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tv   News  Al Jazeera  June 19, 2022 5:00am-5:31am AST

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told me to sensationalize how we fell these stories. what donnelly's do best is look at the half of the story. programs that open your eyes to an alternative view of the world today. oh, now dedira. in just under a year's time catalyst al bait stadium will house. the opening match of the 2022 world cup. the official opening of the stadium came on day one of the arab cup, but many friends were already counting down to the big kickoff. next november, c, u r. o 1022. as this tournament unfolds over the coming days, it will play a key role. the organizes getting ready to host the middle east. biggest ever sporting event next year and for the cattle national team is like it used to playing in front of expected home crowds lobby hoping to convince both the fans and themselves. so they really all ready to take on the world. ah,
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police and brazil confirm the remains of indigenous expert bruno para, have been found in the amazon. ah, you're watching al jazeera life or my headquarters in del hi. i'm danny. navigate also coming up. heavy rains cause major flooding and parts of bangladesh and india leaving millions stranded. the us allows cove 19 jobs for children as young as 6 months. plus. i'm gabriel's onto in new york where moviegoers are celebrating the 50th anniversary of one of the greatest films ever made. that story, coming up with
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hello police and brazil have confirmed that human remains found in the amazon or those of indigenous rights expert, bruno pereira and british journalist don phillips, autopsy results show they were shot or the firearm used for hunting indigenous groups or demanding justice for the killings and what more protection from illegal hunter as miners and lawyers? monica anna kev reports. ah. this vigil was held on the day, brazilian federal police confirmed the 2nd set of human remains found in the amazon . are those of indigenous expert boon will bit eda learn almost act of his work costumes of rain forest animals to remind brazilians that bid it a died protecting indigenous territories from illegal fishermen and poachers. they blamed brazil's president april, so nato and his administration for turning
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a blind eye and dismantling organizations created to protect the green forest. and its people owe me to my wiggle room after president bowes and arrow took office. our attack as have been emboldened missionaries mine as far as logs and fishermen, they gained strength and they all want to pace about land honey beetle. i'm afraid it went missing on june 5th. while traveling with british journalist don phillips, whose remains were identified on friday. police say, am i due to the costa and his brother was a ne, have confessed to ambushing the men. lisa phillips was killed by a shot to the chest. fietta was shot twice in the chest and the head stove on a single can. we have detained a 3rd suspect who was in the area of the crime when it happened. mother that he did, i was working with the indigenous people of their job id valley, helping them track down legal fishermen who steal their food. last december,
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we accompanied him on an indigenous patrol. he told us at the time that he was being threatened. dom phillips was researching a book on how to save the amazon. their bodies were found deep into the rain forest, 3 kilometers away from the river. the murder of dom phillips, sim, group idiot, uh, has shopped, brazil, and the world. another vigil will be held on sunday in the brazilian capital brazilian. meanwhile, the investigations continue. resilient. investigators savvy suspect more people are involved in what seems to be a planned crime monitor not give all to 0. we have is an arrow. that's not bringing kurland as was a brazilian environmental journals herself. she joining us from rio de janeiro. welcome to al jazeera. thanks for speaking to us. your new bo fees, man. just tell us how you will remember them and their work 1st of all.
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well, hello. thank you so much for attention talking about done and you know how i needed to go for? no, i'm leaving a message on the line to you last year and how many times here we are in the office or it's on it. and i also had the opportunity to talk to the time with a special attorney to find a mentor film about a while ago to the front line to fight against legal orders. and i did time, who was the had i was brazil, indigenous agency, and the he was the coordinator for indian lady. oh, yeah. it's really great. kenya, now there's news out there. they're tragic mon, i know they have written about it as well. recently you say that the murders of
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both dom and room are emblematic of the ger of the risks that journalists faced right across latin america. how dangerous has it become for a journalist to be reporting on environmental crimes? yeah, absolutely. wow. there is exists for a while, but i had to say that is getting worse and worse, especially after president a campaign, you're clearly emboldening, you know, and it will miners and even longer, you know, and you need to lose because of areas you all said when they were kate and he sent him on her on the line for them with true doing this, i'm just ration do, do that to happen. and we can clearly see that there will be if you have information about the violence against environmental defenders and journalists and
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so in i q. remember that in just a few months after he's a nation. i was in brazil covering the hugest in gathering there. and all of them had that, you know, the situation became worse, and unfortunately that's what we see, you know, even in other parts of brazil, we saw for example, original plan to call them brazil, for example, who does a lot of investigative, especially into labor or environmental stuff they were, you know, threatened to buy that will lead from the ground. there is a case of another resident journalist who was charged by the court to pay, you know, i'm giving and said fine to me to sort of just is because a book he wrote and then you mean there are accountable facts on the ground. and also, you know, by this beach and i wrote the times trying to describe the media. this,
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grab the media, you know, and attack journalists with beach. in the same time. he's a speech clearly emboldened right to me already. and you also say that this should be a wake up call for the need to protect reporters on the front lines from reporting environmental crime. so what sorts of protections would you be calling for? yeah, i believe that the majority of the class will be now do need to speak to risk because as i'm before going on the ground, you know, because we need that. but i mean that now you need to speak to rooms. i did it, for example, to post i environmental train a man in the back. and i can say that there are a lot of things that to be heard. there are all ready, you know, all of this, but i think that now there is a really undeclared war and you need to take more and more professional before
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going to that route in the amazon, it was written by owners to uncover environmental. thank you so much. carla manders, for talking to us on al jazeera, giving us your thoughts. welcome. that's my pleasure. in bangladesh, at least 25 people have died in floods and landslides caused by heavy rain. neighboring parts of northeastern india are also affected, and millions have been left homeless, victoria gate, and b as the latest. if you leave, the rain has been relentless in the eastern city of fill it in bangladesh. american office siller. silly has been overwhelmed twice by flood water within the last 2 months ago by the flood this time is much more severe, even in the scent of the city. what there is water up to my hip, one huge swathes of ne and bangladesh of flooded after days of heavy rainfall. rivers had burst that bank, villages all submerged and estimated 4000000 people are stranded. the army has been
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sent to rescue people, and schools have been turned into relief shelters. in neighbouring a sam state in east in india, more than 2000000 people are affected by flooding and landslides. we are now wounding over the past 2 days. the water levels been rising rapidly since 7 am rescuers have been checking in on people who live here, rescued and evacuated almost a 150 people and will bring another 50 who are currently stuck. bangladesh and east in india regularly affected by floods, but experts say climate change is making it worse. often it's the poorest communities that are hardest hit more carbon liquor. there's water everywhere around 6 or 7 kilometers, barriers flood. miller, people don't have any way to live. and have to go to higher ground. oh, it'll got olga vasa, the flood water has inundated our house on this has created a lot of issues for people here as well as animals or there's also the issue of a lack of food. it's the start of the monsoon season in this region. it lasts until
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october. people here are dreading many more months of non stop rain and the flooding and misery. it brings victoria gate and be al jazeera. i telling fighters have claimed responsibility for an attack on a see a place of worship in the afghan capital. on saturday. 30 people were in the temple in capital. when gunman stormed the complex armed with grenades, one worshipper was killed. a taliban fighter also died in a gun battle with other attackers. ukraine's president has inspected reconstruction efforts in the fort city of death. oh, it's been under heavy bombardment by russian forces. ukraine's inability to use its deep sea ports is contributed to a jump in global food prices. follow the resolution ski thank troops in the city for their service. us health officials have approved covered 1900 vaccines for children as young as 6 months old. it means america's last remaining age group has
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now been approved for vaccinations. millions of doses have been ordered for distribution and will be available starting next week. dr. william schaffner is a professor of infectious diseases at vanderbilt university medical center. he says pediatricians and others in the medical community have been eagerly waiting for this moment. you know, if we just look at these children age 6 months through 4 years of age, up to their 5th birthday. thinking back just in the united states, over 20000 of them, 20000 of them have been hospitalized. there have been over 200 deaths in children. this is an opportunity to prevent children, small children from dying. and so it's very exciting. the american academy of phoebe of pediatrics, as well as the cdc, and people such as myself,
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are enthusiastic about this and are going to be encouraging parents to bring their children into their doctors to be vaccinated. first of all, they're safe. that's very, very important. parents mostly want to know about that. and then on the effectiveness side, they should have a level of effectiveness against severe disease keeping children out of the hospital comparable to what we have for older children, adolescents, and young adults. in other words, we think that they'll be about 80 percent effective as about as good as we can get with our current generation or vaccines. there will be, according to our surveys about a quarter of parents who will bring their children in very promptly because they've been waiting for this. and then the vast majority will be a bit more cautious, and we urge them to go to their doctors, their family doctors, their pediatricians ask their questions to the point that they feel comfortable in
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doing that. and i hope that that happened soon. stella had on al jazeera colombians prepared to choose their next president and a hotly contested vote between 2 vastly different candidates. and the crypto currency crash continues. will tell you why analysts say bitcoin slide will be stopping anytime soon. ah, the journey has begun. the faithful world copies on its way to cat hook. your cattle package today has been more flooding seasonally normal, but still annoying in central, in some parts of china and this is all the season rain the plum rained. now that's going to pulse in now. probably along the yangtze towards shanghai. it does the same as it goes through a japan as well, giving either showers or longer spells a rainbow just on that sudden fringe of japan tokyo stays at
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a humid $29.00 hong kong, probably out of the showers at 31. they still pretty hot in beijing and gina hotter than average, but not record breaking lee, so throughout se, asia big land mass, or small islands to jostle, get dead. he shouted the moment every now again, you get an area of concentration is hard to see it here. but maybe peninsula malaysia, down towards singapore looks particularly wet during monday than the monsoon trough officially has burst here. good, you rach dives down here comes up to bangladesh, but you can see what ahead of it. plenty of probably welcome shout. someone pretty stormy. stop as well. particularly in northern pakistan. so touches come down. the rain has start to fall. it's been flooding, rain of which is still a warning in the northeast of india. and in pakistan, real big shout in the law found around molten. unfortunately, further south is still too hot and too dry. cats are air weight issue and i know the journey.
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ah, the shake hm. odd award for translation and international understanding is accepting nominations for the year 2022 from february 15th until august, 15th this year. for more information go to w, w, w dot h t a dot q a slash e n o the me hello again, the top floor is on al jazeera, this, our police and brazil have confirmed the human remains. jones,
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in the amazon of those if indigenous expert, bruno berrera. i'm british journalist on trellis. they went missing 11 days ago. autopsy results show they were shot with a firearm used for hunting, massive floods of ravaged bangladesh, leaving millions of homes under water. at least 25 people have died in the flooding caused by heavy rain. neighboring parts of northeastern india are also affected. us health officials of approved covered $1900.00 in for children as young as 6 months . after last remaining age, group doses will be available starting next week. colombians are preparing to cast their ballots in the most contested presidential election and recent history. the vote comes one year after security correct on on st protest, fueled by deepening socio economic problems. terrorism reports on the promises made by the 2 presidential hopefuls who sit on opposite ends of the political spectrum. a book, a sort of the last election is just
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a few hours away from the election. i've talked to the columbia that it's ready to change, that he's ready to make history says, who will be thrown in the commercial ads. napoleon, feed my name. this is the 1st time i left when candidate has made it this far in a presidential campaign. and economist, and also a former gorilla. he promises to fight inequality. we think the war on drugs and overhaul the tax system was a 1000000 plus hooks look at what we propose in the medium term is food sovereignty and energy sovereignty based on clean energy. a process the disconnect says from the economy that i call fossil coal and oil, and which connects us to the agriculture and industrialization policy. what is with us, challenger is a 77 year old business man known as the king of take talk parallel for amanda, shocked the country by making it to this sunday selection. he has based his
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campaign on attacking corrupt politicians, who he says have failed. the columbia people at man, this is the former meal of kara manga, and many compare his political style to donald trump's. v, as in wherever they warn you, then on june 19th, we have a commitment with columbia. we have waited years to get the corrupt out of office hours on june 19th, we can begin to rewrite the new history of columbia, mark like this on the voting, carting look into my eyes, read my lips. i will not fail. you both candidates promise change, but the elections has people here on the edge security forces are on high alert for potential political violence. some radical groups have said that they won't acknowledge the results of sunday's votes, and that's why thousands of soldiers and police officers have been deployed across the country to guarantee the safety of the electoral process. protest last year against tax races and health care reform,
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left dozens dead and hundreds injured. is of protesters located the protest showed we had serious unresolved social issues before the pandemic in the cities where the majority lived in the informal sector. when the economy was closed because of the pandemic, many lost at all, it continues to be a time bomb. and that's why the challenge now is to start addressing all those issues. the winner will inherit a country with solid economic growth, but deep social troubles. troubles that had been ignored for too long. that he said, well, i'll just eat at border. a memorial service has been held for al jazeera journalist shooting a block where she was shot in the head by is really forces while on assignment. and janine last month, family and friends gathered at a church and occupied easter whistle and members of the international community have condemned her killing and continued to call for an independent investigation. a block that was with al jazeera for 25 years,
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covering the story of the israeli occupation. she was known as the voice of palestine. bernard smith attended the service and occupied east jerusalem. oh, this is a memorial mass in sharina. i closed hometown katelina, marking 40 days since she was killed by israeli forces when covering a story in janine and the occupied westbank is an opportunity for sharina, friends and family to remember a colleague, a would want to be remembered for what she did. she was the voice of palestine, the voice of truth and she was compassionate. she was empathetic, she wasn't just a journalist at the end of the day, she was also human being. then she continued to to advocate and to talk about just
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just for palestinians. i want people to remember her as the fun, humble. okay. cheerful person. she's always serious on tv, but she's not like that. oh, she's always happy person. she changes up the moon. when she enters the room, she like she brightens up the room when she answers it. oh wow. and on sunday there'll be an official memorial in ramallah, given by the palestinian authority and hosted by palestinian present mood. abbas tennesseans have continued their protest against the proposed new constitution. they fear it will get president of high society, tighter griff on power fired once a referendum for a new constitution to take place next month. but main political parties are threatening to boycott that votes. there is a growing concern about an increase of hemorrhaging fever in iraq. more than
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$200.00 people have been infected and at least $27.00 have died since the start of this year. most of us sick had direct contact with animals and were livestock breeders or butchers without the had reports from by god beaudry him up to says she was overwhelmed by his aches fatigue and vomiting for days. she's now been diagnosed with him, a roderick fever and his receiving medical treatment and this hospital in the southern iraqi city of nasiriyah. how many of them are 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 our neighbors bond. the province of the car 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 takes or by direct contact with the blood,
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tissues of infected animals. subsistence farming is common in villages are cross, he rock, animal burns are usually located near houses. so family members often take care of their livestock officials have conducted sterilization campaigns in several provinces, including the capital by the dad. live is stuck on burns, i was played with cypher misery in solution an anti take place. decide a lot of the up with we out. we spray everything on the ground, the walls, the holes in the walls and ceilings, as well as the parts of the animals, the potential areas for tics to live, including the skin. and fer me, cattle and sheep are the most potential carrie and the virus on monitor slaughtering is common here. so the health ministry has urgent people to buy meat
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only from license the butcher. he's the shop, few months of climate change in iraq has helped the virus to evolve its genetic characteristics from strain viruses to substrate. and that's how it's become more resistant. usually starts worsening from mid march every year. that's the breeding season for tics and newly born leeches which find their way to animals. skin tone. hemorrhagic fever is part of the family of viruses that includes ebola last hunt, a 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 some other temperatures . but there are concerns unhygienic, but sure eas could you give breeding ground for the virus. as more any mothers are slaughtered during the upcoming muslim festival of a deal of how hold up the la l 0. that
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in spain, raging wildfires of forest nearly 2000 people from their homes. more than a dozen, catalonia and villages have been evacuated as far fighters try to bring to flames under control. spain has been enduring a heat wave throughout the week with temperatures in some regions topping 40 degrees celsius. bitcoin value has dropped below $20000.00. that's the slowest since december 2020. the crypto currency has lost more than half of its value since january. it's part of a wider crisis in the market as panicked investors sell off their riskier digital assets, pushing prices even lower. glenn goodman is a crypto consultant and he says the fall in value is not a surprise. this was the same in stock market is kind of like a vicious circle when people borrowed money during the good times. and then the market starts falling and falling and falling. people are forced,
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or hedge funds in particular, forced to sell the stuff that they bought in order to pay back loans. and that force is price is down even further. and then that triggers even more of the selling events. but what we tend to see in these situations and we see it in market all the time. you can tell i'm doing my kind of, i've been there, i've seen it, i've done it, you know, markets 1000000000 cycles. they go massively up, they go massively down. and crypto in particular has always done that. have these enormous up and down waves that last sort of a few years each before you get the next big wave. so to some extent, this was kind of inevitable because it's just what ways have traders and investors need to be careful that they're not investing more money than they can afford to lose. because inevitably we offer a big got everything comes back down to us every single time. this super cycle think didn't happen was never going to happen. it's just not how markets operate. but the good thing is, in the longer term money has poured in to the crypto industry to the software
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developers, you know, will this, it, will, this venture capital money is paid for software developers who are developing brilliant projects, some of the greatest brains in the world a working on making block chain adapted to the meta verse in future and to decentralize finance was widely considered one of the greatest hollywood films ever produce the godfather as 50 years old this year to celebrate a re master and ultra high definition version of the classic has been released and it's received start treatment at this year's try back a festival. gabrielle is on the reports from new york. ah, oh my god. and 50 years after it 1st appeared in theaters re watching that godfather is an offer. many movie fans also can't refuse. my father is no different than i ever. busy responsible for other people released in 1972. the
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godfather is based on a best selling novel about an italian american mob family. the film redefined mainstream acting and revived the flagging career of marlon brando on to this for you and launched the film career of costar al pacino. i told her i can handle it. oh and what's more? it inspired a wave of realistic, hard hitting mafia dramas, from mean streets to good village, a soprano since mister mamba. what did you call me? the godfather really is, is a great film. movie critic, bill gay barry says the driving force behind the film was its director francis ford coppola for francis ford. coppola is kind of a classical filmmaker. he was interested in telling stories in what might have been considered an old fashioned way, really. but he was also very much on the cutting edge of what constituted
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a good performance on the done to make you, did you service, was that what constituted subtlety? all the things we see and the godfather, good bernoulli re mastered godfather, was 1st released in theaters here in the u. s. in february with robust box office results. it's now playing here at tri becca in new york city, but will soon travel to other film festivals throughout the world. because the godfather trilogy was, and still is an international phenomenon, seen by hundreds of millions of people in dozens of countries. it has global appeal . i think one of the reasons for that is because it's actually about family, you know, my older brother and i love you, no matter where you are. you can relate to these characters. but don't ever take size with anyone against the family. 50 years after was made it's a film just.

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