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tv   News  Al Jazeera  June 15, 2022 12:00pm-12:31pm AST

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hey, todd, bike and bennett, counting the cost on al jazeera ah al jazeera with oh, here is from al jazeera. on the guy with me tonight. i'll just, there is only a mobile app, is that for you? this is where we dissects, analyze the fun thing and i guess i feel that from algae, there is a mobile app available in your favorite app to get that great. and that domain and you up from out of even need at you think of it ah,
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the e you is set to sign natural gas deal with israel to reduce its dependency on russia . ah, hello, i'm adrian again. this is al jazeera alive from dough. also coming up, the u. k. government says that it will press home with its policy of sending asylum seekers to rewind up despite a loss. but at setback, china's economy shows signs of recovery, bought at imposing more, coven 19 restrictions, and some major cities and, ah, disbanding. for the time being one of the world's most successful music groups decides to take a break. ah, israel at the european union, they are expected to sign
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a natural gas export deal on wednesday. the e. you preview mostly identified israel as a new source of gas. it's looking for ways to reduce its reliance on washing and the jeep following moscow's invasion of ukraine. the savings to, to take place in egypt, where the european commission president will be after talks in israel. the european union was the biggest, most important client from the supply, russia, oil, gas, and cold. but with the beginning of this war and the attempt of russia to blackmail us through energy by it, deliberately cutting the energy supplies, we decided to cut off and to get rid of the dependency of russian fossil fuels. and to move away from russian diversified to trustworthy suppliers. in recent years, israel went from being a gas importer to becoming a gas exporter. and we're currently working to produce natural brett gas from
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a more natural grat. gus from israel's economic waters, our 0 moment smith joins us now live from west jerusalem budded waters. this be a deal mean for, for israel, i'm for egypt. while this, this memorandum of understanding is called, has been signed today in cairo. now, egypt has always wanted to set itself up as a regional gas hub for gas from the eastern mediterranean. it was originally exporting a lot of his own gas, but now most of its used domestically as its own resources dwindle. so it's become a record in port of gas from israeli now in ports over 26 percent of israel gas out put about 20000000 cubic meters of gas a day. and what egypt will be doing with that is processing it, moving it on to your p in markets for israel will. israel is actually suspended,
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exploring new gas fields in his waters because he was trying to focus on finding renewable energy sources. but because europe is looking for alternative gas supplies, gas sources from alternatives to russia than israel is now expanding and looking for further gas fields to exploit. but gas that europe will get from israel will be liquified, will be some egyptian gas, and it'll be mainly israeli gas. and interestingly, it's coming through a pipeline that was originally built by our gas pipeline for egypt to send gas out to syria, to lebanon, to jordan. but israel now has a connection in the pipeline. and now israelis taking gas in through into egypt instead. so he's reversing the process and they original intent of a our gas pipeline. so how quickly can it replace russian, jeff kennett replace russian gas?
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so looks like it's going to be at least a couple of years before the significant flows of israeli gas into york. israel, that the plants in egypt that liquify the gas from israel and load them on to ships for europe or push them through pipelines for europe. they're already running at capacity, so egypt can cannot do more than it's doing at the moment. so there's already enormous pressure on egypt, on egypt capacity to do that. so it's gonna, it'll take a couple of years, but it will allow your up to reduce his reliance on russian gas. you are takes about 40 percent of all it's gas from russia at the moment as we know because of the war and ukraine. europe wants to drum dramatically reduce that reliance houses, their response threats, reporting live that from western iceland. but of many thanks.
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the french president is declared later, we'll do all it can to end russia's invasion of ukraine. emanuel macaroni arrived in romania, the 1st stop on a tour of eastern europe, which will also take him to moldova. both countries share borders with ukraine. france deployed around $500.00 soldiers to romania when nato bolstered defenses on its eastern flank will inside ukraine. government forces say that they're trying to get the last civilians out of savannah. don't ask. russia has destroyed all bridges out of east and city, and is fighting to take control and has battle for the dumbass. reaching out to cirrus child. stratford reports now from cave members of ukraine. security services run for cover as the sound of a shell comes through the air and explodes close by. in the basement, a group of elderly residents is hiding. during a brief, lo, they emerge from the shelter, dazed and terrified. the police tell them to get into the vehicle quickly. another
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show explodes, the car policies a body on the street. just a few kilometers south the wreckage of what were people's homes still burns. this is lucy chance, one of the 2 remaining cities that russia doesn't control the lucas region. the ukraine, an army says, russian forces have destroyed the loss of 3 bridges. that used to connect the city with neighboring sivilton esque over the river to the north. potentially making it very difficult for soldiers volunteer units. and what the ukranian military says on many civilians refusing to leave or trapped inside. we are civilians. why are they shelling us as if junior? we don't have any one here. no soldiers, why are they bombing? says a friend, or do they stand by a grave where one of their 2 neighbors was hastily buried in recent days. but she was, you see, at the top of the van, they all asked this question,
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why don't you leave? but where are we supposed to go? this is our land. we grew up here. we live here. our mothers and fathers are buried here in the cemetery. these residents line up to get water from a fire truck ukrainian or sorry to say this be know what role that tricity for days on, exploded rockets are stuck in the earth and rubble. people here say russian shilling is increasing all the time. and that's, you know, if you've seen a threat, they started shooting very hard. that's what many people began to leave or at least the ones who had some way to go. military analysts say most of ukraine, soviet built weaponry has been destroyed. ukrainian army says it needs more long range artillery and tanks. if it is to stop, the russian advance, ukraine's western partners have already sent or promised to send military hardware worth billions of dollars. ukraine says it's no in a sufficient and it's not getting to the front lines fast enough. as nato defense
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ministers are scheduled to meet in brussels on wednesday, there are many ukrainians increasingly asking whether the west can sustain or even build upon its level of military support. charles strafford al jazeera, give the u. k says that it will cite any legal challenges against its controversial policy to send asylum seekers to ruined up the 1st flight on tuesday. didn't get off the ground after a last minute intervention by the european court of human rights. the dean barber reports from london waiting to depart for a wonder, but even with the planing position at an air base in western england, the legal challenges continued. lawyers for a handful of asylum seekers still do to be flown. take a gully, asked the european court of human rights to get them off the deportation list. it did, and suddenly the flight was called off. on monday, the court of appeal had ruled the flight could go ahead. that decision prompted protests here at the home office. the home secretary pretty patel has always said
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her department expected the agreement with rolanda reached in april to be fought in the courts. but the british government has already paid romando more than a $150000000.00 for infrastructure. and it insists it scheme will deliver. i was before the 1st flight was expected to leave the foreign secretary said, it didn't matter how many people were on it. it's a key part about strategy for tackling the polling people smugglers who are trading in people's hopes and dreams. and in many cases costing their lives said this is why it's likely important that we press forward with this policy. and if people aren't on the flight to day, they will be on subsequent flights to lawanda. while the prime minister cheering a cabinet meeting made a different argument, the objective is to ensure that we make that clear distinction. i think everybody can see is fair and reasonable between legal immigration to this country by safe
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and legal routes, which we support the uphold and protect. because we will understand are the benefits that it brings, and are distinguishing that from dangerous and illegal cross channel migration, which we intend to store. refugee rights advocates point out. people crossing the english channel don't have a safe and legal route to claim asylum in britain. people are forced to take the route because there are so safe, you route to travel into a country that me. okay. so what the government does with that board to policies is they fuel the business model that people to africa. so what they should be doing, instead of so playing their base and trying to port people who simply want to claim asylum here. they should be opening up more safer to travel the people to get here . they have to risk their lives. on tuesday activists blocked the road near a detention facility, trying to stop vans, taking any one on the flight list. oh, they're hoping a y decays next month, challenging the plans legality. will stop any flights from going ahead?
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the dean barber al jazeera london, china's economy is showing signs of parcel recovery according to the latest government data. industrial output in may increase no point 7 percent, that's slightly higher than expected. but retail sales remain weak. the government is persisting with its 0 coven 19 strategy, which is having an impact on businesses. as katrina, you report bating authority said they're racing against time to contain a ferocious resurgence of corbett 19 less than a week after capitol east by restrictions. hundreds of new cases had been identified all linked to this night club, heaven supermarket, it's business license has been suspended, and the owners are under investigation. they turned on toll should your balise have launch a criminal investigation into the bar? and the reverend people in charge of the boss, unc suspect, the interference with epidemic prevention and several other people have been
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charged with breaking corporate rules, including 3 men who ignored orders to isolate at harm. the cluster has spread to 14 of aging 16 districts and wanted mass testing in the largest charl young. the reopening of schools has been delayed, has been supermarket, but it's located here and suddenly turn in areas beijing known for its night life, restaurants, and shopping. these businesses have just reopened when this new cluster was found and now hundreds of them have had to close their doors again until further notice. dozens of cases have also been recorded in shanghai, forcing tens of thousands of people back in doors. the commercial center emerged from strict to month, looked down at the beginning of june. new economic data shows china's 0 tolerance approach to the pandemic is continuing to take a toll in may, industrial output rose 0.7 percent compared to the same month last year. and property sales improved slightly,
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but retail sales fell 6.7 percent with uncertainty weighing heavily on consumers spending. it is so incredibly susceptible to our faltering the moment. there's even a slight, a bully, you know, that co it outbreak or covert scare even that i think consumption is going to remain under severe pressure. and that is a biggest economic challenge to the party right now. i've been writing bad is going to take a lot of effort and i was meant to meet him, meet drastically different policy than the one that we had in place. analysts say, as long as china's leaders refused to live with the virus sustained, economic recovery will be difficult, leaving business owners anxious knowing they could be one corporate 19 case away from closing their doors. katrina, you al jazeera aging, which assert going to take you to brussels. we're at nato secretary general. yes, stalking bogus, holding a news conference outlining plans to increase help fort ukraine. i let's just
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listen. i don't parsons from sky news. mr. seth given there are lots of people here in brussels who think that the european commission is being played by the british government for its own domestic concerns. do you have trust in the good faith of forest johnson and liz truss? and if not, were you tempted to go harder and further with the legal proceedings that you've taken against the british government, or do you still have those options up your sleeve? thank you very much for that question. of course sir. i think our, today's action, the fact that we have to size the legal proceeding center, legal action against the, our ally against our, our partner in this is very difficult times where we face together. the global challenges is pretty telling what the level of trust or v hair are
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at the same time, or we are fully aware of their current circumstances in the world, in europe and in northern islands, and therefore for us. so the piece on the islands, and so our commitment to the people of northern ireland. ah hi for. i would say all the riding a principal in how we approach these negotiations. therefore, we decided that our response should be measured, should be proportionate. and sir v r offering not only legal action here today, but we've been flashing out what concretely we could do. i was a sewing showing you 30 pages of the, of the certificate, 3 pages. and sir, i can also tell you, said sir, while you are fleshing out in our, to this proposals exactly, response to their queries to the questions,
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to the propositions i heard when i personally visited the northern ireland. and what i heard since then because i, i am in the regular contact with the business community. the society and the political leaders are in no danella what they, what they want us to focus on easter eastern, straight, reduce administrative burden makers, operation of the protocol as smooth as possible. and this is exactly what we are, what we are doing. and so what we are offering is join solution which will offer stability, which will offer legal certainty we should offer legal clarity. and sir, while you are talking through their, to the business operators in our potential investors, what you hear from them, you know, for us, it's very important to know if you are going to invest, are we going to produce for 5w5xw or 500000000 and that has, i would say, very important implications me or for it and promise the people of northern ireland
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to have the best of the both worlds. and this is what we want to store for them. what we are now getting an a formal this draft bill would be the mountain most does mounting of paper work. wait, sure. as a business operators in the northern and northern ireland, so we'll have, go, have to fill up. i mean, go and ask her. i don't know the meal producers in northern ireland how he, how he or she can produce the milk one source for you. and other one for the u. k. or any kind of manufacturer who wants to benefit from the access to both the markets of the u. k. in the you should have 2 different production lines. so, so therefore what i'm, what i'm saying here is let's focus on practicalities. let's focus on how to make the operation of the protocol to move and this is what the, what we are going to do. therefore, our response, the day is, is measured,
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so therefore it's proportional. then that's the, that's the reason why we also fleshing out that what we are putting on the table. it's really over and ready if you have her positive reaction from the okay side. polity. cookeville an engagement. this can be done in nora as we did it through the medicines. we demonstrated that we can sort out the very difficult issue with a very short period of time. and what we are offering here already made recipes, how we can solve the problems of s. b, s checks, problems of customs procedures. and so as i said, sir, we always been ready to discuss other issues as well. but there was radio silence from the concise since february. well, that was a sub committee. you commission vice president to speaking that about the fact that the european union is launch legal action against the u. k. in response to the british governments bill to amend than all the island protocol. he said there is no
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legal, no political justification whatsoever for unilaterally changing an international agreement. the use action could involve or referring the case to the european court of justice, the u. k. government is already admitted that the new bill would mean that it didn't meet its obligations under international law. but britain argues that an emergency loophole allows it to strike. to scrap post breaks. it checks on goods arriving in northern ireland. lisco live to out 0. ne parker, who's standing by for us in london. he was listening to the whole of that press conference. the press briefing course, we caught the, at the end of it, the need, the u. k. government came to under play this new bill. but as we can see, that's definitely not the view from brussels, with it poised to take legal action. yet as a completely opposing a sets of words and phrases being used to describe this attitude to these proposed changes to the nova line protocol. european commission, clearly not happy about the tool saying that it's
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a rhodes trust. we've heard from the irish government, obviously very, very keen to know what's happening on its doorstep, saying that this breach is the case international commitments and is a particular low in the u. k. approach to breaks it in shop response bars. johnson as basically said, there's nothing to see here. this is trivial. he says, not a big deal or on the government's website. the proposed changes are described as a, as a quick fix, almost something that can be tinkered with and solve rapidly as opposed to something that's been labored over for many, many years. as such, the commission is now announced these legal challenges to the bill of the legal challenges all 3 followed. the 1st will be to resurrect a legal challenge that was suspended in september of last year. that over the british government's decision to delay introducing checks on goods entering the northern ireland. the 2nd is about a failure by the british government to shad trade data and the 3rd of failure to
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set up boredom, posts on goods entering the island of islands. this could escalate all the way up to europe in courts of justice to which is the body. this overseeing all of this . there are channels of arbitration under the trade deal between the e u, the u. k. but the initial step takes the form of a letter from the commission to the british government, which now the british government can choose to respond to. so what reasons are the british government giving for this new bill that he wants to put through parliament of what form would and he potential changes to the northern ireland protocol take we mentioned to this apparent loophole that the british government is been drawing attention to. it's called the doctrine of necessity and under the u. n's international law commission, it would essentially allow governments around the world to break international law if quote that particular country faces grave an imminent peril. while britons of
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foreign office is stressing that the northern line than protocol is putting such a strain on social economic goings on in northern ireland and on the relations between communities, the nationalist community and the unionist community. and all of that on that assad should, has the right to legally circumnavigate this international law. annette and actually agree protocol and and essentially scrap it and rewrites it in the interests of all of those concern, i think is going to be significantly harder for the european union to take on that view when it comes to the northern ireland protocol. but if the bill does indeed become law, what the british government has been suggesting is foss tracking goods, entering nova not, and so they'll be a green channel, a red channel goods destined solely phenomenon. of course, part of the united kingdom will go through a trusted trade escape, whether will not be subject to checks, goods that a destiny for the republic of ireland will be subject to the read channel and
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subject of course to checks. but of course anybody he's been on and will know that the board of 3 northern on the part of the u. k. and the republic of ireland upon the e. u is absolutely porous and nobody is prepared to see the good friday agreement breach by return to a check on the border of on the on of on and itself out there as need back a reporting live that from london. they've many thanks a you, an expert has accused me on mars army of deliberately targeting children since taking power last year. the you and special repertoire on human rights in mere masses. it received reports of 142 children who were reportedly tortured by soldiers, police, and pro army malicious. the un says that the 400 children have been killed or maimed by armed groups since the coo and that a quarter of a 1000000 have been to placed on jaw. mo is an advisor to the ministry of human rights in the national unity government. he says the international community should
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hold me on mars leaders accountable for crimes against civilians. it's delivered. it's intentional ah, of course in the history suggest to per miss military targets them was vulnerable as well. nice them are. so they have these heavy, too old action, sentimentality of targeting the most we get on and, and in some, in a sense we have also seen the, the whole state of the children where they could couldn't find the parents. and this is very in human. and in some cases, the minor has been step 10 and in the mail, so it has been removed and to being marked and sexually assault. and this thing has been there for for an hour, for decades long. and of course, it has been accelerated since the qu attempt on 1st of february 2020, why international community need to do more and her internship. these atrocities
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are taking place in the eyes of international community in the weakness of international community and at coordinates, like their reports says they coordinated actions against military need to be taken to stop these things. otherwise. yeah, the no sensitivity in any man will have to continually ping the price of our lives and likelihood and, and, and her. and it did that. the ability to make contact on to call is within the capacity of international community. it's matter of political will and showing the moral responsibility. a judge and ecuador has ordered the immediate release of an indigenous leader who was detained while leading a nationwide strike against high prices. human rights groups had criticized the arrest of lenny. this isa, or latin american editor, lucio newman, report. tempers were already reaching boiling point when the government ordered the arrest of lou. neither isa leader of ecuador confederation of indigenous peoples.
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the powerful organization had just begun a national strike to demand the fuel food and fertilizer prices be lowered and frozen shortly before the arrest isa had sent a stern message to president key and more lasso de la mortgage is that young connecticut. if the president does not respond to any of our demands incident that we will continue indefinitely in ecuador, as acute economic crisis, made much worse by the pandemic, has led to a sharp rise in prices, hunger and malnutrition. oh, he says the rest has angered indigenous communities that produce the lion's share of the countries. fresh food in ecuador, it's amazon region, the combative indigenous organization that represents more than 1500 communities, is calling for a national uprising law that things children oyster maximilian dick dorian state
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has kidnapped our lead of, i'm summoning all the presidents of all indigenous nationalities organizations, federations communities to rise up and march and reach every city the country loves . oh, it's not an empty threat. less than 3 years ago, the indigenous confederation but ecuador, his previous government, to which needs to strikes and sometimes violent public protests, hulu. after paralyzing the country for 10 days, the government caved in to demand to retract the increase in fuel prices as required by the i. m. f. c. and newman al jazeera, global boy bands sensational bts have announced to their taking a break to concentrate on their solo careers. the move a shot to k, pop groups, legion of fans, and course the value of their management agency to plummet 22 percent. rob mcbride reports russell ah, the surprise announcement came during
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a dinner to mark the 9th anniversary of the groups debut complaining of exhaustion and of the toll the pandemic has taken over. one of the members announced they all, they did a break called bang for feel. so saying that on a tide is very sinful in itself, and i wish we could talk happily and do things happily. no matter what the rules. that's all i want and i'm taking it doesn't work for the most difficult thing is writing lyrics. i have nothing to say any more. i should be able to tell the story that i want to share, but i end up forcing myself to write to please people when it's too painful. it seems as the ultimate boy band, even bts can't change the fact. they're not as boyish as they were. now did they already grown up? you know, the members in our average the asia is approaching in order. so t, so that is quite normal process in the korean pop industrial, the, when the member at the corner have been that they must have started their own
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business. b t s seem to be at the peak of their global popularity, generating billions of dollars for the south korean economy. as soft power, cultural ambassadors and building a fiercely loyal international fan base numbers, tens of millions referred to themselves collectively as army. the response from those spans has been instantaneous and impassioned with the flood of social media posts mostly expressing shock. i just want to give them a hug, says one fan, while others describe the move was courageous and all of them it seems still vowing lifelong devotion. was it? honestly, i was in the news battered the market value of the bands management agency, hiv, which seemed to.

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