tv News Al Jazeera June 14, 2022 10:00am-10:31am AST
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he is incredibly lucky. those coming out fast, foster lives alone with no man's land where one of the few to gain access to this embattled town. they take us to their basement where we find others sheltering from the shelling. please about 2 weeks now. price like 3 days journey devastated buildings cornell, a grim reminder that the russians were here. gay. com and make sure you're not hyping the situation. be part of the debate. my main characters are women, when no topic is off the table, the laws and you asked allow child marriage to happen legally. these are basically archaic walls. the eyes often legitimize and legal wise, had a series on an online jumping to the court section and meeting to be part of the discussion this stream on out his era. ah,
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asian shares dip for a 2nd consecutive day as fears grow. the u. s. economy could slide into recession. ah, hello, i'm adrian again. this is al 0 live from doha, also coming up a price of freedom in cambodia as a court convicts government. critics of treason ah, islam homes are demolished on to protest against anti islam remarks by india's governing party at the u. k. sent to the port asylum seekers to rwanda. after a legal challenge against the policy fails, ah, asians stalks are mostly trading low up for a 2nd day off to wall street entered what's known as
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a bare territory. that's when markets for more than 20 percent from a recent high, it was a steep cell off of u. s. stocks on monday prompted by fears of steep interest rate, right hikes at a possible recession in the world's largest economy. lisco live that a so i'll just, here's what mcbride is watching, asian markets up for us. now, great day then, although i see right now that the hang sang is blocking the trend road. that's right. they are, markets are mostly down following the overnight sell off in the us, the one of the biggest loses has been actually the old res index site in australia, that's down nearly 4 percent, but it was a public holiday in australia yesterday monday. so you effectively had 2 days of settling in a very busy tuesday session i but all the other big indices, the bigger indices, are down, the nick a in tokyo down one and a 3rd percent, nearly half a percent down on the cost be here in south korea the hang saying index after initially a shop full making back all of its losses, but all of the markets, hey,
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renee, you remaining extremely nervous, extremely jittery about what the u. s. federal reserve is going to do next, given this unexpectedly bad inflation report to the highest inflation rate in 40 years. there is an anticipation of more interest rates hikes to come. you've got to remember that interest rates at the start of this year were barely hovering above 0 . the u. s. federal interest rate was a quarter of one percent incrementally. the u. s. fed has gradually increased the interest rates as these inflationary pressures have taken a hold. we had a half a percent rate rise in may, but the expectation is now that the fed is going to have to intervene. farmers robustly, we're going to be seeing for a bigger interest rate hugs with some speculation being we're going to see the 1st of these this week and that by the autumn we may see an interest rate in the us of 3 percent or even more. you mentioned the net k in japan down of one of the quarter
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percent so far today. what's the situation in japan? what's, what's happening with its economy right now? that's what being one of the stand out figures if you like. amid the all of his turmoil, and that's the decline in the value of the japanese and, and also speculation about what that might mean for the longer term prospects for the japanese economy. one us dollar now buys a $135.00 yet, and now the, the end hasn't been that week for more than 20 years. so it has been a quite, quite a dramatic full. it used to be the case that a fully n would see a rise in the k. that's because that scene has been good news for japan's export as they can sell more stuff. but it gives us an idea of the strange times we're living in. we have a falling in and falling nick a and that's because the speculation is that japan really isn't the kind of exporting power house that it used to be. a lot of its production has been moved
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out of japan. it come very nimbly respond to a falling again because of labor shortages and supply chain shortages that we keep hearing about. but what is definitely hurting japan is the and all the inputs and the cost of those inputs which have risen dramatically. so it's more expensive for consumers of far worse for businesses that rely on role materials and components as the japanese government has acknowledged. but the problem for the japanese government is intervening. it is adopted and has for years a very, very loose monetary policy to try to stimulate a sluggish economy to try to get people buying more to stimulate wage growth. and the japanese government is low to give that up. but the feeling is that without the central banks around the world tightening their own monetary policies, it's very difficult for the japanese, the bank of japan to continue this policy, especially given the following again. and it will have to bite the bullet and have to intervene. i'll just see what the bride reporting live from so many thanks. drop
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. a coach in cambodia has convicted a prominent lawyer of treason, cherry sang fishes up to 12 years in prison. the cambodian american lawyer and 12 other defendants were charged in connection with the failed attempt by opposition figure some reign seats return from exile in 2019. they have denied all charges on my mind. i am ready for the shay. i'm a verdict that will be announced this morning, which will be a guilty word. i am ready and prepared to go to the notorious keyboard, imprisoned for my political opinions full my belief. i for my belief in democracy for my belief in freedom, i am ready to pay the price of prison in order that i live out my conscience and my belief in freedom in just this protest as in new delhi, have denounced to demolition of homes owned by muslims authority say the buildings
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have been constructed illegally, but rights groups say that it's part of an attempt to intimidate muslims. last week there were protests and several cities against 2 full officials of the governing b. j. p. they made remarks about the prophet mohammed with many consider offensive alters he was pumping. the towel is in india state of utah pradesh. probably. where are you? what's the booth us? there is some fear, but mostly immense anger against prime minister in the windsor mo, these party, just a party or b t p. we are in a town, garza hot and boy in northern indian were actually outside the mosque where protests began last friday. now these protests were part of a larger movement against the b j piece to spokes buses. that made blasphemous comments against the prophet muhammad, a protest as were demanding that no bush out,
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my former spokesman off the b. j. p. b. arrest for her comments now cross india about see 100 people have been arrested for those protest in this town. about a 100 people have been arrested. police say they've also wrested about 18 people for hate speech. most of whom have been hindus. not 3 homes in the state of alter for days where we are have been at least partially demolished. 2 of those are here in so hard and both these homes belong to people who are protesting and lawyers and activists point out that it is completely illegal and that the government is particularly beach, doug's state governments govern by the b j p. are using or rather misusing the law to intimidate minorities, specifically, muslims, they see as best as an extension of an anti minority sentiment that has been fueled by the b j. p. they've been hate speeches. and now you've seen a bulldozer. it's being used. in fact,
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a prominent lawyers have pointed out that millions of people in india live in homes that could, could be considered illegal and not just talking about homes belonging to poor people. i mean, some of the most palatial homes in the national capital would be considered an encroachment. and so the selective use off of power to intimidate people is what is being criticized and spreading. feel. we're also learning, batch, civic authorities have received about dozens of names and will be solving properties of about 30 or 40 people to check for irregularities. again, a move that has come under heavy criticism and that is spreading fear amongst people who participated in the protests of she was probably natal reporting live for from pradesh in india and the french tea company the 1st flight carrying asylum seekers from the u. k. to lawanda will go ahead on to say that softer a last ditch attempt to hold the deportation failed of the appeals court. laura
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burton manley report o, a chorus of anger from protesters outside london's court of appeal. as the judge gave the green light 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 see how many members killed, they've, they've had torture themselves and they are tired. but at the end of that heather, that finding attention incredibly traumatizing, 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 smuggling networks and deter refugees from making dangerous journeys to britain. the united nations refugee agency hits
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back thing rwanda's human rights record is on the 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 holmes secretary, pretty patel visited cook ali to finalize the project and potentially send tens of thousands of people them. the deal includes a payment of about $150000000.00 to the refund and 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 ding you deflated and many more have had to be
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rescued from the channels busy shipping lanes. some of those who risk their lives will leave on the 1st flight on tuesday. but there 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, laura, that molly on to 0. former us attorney general william bars describe watching donald trump become detached from reality while refusing to accept his 2020 election defeat. he and the former president's family members were among the latest witnesses, hurt by the committee. that's investigating last year's capitol hill attack al jazeera. how did your customer reports to washington?
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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 forces decision to ask is calling arizona for jo by that is a big get for the body campaign. did i share the atmosphere? the attitude in the white house. ready completely, it was becoming clear that the road race would not be called on election eye. witnesses say trump was livid and ignored their advice to wait before making a public statement. the said he instead turned to his private attorney, rudy giuliani, who was described as drunk. the mirror was definitely intoxicated. mere juliani was saying, we want it there still hear from us word. all the votes come from. we need to go say that we won a and essentially the,
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anyone who didn't agree with opposition 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. if you in the weeks that followed, trump would continue to spread the lies of widespread voter fraud. despite being told by attorney general william bark that the claim was bogus. i wish from a demoralized because i thought, boy, if he really believes this stuff he ish, you know, last contact with these become detached from reality that to read over and over witnesses testified that trump refused to accept his election defeat despite the
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growing evidence otherwise, not only was there not evidence of 8000 dead voters voting in pennsylvania. there wasn't evidence of 8. the former president's media campaign spread the election falsehoods invigorating. his base supporters donated $250000000.00 to trumps, 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, the rally, not only was, there's a big law. there was the big rip off. the committee plans another half dozen public hearings to connect the election lies with the violence of january 6th. they say evidence will show that trump 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
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jazeera washington still to come here on our cerebral here for you. crane, where the lost escape route from subordinates has been destroyed. ah, acquittal was police use force on the 1st day of a national strike led by an indigenous peoples movement. ah hello, we got some extreme weather setting up across parts of europe over the next couple of days. we got some very heavy rain for the rates. we got some very warm weather i went to was to western that heat will build as we go through the next day or so. couple of areas of low pressure affecting central and eastern parts at present, but it's about the heat. as we go on through the next couple of days,
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we really need to be focusing. we have got to temperatures getting up into the forty's, across parts of spain. am fortune coach, go. and we will see that he just making us well a little further north was as we go on through the next couple of 31 celsius in paris by wednesday, london could see that caught a temperature by the end of the wait $27.00 there. as we go on into work thursday, lots of very high temperatures and with the heat, of course, big storms, you've got some very heavy rain pushing across towards eastern parts of europe, down towards se showers there across. so the bulk is pushing down into greece into turkey. will unsettled over the next hour or so. and the skies opened up across central and western, possibly one or 2 showers. notice just around austria, around swiss alps as well. we roll across northern africa. it is long as you dry and plenty of hate around here as well. we have got some very, whether the seasonal rhinestone very nicely across a good part of west africa. ah,
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no, you came through the buildings, right. see if there's anybody else trapped inside. when people need to be heard and the story town, i feel like i wasn't really awake until i went to. it definitely changed my life in a good way with exclusive interviews and in depth reports, and not hardly what he left here because al jazeera has teens on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and lied knees. lou ah, hello again. this is l 0. that's too much of the main news. the south asian stalks,
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a trading mostly lower after wall street, entered what's known as bad territory. that's when markets for more than 20 percent from a recent high for a sustained period. a coating, cambodia has convicted prominent lawyer, terry sang, and dozens of members of a disbanded opposition party of treason. they face up to 12 years in prison. the you case, court of appeal has rejected a request to hold the 1st flight to putting refugees migrants to reform the human rights groups had asked the court to block the flight, which is scheduled to leave. later on tuesday, russia has destroyed the last bridge out of savannah on that sc. a city at the heart of the battle for ukraine's don bass region. it was one of 3 bridges leading out of the city. many civilians are now trapped. hundreds of them are still sheltering inside the household chemical plant, which has come under heavy shedding,
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rushing back separatists of warns ukrainian troops to surrender or die. let's go live now to ukraine's capital keith. i'll just hear as charles stratford is that charles, what does it mean for some other than that now that that last bridge has been destroyed? what it means, adrian is a very worrying situation for if you say what's believed, always been reported to be around $10000.00 civilians in that city. now we call confirm as to whether the majority of the civilians even wants to leave. because we know having visited these areas in the past that there are many in that area who despite the terror, despite the level of to shelling, wanted to stick it out. prepared for potentially, russian forces to take control of that area and for those civilians to remain there . as you mentioned, also very worrying for what's being reported as being at least $500.00 civilians, including 40 children sheltering in that adult chemical plan. this giant great
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soviet built chemical plan that we understand that we know has come under heavy shelling in recent days. and of course she has huge implications military for the ukranian army as well. we understand that there could be thousands of ukrainian soldiers inside civil donates. that if that 3rd bridge, that 3rd and final bridge has indeed been completely destroyed. it has implications for them. was he getting military supplies into those ukrainian forces and a potential scape group out across that river to the town over the sea chance? which is the other town, the only other town in the new gun screech and the russian forces do not fully control. i've seen video this morning of some of the shelling of lucy chance can the last 24 hours and it's very heavy indeed. we also know that russian forces are pushing up towards the she chance come areas that they control around the town of puts not incremental gains being made as reported by,
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by our sources in that area as they try and basically push up from the know from the south and the knolls, down towards lobby and seeing this pinch movement to try and cut off those ukranian forces, ukrainian defense experts and the government members here making statements. this is all about weapons. they say they are not getting enough west and heavy long range weapons into ukraine. quick enough, they're huge logistic problems or the west and donors, western nations, donating, giving billions of dollars worth of long range artillery and multi launch rocket systems as well. the problem is, is the huge distances that they have to travel to get to those east in front. then there's problems of having to train ukrainian forces to give them the know how and how to use them. unprecedented lensky saying that around $200.00 up to $200.00
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ukrainian soldiers dying each day. so, you know, obviously we cannot confirm these kind of statistics, but there are many people now who was saying that the ukrainians all basically have their back up against the wall militarily in that area. more so than they have done . since this will began on february the 24th chance, many thanks sounds it is charles strapped for their lives in keys. a report from human rights watch has condemned israel's blockade of gossip. the report found that the moved devastated gases economy and cut off nearly 2000000 people from work and education opportunities for you and says that the shooter terran situation in garza has reached unprecedented levels. you morale fire reports. the 14th of june marks 15 years of an israeli lan air in sea, located of the gaza strip. that's one of the most densely populated areas in the
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world. 2000000 palestinians live in what has been described as the world's largest open air prison. since how much to cobra? because the strip in 2007 after legislative elections. israel has imposed a full siege on the enclave. it strictly controls every one and every ping going in or out. it's further damaged causes bleak economy and the dire living conditions of it's 2000000 people. and that's been worsened by both israel and egypt, keeping their porters closed. israel allows passage through the air is crossing only in what it considers exceptional human carrying cases in human rights watch. latest report on israel seat. it states the closure has devastated the economy. garza contributed to fragmentation of the palestinian people and forms part of ease railey authorities. crimes against humanity, of appetite and persecution,
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against millions of palestinians israeli authority should lift the closure of casa and the generalized travel ban and permit freedom of movement, subject to at most individual screenings for security reasons. oh, more than 60 percent or refugees, depending on the united nations refugees agency for food, education and medical aid. there's not a moral. so here in, in, because i will give you one figure about the number of people who used to receive food from on roughly copeland from in 2000. and the number was 70000 people. now we are talking about 1100000 people. this is how the number are, you know, rising. why little was seen once on the factory produce him medical and industrial equipment. but israeli officials stopped materials and turing garza, they say, can be used for dual use,
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meaning civilian and military. he sais that left him and more than 30 other workers without jobs. men on the whole bodily, many essential materials from our factory were banned from entering causes. this caused our factory to stop working. it's a piece of junk now, and we were forced to send all workers home since israel imposed it's located, it's also launched for military assaults on costa with the siege preventing construction materials such as stealing cement from reaching garza reconstruction has been near impossible. the un weren't in 2015. the living conditions in gaza were deteriorating so rapidly. it could become an inhabitable by 2020. now in 2022 palestinians in garza are still living under israel. blockade denied her basic cry to freedom and with little or no hope of
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a better future. you may be it al jazeera, gaza al jazeera media network continues to demand a rapid independence in transparent investigation into the killing of its journalists in the occupied west bank. sharyn barclay was shot in the head by israeli forces while on assignment in janine, on the day of her funeral is really forces stormed the procession and started to beat mourners causing pall bearers to almost drop her casket. that didn't stop thousands of palestinians marching through occupied east jerusalem to take part in her funeral burial. members of the international community of condemned her killing and continue to call ford investigation. should be in our clay, was with al jazeera for 25 years, covering the story of the israeli occupation. she was known as the voice of palestine, ecuador, as president, is vying to use force to break up a national strike. ah, lee,
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susan tea against and stronger maids to break up a march by students and trade unions in the capital quito. the protesters want the government to reduce the cost of fuel and to reverse the privatization of public services or latin america. editor lucio newman reports. this is the beginning of the national strike that could paralyze ecuador, la molly, these assume the correct if not you're not the mobilization is national, it's regional and the mobilization is indefinite. i'm or if the president gives his answer today, then we will stop. if the president does not give answers to any of our demands, we will continue indefinitely. one by, ah, demonstrations led by ecuador is powerful indigenous confederation almost 3 years ago, nearly overthrew then president lehman moreno. forcing him to backtrack on plans to raise fuel prices. to day their demands are far greater. not only to these protested want fuel prices lowered and frozen,
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but they also want the same for essential goods and services. again, somewhat embarrassedly development, we are literally starving to death. there is no work farm products. how many miles there is no proper support from the kaufman with the rise and fuel prices? everything is more expensive and develop the government doesn't harrison, but they're here to perform a no, it doesn't of it. know the price of fertilizers? no, and our products are already cheap. how are we going to survive to feed our children road to being blocked in at least 10 their coders, 24 provinces, conservative president, yet molasses says he will not tolerate further disruptions, aura, can passamore at the back just now as we are beginning to get back on our feet from the pandemic that we cannot allow political groups, he wanted to stabilize ecuador, and profit from the chaos that paralyzed our country are real. with the government is already struggling to control ramp and violence and drug trafficking amid a severe economic crisis. but unless there's
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a break till the strike by the well organized indigenous confederation with the support of other trade unions could present the most serious challenge to ecuador stability. to see a newman al jazeera, cuba has had a down sentences to 381 people who took part in last year's anti government protest . most was sentenced to between 5 and 25 years in prison. thousands of people to pass in country wide demonstrations last year, angry of a shortages of food medicine and power, as well as a wave of coven 19 infections. more than 100000000 people have been warned to stay indoors as a heat wave bakes the united states. excessive heat warnings have been issued for several cities with temperatures. forecast to reach 40 degrees celsius. it's pushed some schools to shift to remote learning. many cities announced plans to open cooling centers, the mayor of chicago, a suggested that people go to public libraries to cool.
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