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tv   News  Al Jazeera  June 16, 2022 5:00am-5:31am AST

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miss the most wonderful herb in the world. chinese see it, these and of the goddess problems. who do nathan claims that are being sold for the scott barely to quad fusion, one going to most to go back to quality that happened to on to be born, creeped t with the same enjoyment as respectability. the need about 3 to 5 years of all people see launch the grown and she'll old from o.
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brazilian police say a suspect has confessed to killing an indigenous expert in the british journalist in the amazon. ah, hello, i'm carry johnston. you're watching al jazeera where live from don't also coming up . for the 1st time, a 100000000 people have been forced from home world wide record displacement figure driven by russia's war and ukraine. the u. s. federal reserve attacks inflation with its largest rate rise since 1994 and signals more to come and the hungry, super worms that could help us make a dent in the wells, plastic problems. ah, brazilian, that police say a suspect has confessed to killing indigenous researcher, bruno pereira and british journalist dom phillips,
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investigators say the suspect led them to a remote amazon burial site, where human ret remains having recovered. ferrera and phillips went missing more than a week ago. or more that speak to one cannot give whose life for us in rio de janeiro, monica, what's the latest of the police have been saying? well, it's been a very sad day. ah, dom phillips as wives has said, at least um they know now wow, what happened to them? at least they found some sort of closure. it was a day that started with very terrible rumors about body being cut up and burnt and buried. but finally, one of the 2 men that were suspects of having murdered, but a little bit era and dom phillips, he confessed he led the police to this place. it's like 3 kilometers inside the
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jungle. a very difficult place to drag dogs to people in they, they are, they took them there and, and they found human remains and now the investigation is not over because b might not be the only 2 people involved in this. also, they have to identify the human remains, compare them with the dna that they already collected of journalists, dom phillips, and of a brazilian, indigenous expert, bruno video ada. the reason why would they have been killed, so is so brutally. and the reason is a little bit it has been for years are helping of the indigenous people from their job id valley, which is an area the size of morocco. and it has, it's the home of the largest number of un contacted tribes. he's been helping them patrol their land because it's been invaded by illegal fishermen. by poachers. by
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miners of the 2 suspects are fishermen. when we were there in the shower the valley, we actually met one of them, a mighty ogle. it was his brother who confessed and so the next step will be tomorrow. they're going to continue digging in this area. they're also going to compare the remains with the dna samples that they have. okay, monica not here. thanks for that update. we're going to stay with this though because of some cow. he is a journalist based in brazil, and he joins us on skype from south palo. thanks for being with us sir. how much does this reflect an increased empowerment of organized crime in the region? do you think yes, absolutely. result all budget cards coming from the federal government, which began in 2017, under the administration of michelle. and have continued under the administration
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of j oaks in our, which began on january the 1st 2019. and not only that, what we've seen during the box and ministration is kind of stacking all agencies along along with the car. but those are stacking agencies, government protection bodies for indigenous people and the environment. the agency's we enjoy that with allies, with people, with no former experience of people that were aligned ideologically with mr. both and rose table and the amazon, which is to develop the amazon. you know, basically when you know what the devil then she declared the amazon opened the business you know, long codes to legalize mining and other heavy, extractive and industrial activities or indigenous lands. for example, currently prohibited by law. he's welcome to legal minus to the presidential palace,
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members of the store, but i have had meetings of illegal minors in the presidential palace and you know, much of his support comes from lawless regions in the amazon and across the country . so yeah, what we have seen in the last few years, both and i rode ministration to go even increasing lawlessness in the amazon as a result of an even direct result. mid to both scenarios in century rhetoric and also costs and d banging to the very agencies which is supposed to be protecting the forest, added people. both of these individuals who are doing very brave work in, in very difficult circumstances when yeah, absolutely. i mean, like, the amazon has been a lot as a place for a long time. right. you know, for century american non dorothy staying,
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she was murdered in 2005 and that cool is an international our right to, you know, and it's one of the most dangerous parts of the planet to be a environmental. ready land defense, but the thing with bruno and the thing with dog now it's, it's been announced finally that they needed to brilliant and courageous men that were basically as many people i have spoken to doing similar swimming against the tide to do, they were probably in the really, really challenging and a whole thought environment. bruno had been demoted from his position, working for the federal indigenous agency in brazil, had been demoted from that position in 2019 you know, off a successful operation to combat illegal mining in the region. you
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know, it was very much seen as a political that was politically motivated, demotion at the time. and then after that he took leave and went to carry on working with the indigenous people that he'd been working with. so many years. and don phillips had joined him. they had worked together in 2018, you know, doing some brilliant coverage of the region for the guardian. i was covering with him at the guarding during that trip. and so, you know, he would get in touch with me in these like remote john who was telling me what he was up to and asking me, what's the weight of the mud puppy what was going on in south hobbling rio. and that's like bruno dogwood publishing a book and bruno was helping him, you know, was helping him in this region. the book was, you know, toward the end of being finished. and these man, they go on, but the legacy will live on forever. ok,
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simon. kerry journalist in that sound power. thanks for your personal insights today. thank you. for the past decades, every year has seen a record number of people forced to flee their homes. this year is no different than you. hi, for displacement above 100000000 for the 1st time. un refugee agency says the scale and speed of the crisis is outpacing solutions. the biggest factor right now is the war and ukraine, which is triggered one of the largest mass displacements since world war 2. there are glimmers of hope. 5.7000000 people returned to their countries of origin in 2021. for the un high commissioner of refugee says over all things are going in the wrong direction. new conflicts emerge, old conflicts are not resolved. and because the causes that push people to flee are becoming more and more complex, are violence persecution,
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human rights violations, but also m to an extent, climates, extreme climate phenomena, and the climate change inequalities. even the pandemic, everything conspires to make the situation very difficult for people in certain countries, and their only option is to flee. and there, this is why we've seen this bigger grow year after year and reach now more than a 100000000 people. the still almost 6000000 syrian refugees in the middle east. i've just come back from bangladesh. we're in a tiny and very fragile area of the country. 1000000 refugees from member of the ro hinge a community have been living for the past few years and the list is very, very long. so the size, the complexity, the difficulty of finding solutions,
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all of this illustrates the, the, the nature of the problem we're dealing with on a frantic rush for safety in ukraine is that people scattered across the country. wondering if a missing loved ones are still alive, shall stratford reports from keith. julia and ludmilla escaped the russian bombardment of mary auto on march 19th. over the next few days, they risked their lives 3 times, driving back into the city, breathing, bullets, shells, and airstrikes in a desperate attempt to find the father of their family. 61 year old alexander phillip ankle. they fear, he never made it out. so usually it is when we were driving there were russians on one side, ukrainians on the other, and they were shooting, says you really you that we were in the middle, it was terrifying those up, but we were determined to get dad when you select the family used to live near the as of steel plant, where an estimated 2500 ukranian soldiers and civilians were trapped for weeks. as
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the fighting intensified safely to a basement under a block of flats in the city center. on the day they escaped, the shilling was intense, and alexander never made it from the basement to the waiting civilian car. we were sure he knew we would come back for him, says ludmilla. and he would wait for us in the basement allah! a few days later, they returned to where they had last seen alexander at them. either he saw all the buildings were burnt, and destroyed, says ludmilla. and there was no one there. ludmilla and julius story is not uncommon. the united nations estimates that russia's invasion has forced more than 12000000 people to flee their homes. the ukrainian government says thousands of them are searching for friends and loved ones, missing fear dead. and her chance of new cobra is a psychologist, volunteering at the center, helping some of the 10s of thousands of people from mary apple who fled to the
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ukrainian control side or chill or yoga to day. i had a lady whose husband was killed in front of her and she asked, why did i survive? she like so many is deeply disturbed, constantly breaking down and a fusion to accept what has happened was families who come to the center to receive food parcels. once every 2 weeks, children play while their parents register, until their stories to volunteers. andre used to work at the as of style plants as a lathe operator, he says he left many friends behind mother supporting too much. i think they are more sympathetic to the occupiers yet they don't, they call me and ask when are you coming back? but i will never returned with russians in control. anastasio was a social worker in mary or pull before the war. she struggles to hold back, her tears said i be upset, holly, he shall, didn't we all lost friends, they're gone forever. in my case, it would have been death or captivity because i refused to work under the occupiers
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. i don't know if i will ever see my city again. ukrainian government accuses russia a forcing tens of thousands of people from mary opal into russia and accusation. russia denies. eula and lute miller say their only hope is that all examiner is still alive. cha, stratford al jazeera keith were coming up shortly, had briggs, it flares up again. dispute over northern ireland is heading for the course, thus the street name change with the not so subtle message. the journey has begun. the before world copy is on its way to the castle book, your travel package today. over the past few weeks about
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a meter of rain has fallen in at some stage in the far northeast of india. hello everyone. and that rain continues to come, that you're on thursday, we'll go in for a closer look in one sec. but there's our monsoon rains falling that's now entered good rides and it stretches right down that west coast. ok promise you we were going for a closer look to where the foreign northeast of india. this is not good news. darker the color, the more intense the rain is falling and again, in some spots here, we've picked up a meter of rain over the last little while and still more to come. for se, asia, it's looking like this. waves of rain really moving west to east. so it's going to blanket borneo and rain get help with rain for central java on thursday. now to china, the plum rains are seasonal rains really concentrated over the pearl river valley. so i suspect we'll see some flooding there. and certainly we have and one tongue province also north of that and who nan province, but dry for the young, super valley in the yellow river valley hot sunshine here shall jo at 40 degrees
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and will end this weather report in japan were the main island of hon you okay, we got a week band of showers here, same goes for whole cato and those conditions will begin to improve in beijing with a height 29 degrees on thursday. that's it. that's all so cas, airway. official airline of the journey. when the news break, looking through the building, trying to speak with 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 morocco. it definitely changed my life in a good way with exclusive interviews and in depth reports, there's no harm in what he left because al jazeera has teens on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and live news. ah, ah,
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the me, you're watching l 0 reminder of our top headlines. police in brazil say a suspect has confessed to the killing. 2 men went missing and the amazon authorities also say body parts pound business. expert pereira and british journalist don phillips went missing. more than a week ago, the un refugee agency reports it says, a number of people displaced worldwide, has risen to a record of 100000000. biggest facts with the movements as much as war. ukraine. of the u. s. a. federal reserve has made its most aggressive upward move on interest rates in almost 30 years. is trying to get on top of searching inflation, which is being driven by factors seen increasingly as being out of the feds hands.
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my kind of reports from washington d. c. denouncement was expected, but no less shocking. at today's meeting, the committee raised the target range for the federal funds rate by 3 quarters of a percentage point resulting in a one and a half percentage point increasing the target range so far this year. the only potential rail flight an unemployment rate near a 50 year low with job vacancies at historical highs and wage growth elevated. but this is offset by soaring inflation, which the rates type is intended to curb. prices across the board increased by nearly 9 percent last month alone, as inflation reached a level not seen in decades. the interest type will increase the price of mortgages and insurance among other things. but the fed hopes that are also damping consumer spending, which in turn should reduce inflation. my colleagues and i are acutely aware that high inflation imposes significant hardship, especially on those least able to meet the higher costs of essentials, like food,
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housing, and transportation. we are highly attentive to the risks high inflation poses to bite. so both sides of our mandate and were strongly committed to returning inflation to our 2 percent objective. and that would be welcomed by a suffering public. y'all have got to slow it down and stretches. gallon and milk of mom, we don't know the 6 bucks every 2 days that go to safeway. the mil for chelsea lewis and her family inflation is not an abstract statistic. it's an everyday burden that determines whether there's food on the table or whether she can drive the twin high school kids to track meets the surgeon. prices is particularly hard on people, still recovering from the economic ravages of attend demik. this is been a rough time and then with the, you know, the recent with the ukranian situation and then the gas was shooting up. it's just like this world is, is, is certainly even more rough for the ones who are already struggling to keep their
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head above water. so it's kind of like now i can speak for myself. you kind of feel like you're drowning in a sense. chelsea is holding down several jobs while studying for a degree, but she couldn't cope without a government safety net. in particular, a housing subsidy known as section 8, food stamps, about $800.00 a month. my daughter who you just met. she's on social security. that's how we're managing. but the good blessing is before we moved to georgia after 60 years and being on the section a housing voucher program, i made it to the top of up to the fits announcement, the white house, which continues to play much of the gloomy economic outlook on russian president vladimir putin section in ukraine, said it was doing everything to steady growth, and that's little comfort to the louis family, which regularly plays a board game called the game of life in which players get into debt, take out insurance, make investments, spine property, and so on. but they have little or no control over the real game of life being
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played out beyond these walls. one of rampant inflation and rising interest rates in which the consumer is always the loser. my kind of jazeera washington, the us house committee investigating the capitol hill right, says a man who was on a toll the day before the attack returned. on the day of the insurrection, the committee has released a video of the tool, which was organized by republican congressman adam fisher, was it was the day before the capital riot, and constituents of republican congressmen, body loudermilk were being given a tour of the building. one man in particular, seemed interested in stairways and security checkpoints, not the usual tourist attractions. the same man who filmed himself walking towards capitol hill on the day of the riot, making broad threats against democratic members of congress. he has not been charged with any effect. there is no escape pelosi schumer,
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adler, i will come in for you. the congressman whose offer during the visit said he did nothing wrong. these are folks who had never been in washington dc and there they were here to visit their congressman. why not just speak to the committee? and just because the committees never called me and asked me anything, they said they let her rear corporation, they never sent it to me. your office never know, never, never received a letter, never received a phone call. never received an email they sent to you guys the chairman of the january 6 committee, betty thompson says the behavior of the group raises concerns about that activity and intent. there being suggestions, a number of tours and the days before the right. a load some of those involved to essentially study the layout and will capitol police say there was nothing suspicious about the ledger miss visit that are called to reopen that investigation . it seems suspicious that you need a subpoena for
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a member of congress to want to volunteer everything he knew that was arguably relevant to the investigation. why do you need a subpoena? your member of congress is supposed to be upholding and defending the constitution . you should be volunteering like a good samaritan. everything you know, the leader of the republicans in the house says the shows the committee is more interested in attacking opponents. but the committee is expected to lead more evidence of other suspicious visits incoming hearings. allan fisher, i'll just either washington, the by the administration has reiterated. it's cold for a fair and a thorough investigation. the king of al jazeera june, the serene claim, palestinian american, was shot dead by his really forces on reporting in the occupied west bank on may. the 11th, what we want is obviously for this to be fully investigated. and if there needs to be accountability, had the accountability had at the end of that investigation, we've called for thorough complete, transparent investigations into her death. and we're going to be watching this very,
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very closely. i don't have any additional details on what an independent investigation would look like. i just don't have that for you today. but i don't want you to walk away thinking that we don't want this fully investigated. and for that investigation, to be thorough and transparent section of the street in front of saudi arabia's embassy in washington, d. c. has been renamed doctor murdered journalist jamal construction. he was killed by sal the agents in istanbul, in 2018 practical hain was at the unveiling. were standing outside the usually heavily fortified. saudi arabian embassy here in washington, dc with a crowd of media and supporters gathered, were about to see the name of the street that the embassy sits on renamed, who showed you way. the washington state, the city council, about a year ago decided to change the official name of the street to honor lane, washington post journal, jamal showed you. now the organizers here say they're doing it now and large part
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to raise awareness of the fact that us president joe biden will soon be heading to saudi arabia. basically feel betrayed. i think the promises that he gave us gave the general public about protection of saudi distance. the also the promise of making the saudi government, the a prior. they are activist, say they want the american people to remember that on the campaign trail, joe biden promised to make saudi arabia a pariah state. they say that obviously a promise now broken cupid 19 vaccines are expected in the arms of children on the 5 in the u. s. as soon as next week, experts convened by regulators have unanimously recommended the shots be approved during deliberations. doctors said that although most american children have been infected by now, high rates of hospitalizations among infants and toddlers underscore the need for vaccination. now the british government is refusing to rule out abandoning european
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human rights packets off to a judge, blocked from deporting asylum seekers to wander the last minute intervention by the european court of human rights for the 1st flight to be cancelled on tuesday night . the court is unrelated to the european union which you left in 2020 british homes, secretary, pretty patel for the government were deterred into more flight. so planned the you and you k are fighting on another legal front over northern ireland. britain is trying to get rid of trading rules. it signed up to under the briggs, it divorced steel. neither bark reports from london. if he thought the battle over breaks, it was done and dusted. think again, because a thought he detail and the trade deal signed 18 months ago has come back to haunt all involved with the british government plan. to unilaterally scrap the northern ireland protocol, infuriating brussels. this is illegal. that is why the commission has they
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decided to take legal action against the united kingdom for not complying with significant parts of the protocol on islands, northern islands, and in the u. k. angle spilt across the floor of parliament over the government's apparent disregard of international law. i know a threat to the trade war with our european friends, triggered by a law breaking prime minister. he talks about a trade rule. he talks about, he talks about a trade. well, what could be more foolish? mrs. bigger than a project of actually visitors, trade barriers or within hard to deny the line and protocol is designed to prevent a hard border between northern ireland to part of the u. k. and the republic of ireland and e. u member that arrangements protected by the good friday agreement that entered 30 years of sectarian violence in the north. but instead it effectively created a border in the irish sea with goods imported from mainland britain, subject to checks and going unionists and others who want the province to be
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a seamless part of the rest of the u. k. the british government hopes its bill will be a quick fix. it's hoping under the changes to allow good destin solely for northern ireland to avoid old shacks, other goods going to the republic of ireland launch, the e. you would go down, a separate wretch on a wet checks would take place. the problem is the border between northern ireland and the republic of island is open and poor is making it near impossible to know what goods a going where the u. k. government argues the problems arising from the protocol justify scrapping the plan. the youth firmly disagrees challenging the u. k for failing to implement checks on goods entering northern ireland. failing to share trade data with the e u and failing to establish inspection, post sip ports. the case could go all the way up to the european court of justice with the u. k. possibly facing a hefty fine. and if the british government's proposed bill becomes law, the you could pull several retaliatory leave as such as ending terry free trade
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going in both directions. suspending fishing rights or even ending 90 day visa, free travel for brits heading to the u. the u. k. and it's european neighbors, all righty, at odds off to the european court of human rights intervene to stop britain deporting migrants to for wanda, leading to coles from some british m piece to ditch the human rights convention altogether. the e u says the doors open for dialogue without it, and soon this dispute seems almost certain to deepen the fuck out to sarah london. the management of plastic waste is one of the wells most urgent environmental challenges. and scientists think they found an answer in a species of worm, jane wolf explained. scientists in australia say this super warm may prove crucial and scaling back some of the damage done by humans who have made a toxic mark on humanity. it's a, it's a very exciting discovery for us because no,
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when we started it we, we didn't know if the civil laws could actually do do what we want them to do with greater prospects that, that's, that's a good outcome. originally from central and south america, the super worm grows to more than 5 centimeters in length and is often used for pet food. this group of scientists found the species took a particular liking toward polystyrene. one of the most common types of plastic, a super worms, peculiar appetite, potentially playing a pivotal role in reducing waste. one could theoretically a half like a few 100000 super forms in a big a big building right to let them degraded. but that doesn't worry well, so we want to correct, right? the enzyme better than reproducing into lap and a half like an enzyme cocktail. so then we can at some point scale it's like industrial setting, a step they.

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