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tv   News  Al Jazeera  June 18, 2022 11:00am-11:31am AST

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well coverage, a lot of his life will begin the journey to a pool via a journey that can take up the frame up from around the world. each family has a small piece of land with about pups to eat or so, but they still struggle to make an informed opinion. there is a need fabiola as federal government take action to really facilitate a pig right. in depth analysis of the data global headlines inside story on al jazeera. mm mm. you want to help save the world? sneeze into your own. lulu
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an attack on a safe place of worship in the afghan capital kabul, ah, you're watching al jazeera alive from door with me. fully battery bore also ahead. these really army has conducted a number of airstrikes in the gaza strip, targeting what it calls military sites. heavy rain end landslides in bangladesh can at least 25 people and leave more than 4000000 stranded. and the rare fever sweeping through parts of iraq experts warney could hit on already overstretched health care system. ah, there has been an explosion or seek place of worship in the afghan capital, which has killed at least 2 people. dozens were trapped in the complex in kabul,
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where there was also gunfire. it's the latest in a string of attacks targeting religious minority groups in afghanistan, phase. the land is the professor of political science at cobble university. he says, armed groups, i exploiting the tiny bans lack of control over afghanistan, security. but unfortunately, we are living close by the, with synergy, the explosions and also that text her actually within taliban in power. taliban liking capacity to capacity of counter terrorism. counter insurgency. the also like my regional international enter sharing support. it's not too full time minorities, specifically my share minority and sic ingram. i need to talk to in many years with how she talks, we have in mind collateral damage was happening. groups
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who benefits from such a targeting, civilian talks for the benefit of getting it and, and stability and messaging the central government to the previous. and now the current government that they do not have control over that population security city meters and they cannot defend the local population, specifically the minorities which creates a, you know, bad governance strep, and beards distance between people in the government. and it increases my trust deficit, which still for somehow challenges the symptom government over the country over the population. so it can be related with the same those talks which happen in on the minority, and then go to higher income land host in the past many years. and these at tech.
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so somehow, a series of attacks on different minorities of gifted and i'm kind of somali, as government says 70 ash above fighters, including 3 foreigners, have been killed after the army stopped. what it called an attempt to terror attack . the armed group was attempting to ambush an army base in the central gold woods region. somalis, information minister says a man who was intending to conduct a suicide attack has been arrested. is really airstrikes have hit several locations in garza, the army says it's targeting what it holds military sites. the strikes come after israel said it had shot down a projectile fired from the gaza strip towards the southern. the city of ash golan . early on saturday. you now say it has morton, gaffer city several air strikes, have been ah, targeting different military post siri in the gaza strip in different areas. mainly in the central of the gaza strip. and in the north of the gaza strip. either the
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rates this time were the most intense in the past few months. these railey arm, you said that these arrays have come, he response to our missile that was lashed from the gaza strip towards ash cologne . oh, very late or last night. and these early raids that happen early this morning are where in retaliation of that missile. i now these raids, i had not caused any casualties, no casualties were reported. but as i mentioned, they were the most tents in the past a month. and many material damage was caused by these rates. al jazeera media network continues to demand a rapid, independent, and transparent investigation into the killing of his journalists in the occupied west bag. sharina lockley was shot in the head by israeli forces while she was an assignment in janine, on the day of her funeral is ready forces stormed the procession and started
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beating warners, causing poll barris, almost drop her casket. that didn't sound thousands of palestinians from marching through occupied east jerusalem to take part in a funeral and burial. members of the international community have condemned her killing and continued to call for an investigation. sharina blankly was with al jazeera for 25 years covering the story of these really occupation. she was known as the voice of pat aside. a heavy rain has unleashed devastating floods in lance lives in blankly dish, killing at least 25 people. really say 21 people died because of lightning strikes and flooding. why, for others died in lance lies. the storm has also left 4000000 people stranded. the military has been deployed to help with evacuations. in china, at least one person has been killed in a fire factory, broke out in shanghai at a petrochemical plant in the early hours on saturday morning. huge clouds of black smoke billowed over the city. 500 firefighters were deployed. not iraq,
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where there's growing concerned about m increase in hemorrhagic fever, more than 200 people have been infected in 27 have died since this sort of the year . most of the confirmed cases have had direct contact with animals and we're livestock readers or butch's. mom would abdougla had reports from back to at been re moto says she was overwhelmed by headaches, fatigue and vomiting for days. she's now been diagnosed with him, a roderick fever and he's receiving a medical treatment at this hospital in the southern iraqi city of a nursery. how many of them we and our neighbors have cows and sheep, but the light stopped to show any symptoms. i probably got the disease from a bond or a neighbor's bon. the province of the par has recorded the highest number of cases among 13 other regions. most of them are farmers or butcher's. hemorrhagic fever is a viral tick borne disease that is transmitted to humans through the bytes of infected
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takes or by direct contact with the blood of the tissues of infected animals. subsistence farming is common in villages across here. arc. animal bones are usually located near houses. so family members often take care of their live in stock. officials have conducted the sterilization campaigns in several provinces, including the capital by the dad. ladies took on burns, i was played with cypher. miss irene solution. an empty tick pesticide, a lot of the art with the up. we spray everything on the ground, the walls of the holes in the walls. the ceilings, as well as the parts of the animals that are potential areas, the ticket to live, including this skin and fur on the cattle and sheep are the most potential carriers . the virus on monitor slaughtering is common here. so the health ministry
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has urged people to buy meat only from license the butcher. he's the shut fema us of climate change in iraq has helped the virus to evolve its genetic characteristics from strain viruses to sub strain. that's how it's become more resistant. it usually starts worsening from mid march every year. that's the breathing season for tics and newly born leeches which find their way ought to animals, skin tone. hemorrhagic fever is part of the family of viruses that includes the ebola last hunter virus and the yellow fever. it has been reported in iraq since 1979 veterinary and say the virus is likely to be eliminated by the rising summer temperatures. but there are concerns unhygienic butcher ease could give breeding ground for the virus. as more animals are slaughtered during the upcoming muslim festival of
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a deal of how hold up the la elgin's era. both that police in brazil say human remains found in the amazon rain forest and those of missing british journalist dom phillips. they have yet to identify other remained sought to belong to indigenous expert bruno herrera, who was travelling with phillips. when did they not give reports from reddish, narrow using dna matching brazil's federal police identified the mortal remains of british journalist, don phillips. he was travelling with indigenous expert luna. bit eda, when both men were killed. indigenous leader batt, to my reuben told us his people need time to mourn the loss of 2 men who defended their cause. he says the union of the indigenous people of the job id valley will continue patrolling their reservation working to stop illegal fishermen and poachers. but come august, don't you give that to so, but it's
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a question of survival. we live in an area which is home to the largest number of on contacted indigenous tribes in the world. they don't go to the local market to buy food. they depend on fishing to keep their families alive. abdulla they did, and phillips were found 10 days after they went missing. when the local fishermen, a mighty over the costa confessed to their killing, he led police to a burial site in the rain forest. more than 3 kilometers from the river, where both men were ambushed. it was not the 1st time he in pity and i had met. we witnessed this encounter between him in that costa last december. the police call the murders and isolated act, and they said there is no proof. they were commissioned by some one else, but michael was says he believes illegal. fishing is directly linked to money laundering from drug cartels a lot on others. ice, kepler's and bloodstream for muslim quality products to say this was an isolated
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crime is a mockery, not only for the families of both men, but for all those who have died defending the amazon and she at diginero, expert sydney, persuadable, says present j bowl. so matto is responsible for empowering people to we're trying to legally exploit the amazon. we will, visual was never in history. has the been a worst time for brazil's amazon like now, not even during the military regime, the murder of dom phillips, them but a little bit at i happen 4 months before brazil's presidential elections. casting a spotlight on a remote area of the brazilian amazon forest. there's nobody valley is the size of austria and home to the world's largest number of isolated indigenous tribes. monica not give al jazeera rio de janeiro still ahead on al jazeera, there will be no one on one meeting between the friends and the president. when joe biden has to react,
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we'll have more on his planned change. so even the security guards here are artistically talent, especially the security guard, and find out why some of the employees at one of the world's most famous hot museums are putting themselves on display ah, the journey has begun the faithful world copies on its way to cattle book your travel package to day. hello there after recording its hardest day of the year and hotter than all of last year, a big change for london. they cecile so 25 to crease on saturday. the winds have shifted around and a band of rain stretching from wales right through into england. so the heat has been squeezed into that southeast corner of england, western areas of france where the heat, their parents could very well hit 40 degrees today. but your big drop will come on sunday. we'll talk about that in the sec. that heat migrating further toward the
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east, prague at $36.00 degrees. you're closing in on a june temperature record, but i don't think you'll get there. there's a big drop for paris from $40.00 to $28.00 as these big storms roll in, some of which will be severe. got big rain for bulgaria, ranging from about 20 to 30 millimeters within a short period of time. that's likely to cause some trouble and showers and thunderstorms for mainland greece. we've got some activity bubbling up to 4 western areas of turkey. and those winds picken up through the boss for us like this in africa. we've got re migrating further toward the north, up into martinez, so showers seem likely a new auction over the next few days. and as we did toward that south, the weather maker is marched into the western cape. the northern cape. so wet and windy conditions, cape town, looking at wind gusts of 60 kilometers per hour on saturday. that's it from me. i'll catch up with you next hour. i official airlines of the journey. so lamar lake, whom it's great to see. welcome to the cut to economic forum powered by bloomberg.
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some people say that they said the globalization going on, but i'd prefer to think off the re globalization or accomplish speakers from heads of state to business and policy leaders will discuss revolving technology education, culture, sustainability, and the impact on the economy. ah, ah ah, welcome back, a recap of our top stories on al jazeera this hour. at least 2 people have been killed in afghanistan's capital after an explosion at a seek temple. dozens were trapped in the complex in campbell,
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where gunfire and grenades were used. is ready as strikes, have hit several locations in gas, or the army says it targeted what it's called military sites. the strikes come after israel said it shot down of project tie, fired from the gaza strip towards the city of ash and on. and heavy rain has unleashed devastating floods and man slides in bangladesh, killing at least 25 people. the storm has also left 4000000 people stranded. the military deploy troops to help with evacuations. by u. s. president joe biden says he will not meet saudi arabia's conference one on one during his visit next month. biden has been facing criticism after the white house announced his trip to re add. he wants promised to make saudi arabia parias state after the murderous journalist jamal household j. i'm not going to be with them. yes, i'm going to ask you. if you're going to be part of it, just like the people part of the day, greg, me, guy is a professor of international affairs at texas
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a and m university. he says soaring gas prices and high inflation have put biden in a difficult position. they have a touch of it. i think that he's climbing down from some pretty tough campaign. rhetoric. calling on the ground, prince bry saying he was going to isolate him. and you know, the fact is that he's going to be in the same room with him. and i'm not sure why he'd be going to saudi arabia except to talk to him. but obviously he's got, he's got to work the domestic side of this and, and, and back away from some very strong language he used during the campaign. the president wants to show the american people that he's doing everything he can even at the margins to bring down the price of gasoline. the ukraine issue just brought into a very start relief. the fact that saudi arabia is still the major player in the world. oil market, and even though the long term goal of the by the administration is clearly the
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reduce the importance of fossil fuels. that's not going to happen in the short term . people are still driving their cars and they still need gasoline. and so combined with these other geopolitical issues in the middle east, the ukraine war and the fact that chad on energy markets is really driving the, by the administration back into a relationship with saudi arabia, from the us present. donald trump has criticize his former vice president mike penn saying he lacked courage during the final days of their administration. his comments come after the u. s. has committee investigating last year's attack on capitol hill? head trump put pen his life rest. my parish had a chance to be great. he had a chance to be frankly historic but just like bill bar and the rest of these week people, mike and i say it sadly, cause i like them. but mike did not have the courage to act as you know,
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service has been held in southwest nigeria for some of the people killed in an attack on the church. earlier this month, 22 people were buried. there is anger at the government's failure to protect lies and property al jazeera is amadine race reports from the town of our 22 caskets holding the bodies of men, women and children lined up for mass. their families grieve to wonder how long nigerians will have to endure the bloodshed. religious leaders say the government is feeling the people. what does it take for every step to house that police? to be able to present is why. why do i have to beg, hug? why do i, how can they don't put back anybody? fullstep all nissan goodness it. as a country continues to plead. so political leaders are beginning to order. i. i
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mean, before you 2 are set a filial on security. we are filled, we are fed the service brought together people of different faiths in anger and grief. the physical damage caused by the orchard type may, he'll quicker what community me to see. i say it's cracked, this psychological impact to last much longer. what happened here was shaken the piece and confidence of a region that is largely avoided. much of the balance that is sweeping across nigeria, raising fears that no place is safe in africa's most populous vision. a few kilometers from the funeral box, though like today's battery, the family metric, one of the victims of the church music ah, the to us it's all says the beach. so
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luke, you mom my mom summer. this was a friend life life less one life from and i spoke to 2 days before these events st. francis church, while the attack happen is corded off each side, some of the debris had been cleared. but the bloodstained sealy is a graphic reminder of the cartridge that took place here on june. the 5th, at that attack, has renewed concerns about safety of lives in the entire country with less than a year to general elections. with the address al jazeera, a war southwest nigeria far said europe by experiencing the hardest, early summer temperatures in decades with fine just blaming climate change in spain, temperatures have climbed about 40 degrees and southern england has issued
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a heat lead near baca reports from london. oh, the british capitals grappling with june temperatures rarely seen the united kingdom. ha, a questionable time perhaps for team building exercises in the park. for others, though, it's a chance to do as little as possible and for some, an opportunity to dust off membership to the cities, most exclusive pools, ah, away from the stifling heat of the capitol. this is bryson of the south coast, where thousands jostled for a patch of beach and a space to cool off. i'm from cyber is and now in cyprus, is raining and i'm in london am. i'm boiling here so something must change minister . take precautions about the climate change for country this made an art form of complaining about the usually wet weather. this heat gives people here something
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else to grumble about that there's a seriousness about the soaring temperatures. real concern about how climate change may start to affect people's everyday lives. in the french capital, sweltering heat being worse and by pollution, making it dangerous for the vulnerable to go out. and in the spanish capital, madrid with temperatures of exceeded 40 degrees celsius for several weeks. the governments issued in extreme weather warning due to the presence of santa dusk from the horrid desert. little comfort for those struggling to work outside climate scientists are in no doubt about why this is happening. we're warming our climate generally. so the average temperatures have risen by just either one degree celsius since the pre industrial period. and that means that the hot extremes that we see every summer are becoming at least one degree hotter. and that also becoming more frequent and also lasting longer in climate activists are threatening more
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decisive action to proceed. inaction by governments, a big business similar to the extinction, rebellion protests that shut down parts of central london a few years ago, were fed up of, of here in the rhetoric we made meaningful action. and if our leaders are incapable of doing that, they're not capable of getting off of a fossil fuel addiction, we're just doubling down, right? i'm continuing to pursue new fossil fuel investments continue to subsidize with home for industry than when we're half the core of we have to call them out and education is cade's the public channel. so on the stand in the row of non violent civil resistance in this moment because every think house is found. climate scientists say the next decade will be defined by greater extremes of weather. but the theory is it will also be shaped by our collector failure to do more. the barker al jazeera london echo doors present as decay, the state of emergency in 3 provinces after days of protest get more law. so says
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is committed to defending the capital end of the country. the protesters are mostly indigenous people. they're set up gold blocks in several states. they're demanding cuts to fuel prices and a temporary ban on debt repayments for small farmers in chile 11 for my soldiers and police officers have been jails decades after the executions of dozens of farm workers in the committee of pain. it was one of the worst crimes committed by chillies, military leaders in 1973. the supreme court ruling has taken decades. most of the victims were poor workers, whose families couldn't afford to seek justice. a latin america edited lucy, a newman reports on pain. oh, the rural community of piney is home to a brutal street to stick. the largest number of victims per capita of chillies for military dictatorship. yahoo! we really rama 65 year old. sonya valensuela still lives in what's called widow's
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lane. she was 16 when soldiers rated the street and took her father, her 4 uncles and her husband of only 6 months. you know, and can, i mean from the winter i saw that they were taking away a line of people with their hands up like this ski emmy bureau roche. my uncle cried a lot. he said, sonya, they're going to kill me. and so it was if you whip the majority of those who lived here in 1973 were poor illiterate farmers who had benefited from a land reform program until a military coup turned the clock back in all 70 men were taken from here and disappeared, leaving their families penniless portion of any am or no, you're right on we were destitute. my grandmother was left to care for 16 grandchildren. they asked for milk for breton perry unless you for days with my father isn't but the worst part she says was the search for their bodies and for
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justice lucy aim in, calgary justice was finally so this week the 38 of the 70 victims who are honored at this memorial, after numerous appeals, the supreme court has ruled to imprison 11 soldiers and policemen with sentences of up to 20 years roar. hello hm. of them now. flood. last or last 2 brothers to uncles and her father, she says she's waited nearly 50 years to be able to sleep in peace carrier compliant. i think of my beloved mother who died in december. i can say that i completed my mission for her. she fought for so many years for this. oh yes, only 33 percent of the victims remains have been found. 24 of them were executed and thrown into a ravine. hill sick went to la la la, lengthy, near by, and they only found my father's glasses and a bit of clothing for the rest of his remains, had been thrown into the se. you're into like rappel and what the dictates ship
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called operation removal. c m. hello with somebody to the loo. so the 17 other victims were executed closer to home. this is the hill where the soldiers brought them, shot them dead, and then left their bodies to decompose. the squadron was led by a lieutenant colonel magna, but he will never spend a single day in prison. he died a year ago, peacefully in his bed before he could be sentenced. many of the victims families have also died. that's why sonia valensuela still feels sadness. justice that take so long, she says, still feels like injustice to see and human al jazeera buying it to the unified with one of the most famous ot museums, is presenting a collection of a little known artists its own employees, kristen salamis, in new york, with more on the unique exhibition, the metropolitan museum of art in new york is known for its extensive collection of art from around the world. but it's the museums latest show,
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an employee exhibition that's entering new territory. the men has been organizing employee exhibits for nearly 100 years, but this is the 1st time one has been opened to the public. more than 400 of the met, 1700 workers submitted their art every one from office staff to security guards. so even the security guards here are artistically talented, especially the security guards at the met him. for me, that's really interesting is that people who have jobs that don't seem to be ones that involved necessarily the artistic talents often turn out to be amazingly accomplished at what they do. it felt an exhibition design manager daniel kershaw to organize the works. sometimes the color is helped to determine what makes sense in certain spaces like here, everything from paintings to sculptures, to photographs. this installation gives you a slice of what's on the minds of more varied types of artists in new york. then
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you could possibly get anywhere else. i almost saw it as a metaphor for the way that i was feeling post, and our maker during the pandemic. and for many of the artist corona virus loc downs, weighed heavily. matthew tom soft sculpture is derived from a painting he saw at the met years ago. i work in the communications department at the metropolitan museum of our pam, you know, are responsible for telling the stories, have other great artists of our time. for 2 people tell a story of ourselves and our my peers, it's really been fantastic. working mid ancient artifacts has been an inspiration for supervising technician staff, zimbalist. if you're an artist that's like having a big encyclopedia, you know, i could go look on my lunch break and get what i want from the collection for this, especially i think i took some pictures while i was working on one of the galleries and we have a few tigers and sphinx because i work in the egyptian department.

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