in the white house. ready complete it was becoming clear that the road race will not be called on election eye witnesses, they trump was livid and ignored their advice to wait before making a public statement. the said he instead turned to his private attorney,
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rudy giuliani, who was described as drunk. the mirror was definitely intoxicated there, juliani was saying, we want it. they're still here from us, weren't all the votes come from. we need to go say that we one. and essentially the anyone who didn't agree with that position was being weak. there's a defiant trump then declared his false victory. we were getting ready to win this election. frankly, we did when this was the fox news political editor and later, fired from his job after calling arizona for by didn't after the election as of november 7th. in your judgment, what were the chances of president trump winning the election after that point? yes, not in the weeks that followed, trump would continue to spread the lies of widespread voter fraud. despite being told by attorney general william bar that the claim was bogus. i wish from
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a demoralized because i thought, boy, if he really believes this stuff, he ish, you know, lost contact with detached from reality. that to read over and over witnesses testified that trump refused to accept his election defeat despite the growing evidence. otherwise, not only was there not evidence of 8000 dead voters voting in pennsylvania, there wasn't evidence of 8 former president media campaign spread the election falsehoods invigorating. his based supporters donated $250000000.00 to trump, so called election defense fund. investigators testified the fund didn't exist and that some of the money went to trump's hotel collection and the event company that organized the january 6th rally. not only was there's a big lie, there was the big rip off. the committee plans another half dozen public hearing to
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connect the election lies with the violence of january 6th. they say evidence will show that from try to corrupt the justice department. and when that failed, assembled the mob that would try to keep him in power by force. heidi joe castro al jazeera washington. well, hurry lipman served as us deputy assistant attorney general and the former president bill clinton. you now host the political podcast, talking feds, and he joins us from the lawyer in california. my skype, thanks for being with us here on al jazeera. so just hi revealing, has this testimony been in terms of what was going on behind the scenes? you know, i, it seems fairly devastating to me. both of these last periods. i've been chopped for a better evidence. they've stayed at the themes that they've chosen, but they also peppered it with real new revelations. and you know,
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today we had the, i think they emerging theme was team normal versus team crazy. basically every grown up in the room called trump that there was nothing whatsoever, not even a scintilla to his assertions of fraud. and the only people who said otherwise were ones that he sort of dredged up specifically because they would propound the big lie, including in court, and now several of them are in criminal and jeopardy in jeopardy of losing their license. so today i thought was very stark in it, identification of just the grown ups in the room, all of whom were saying, forget about this, mr. president and then the others who were for trump sort of ports in the storm. anyone who would tell him what he wanted to hear? does any of this really damage donald trump in any way the trump brand does it?
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you know, i think so, and if it doesn't, and we're in a world of hurt in the country. so much of it lays out a potential criminal case, but even setting that aside in sort of real, re living the hell of january 6 and everything that led up to it. if enough people . and i don't think it would take that many because he was already governing by a razor's edge in the minority vote. come to understand that it wasn't just that he propounded a big lie, but did it with really tremendous damage to our political life. and then you heard congresswoman lofgren, you know, he ripped off his most strong supporters and shut them down for another $2025.00. i think if a it wouldn't take that many people to say that this is really reprehensible and whatever else we're going to be thinking about going forward. trump really hoodwinked us. i think it could matter. and again, if it doesn't, i, you know,
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this comes, this is a constitutional moment involving the american people. and if they continue to embrace in enough numbers to make him an electoral for us the, the audit i talk receive trump after being shown what it amounts to, you know, the countries in trouble, realistically, the way you think this is going to go in terms of the investigation, what's likely to be the end result of all of this the end result and this is important in and of itself. carry is just a full report of what happened and hopefully a scrutiny of it by an up people to change the weight of opinion here. there's also, of course, the possibility of a criminal case by the department of justice, which is a good listener here and will receive all this evidence on the other end. i think it would be a mistake to put all our eggs in the basket of, you know,
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looking to the department to, to, to be the avenging angel as it were. but if nowhere else, it goes to history and something we don't have now as for possible and official account of this horrific episode in us history. second ad, if, if at all, if, if even 2nd to what happened in the civil war and, and it's an effort here by the sitting president to prevent the peaceful transition of power for the 1st time and us history best that we do, we just need to chronicle that if nothing else, ok, hiring them and we appreciate your time here on al jazeera, thank you very much for that. thank you. bye bye. the last go back to separate us. say russia has destroyed the last bridge out of severe on the skin, eastern ukraine,
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the cities at the center of the battle for the don bass region. russia says ukrainian troops now effectively blockaded and should surrender or die destroyed, bridge links very on the key to a neighboring city and russia bombarding. it's as all chemical plants with artillery. many civilians are said to be sheltering in a situation likened to the still works each in mariel 0, then your source is visibly jerome was logo chips ever. dynette has practically been blocked out to the blue of the last bridge which connected it to life. the shank is getting those ukrainian divisions that are there are there forever. they have 2 options either to follow the example of their fellow service men and surrender or to die. there is no other option. a child strapped for his current developments from keith potentially a very dire situation in that city, civil donates could one of 2 cities that the russians are not in full control over in the region of lou ganske in don bass. we've actually spoken to a deputy commander who is serving a gradient deputy, come on
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a serving insubordinate ski, saying that indeed that 3rd and last bridge had been hit this morning we understand by russian forces. but we cannot confirm as to whether that bridge has been completely and utterly destroyed. now, if indeed it has, it has huge implications, obviously for the ukrainian of forces military and fighters in that site that the city in terms of getting military supplies across that river to them and potentially for an xscape route if they retreat. and it also has huge implications for what we understand to what we being told are up to around $10000.00 civilians inside the city. now according to the hate of who ganske regional administration medically regional administration, he saying that there are around around $500.00 civilians sheltering underneath that chemical plot. the assault chemical plant that we know has come under heavy
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shelling according to the ukrainians in recent days. he saying that there could be also 14 children, also amongst those civilians. a british judge has thrown out attempts to hold the deportation of refugees and migrants to ra wonder from all legal challenges our plan, 1st to flight is sh shuttle to take off on tuesday. laura burton manley reports oh, oh, a chorus of anger from protesters outside london's court of appeal. as the judge gave the green lights for the 1st flight of refugees, migrants true, wonder writes, good. say it includes people who had escaped war in afghanistan and syria and being flown more than 6000 kilometers away. will traumatize them further. they suffered incredibly, they've seen how many members killed, they've, they've had torture themselves and they are tired. but at the end of that heather,
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they're finding detention incredibly show him a tie thing, and those are the fair, the deportation how fair castillo aide is absolutely terrifying for them? you k prime minister boys, johnson says a deportation strategy will undermine people's smuggling networks and deter refugees from making dangerous journeys to britain. fiscal, the united nations refugee agency hits back thing rwanda's human rights record is under scrutiny, and the u. k. is shirking responsibility. this is all wrong, this is all wrong. this deal, you know, it is the foundation of the right to asylum that people that are on it countries territory, especially a country that is a signatory to the convention and has the institutions to deal with that. in april home secretary, pretty patel visited by golly, to finalize the project and potentially send tens of thousands of people them. the
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deal includes a payment of about $150000000.00 to the rwandan government. so far this year, 10000 migrants refugees made the crossing from mainland to europe to the u. k. and 28000. last year. in november, 27th people drowned when that disney deflated and many more of had to be rescued from the channels busy shipping lanes. some of those who risk their lives will leave on the 1st flight on tuesday. but that may not be many on it. a series of individual legal challenges mean only a few of the 130 people notified will leave. and the government continues to face pressure from activists rights groups and unions who insist the move is unlawful. oh, more about molly on to 0. well, in the knees ahead,
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the search goes on for an indigenous expert in the janice missing in the amazon, after some of their belongings are found in life inside the brocaded city and yemen where daily life has been a struggle for years. ah, the journey has begun. the 3 full world camp is on its way to catherine book. your travel package to day hello. got more very heavy rain pushing across southern parts of that china big, massive cloud here. that is the may your front across the plum raise and they're still pulsing that really wet weather at cross southern nissan parts of china. it up to this area of low pressure which is pulling out of the way, but it's dragging that rain across southern parts of a japan, south korea. we're also seeing some rather lively showers. we got some showers and to east and china pushing right up across south far northeast. the country will see
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some wet weather to into basing for a time that will clear through a go on through web to say the where to whether the live the a shower, just pushing across the korean peninsula, back into japan, tokyo, but around 21 celsius, not to babylon's wall, as it has been recently, may marla wet weather continued across southern pass, more flooding concerns coming through here. meanwhile, for se, asia, it's the usual case of sunshine and those heat of the day showers good scattering of seasonal showers coming through here. so nothing unusual going on a similar picture as we go on through wedding stay. now we have seen summer weather into a southern parts of india, caulsey or monsoon range. i should be coming from hyderabad into hon dash, they're a little late here, but pretty much where they should be further north and east cats are airway official airline of the journey. i've worked out there english since it's launch, as a principal presenter. and as a correspondence with any breaking the story,
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we want to hear from those people who would normally not get that voice is heard on an international news channels. one moment i'll be very proud all was when we covered the la paula earthquake of 2015, a terrible natural disaster on the story that needs to be told from the hall of the affected area to be then to tell the people story was very important at the time, ah ah, you're watching out to sierra reminder of our top stories now top advisors to form a u. s. president donald trump. so they told him his claims of widespread go to fort were not legitimate. statements were part of video testimony shown as a committee hearing into the attack on capitol hill on johnny. the 6th last ukraine
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says russia has destroyed the last bridge out the eastern city of savannah. on the ets osco back separatists claim ukrainian troops now effectively blockaded in the city, wanted them to surrender or die you case at court of appeal has rejected their request to halt at the 1st flight. the 14 refugees and migrants to remind us human rights groups have asked the clear to block the flight shadow to leave on tuesday. our police in brazil are denying reports at the bodies of 2 men missing in the brazilian. amazon have been found. indigenous rights expert had bruno pereira and british journalist dom phillips disappeared while on our search trip. when aka inaccurate reports from rio de janeiro, hundreds of indigenous testers took to the streets of at the liable moth she demanded justice for indigenous expert bruno video in british journalist don phillips, they went missing
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a week ago while they were returning from an expedition to their job id valley reservation, home to the largest number of on, contacted tribes in the world. we are our booth wine dom, they chanted, but the demonstrators also denounced the onslaught. they have been suffering from the legal fisherman, poachers, loggers and miners. but all no pity ada had been helping them patrol their territory and map the invasions dom phillips was accompanying him on a trip to finish writing a book on how to save the amazon. on sunday, after week long search divers retrieved a plastic bag from the river containing a backpack in some belongings of the 2 missing men. she told the stuff a seizure relative, say the backpack contained a computer, all belonging socks, shirts, shorter work tool, such as their laptop, in reports on monday morning, that 2 bodies had also been found,
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were denied by brazil's federal police. brazil's president abel sonata said he thought something evil had happened to them. never clear give you, though the evidence leads us to believe that something bad was done to them because human viscera were floating in the river alone of indigenous leaders. we spoke to said they will keep up the pressure to find out what happened to dom phillips in little bit era, and that they will continue. the patrols that they did are organized to help protect the rain forest. monica, and i give al jazeera ribs dinero. now, a google engineer has been ordered to take leave after claiming a computer system he was interacting with is self aware lake. the mine works on google's artificial intelligence or a i team. he released to transcripts between himself and the company is chat, bought development system. the more it says it has thoughts and feelings about like those of a young child. but one exchange mine says the system expressed
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a fear of being switched off. it would be exactly like death for me. it would scare me a lot. he says it also told him, i want everyone to understand that i am in fact a person. the nature of my consciousness sentence is that i'm aware of my existence . i desire to learn more about world. and i feel happy or sad at times. google says it puts a big lemoine on pay leave for publishing the conversations on which breached confidentiality policy is a spokesman told the washington post team, including ethicists and technologists, has reviewed blake's concerns. are a i principles. and i've informed him that the evidence does not support his claims . for emily bender is a professor of computational linguistics at the university of washington. she also doesn't believe the engineer, but says his assertions are prompting important discussions about ai. there's huge issues around transparency because we're creating systems that can produce
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coherence in text. and as we see, can fool people into thinking that they are santana, that they have consciousness, or that they're even intelligent. and therein lies many, many problems. so what we need is the producers of the systems to create them with transparency so that it is clear to the users what their actual capabilities are. i think there's not enough scrutiny like that because a lot of this research is happening behind closed doors in large companies that are sitting on very large amounts of data that they've collected, that are not available to the public, to explore or to outside auditors to explore and with amounts of computing resources that others don't have access to as well. we have to be very clear, but what we mean by the term, a i right now that we have pattern recognition systems, that companies and governments will use, taking large collections of data, finding patterns in them and, and making decisions for actual people that impact their lives. based on that data, and that's a big problem. we need to know what those data sets are, what the patterns are, and we have recourse if we don't like the decisions being made. but it's not
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actually intelligence and a i is a misnomer for all of us. there are some very nice use cases, things like automatic transcription, things like machine translation, so long as they're being used in ways where people know that it's a machine that can make mistakes and to not take everything. it says as the actual truth of what is transcribing or translating reopening of blocked roads and supply routes is part of the you and broke a truce between humans, warring sides in place since april. but the who, the rebels, the siege of toys, remains in place. compounding the misery of those stuck inside the city castillo, as wholly on report, living under a blockade. and humans, 3rd largest city, ties, is a burden acme has been dealing with for years. the challenges are many visiting relatives who live beyond city limits is just one of them. must avenue political mainly when ally and i live about one kilometer away from my family. but because of the blockade, i have to go through rough and dangerous roads for them. it takes me about 5 hours
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to get to my parents house to see my mother and father eloquently hum, road closures have left thousands of people with limited access to medicine, proper medical services and international aid. the blockade imposed by who the rebels in 2016 has essentially closed off the main routes that lead to the city making an already dire humanitarian crisis worse. c oh ha, protest demanding an end to the block. he'd have failed. a recent un brokerage truce was extended an early june for 2 months. it's noticeably reduced tensions between who the rebels and the saudi led coalition, but the city remains closed and its fragile economy is feeling the hit. what axia would have been, so good ro, closures have led to a spike in the price of goods. john sporting cos with trucks is a serious problem. drivers have to go through rugged terrain and distant roads as
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it's yet another added burden i viewed about young, about 600000 people live here. isolation from the rest of the country and the world has taken its toll decade that more than the ha, i've got one variable. if a merchant or does a 100 boxes of eggs, he can expect about 10 of them to be damaged because of the rough roads you for that automatically unions, extra costs we and then there's the money that must be paid at checkpoints. for years people living here have been shut out. now they hope the truth will help change that patio little missile again. al jazeera al jazeera media network continues to demand independent and transparent investigation is the telling of its journalist and occupied westbank. sharina clay was shot in the head by israeli forces while she was on assignment in janine, on the day of her funeral, is really forces storm the procession started beating mourners, causing poor barriers to almost drop her casket. that didn't stop thousands of palestinians from marching through occupied east jerusalem to take part in her
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funeral and burial. members of the international community have condemned her killing and continue to call for investigation. and actually was with al jazeera for 25 years, covering the story of the israeli occupation. she was known as the voice of palestine. the u. k. government has introduced legislation to change a post briggs to trading rules for northern ireland. the bill includes proposals to do away with checks on most goods crossing between britain and not, not, and which were agreed on to the regs it was signed in 2019 u. k. ministers argue the current arrangements are a threat to peace and stability. you has want of legal action. you, kate tries to alter the protocol, australia hath qualified for this year's world cup in cut up. they beat peru in a penalty. shoot out within the moment. arianna sanchez reports on the disappointment in lima. first though, andy, which isn't wraps up the game from there was
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a big welcome for the thousands of parade fans. he made the trip to cats are full. this will cut play off against australia, peru hoping to repeat their exploits of 2018 when they returned to footballs biggest stage for the 1st time in almost 4 decades. i've been in rush, i've been in brasil i've been in the usa that that is yet another place of my team is going to play or whatever my game is. i will do my best to be there. our whole country is playing this chance to go to work up and we won't go. it's always something for them for us is low. yeah, i thought a soccer game is more than that where people who are being is yes, a soccer game. oh, you're wrong. absolutely. run these teams did meet the group stage in russia 4 years ago on that occasion, peru secured a to no victory place time out. world cup qualification was on the line with so much at stake. the 1st half past, with no more than half chance is exchanged, their defeat,
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surpassing the desire to take too many risks on the 1st peruvian chance of the night. fools telepath rule out. i in her stitch school, the window, australia, in that playoff against the u. i e e e e last week. he went close to repeating that fate late in the 2nd half. but after 90 minutes, the teams were locked at neil neil peru went close to grabbing a winner in extra time, but penalties would decide this playoff. back off the post and australia sense on goalkeeper and you read main specifically for the shootouts read and he, it was, he proved to be his country's match winner australia on their way to the world cup for a 5th straight time. andrew is the arrow. it's only his like a national team to try and get him to the boys of the mental aspect for peru that why are we making that change to add that little bit of uncertainty and they, brian's since reaching the last 16,
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the 2006 world cup australia have failed to reach the knockout rounds that subsequent world cups in november that once again faced france and denmark. some of the things they failed to beat in 2018 to nicea will be the other group stage opponents. andy richardson, al jazeera, doha with the last penalty. q. like, wow, the huge rout. thousands of fans here in the center with, with the game, with the side live there was this believe and dear father, for many after we long not breaking hours of this game. there was so much expectation to win. this entry head to the next world top, that com to me was mainly paralyzed. the government declared a holiday. and for many it wasn't the most important day of their site. maybe here is it, you know, it, but i feel disappointed. i expected much more from ruth. australia is not the
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greatest socrates. the truth is, i feel very sad that it takes away the illusion of everything about about i think we could have done much more in this country as far as in political upheaval. many say that this love will be significant for the fun. today it was a special day, right? so gary is, is a moment for their fun for the there we are fine and forget, forgot that their social problem, the economy. economy that what did you guys do a sure because it's very difficult to day. ah. however, not everyone is that a small group decided to celebrate a team that has taken her route to the door step of another world cup. ah.
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